Battlefield 4: 5 Ways To Take Advantage Of Multiplayer

5. A Never-Ending Stream Of Rewards

While the term "never-ending" is a figure of speech, it's as close to being serious in Battlefield 4 as it's ever going to get. The game is a literal slot machine that constantly rewards players for sitting there to pour their given hours into it. In multiplayer, players can choose from four different character classes: Assault, Engineer, Support, and Recon. Each class has its own special type of abilities; Assault has defibrillators and medic bags, Engineer focuses on repair tools, Support is used to give ammunition to teammates, and Recon is used to sight out enemies and place mines. Each class goes deep into their select unlockables, ranging from class upgrades that increase sprinting and decrease fall damage to allowing players to combat vehicles with a vast assortment of tools at their disposal. Players also get to choose from over sixty-plus weapons from assault, PDW, carbine, shotgun, LMG, sniper, DMR, pistol, and grenade classes. Each class holds well over enough weapons to max out with optics, lasers, flashlights, paint, barrels, grips, and other accessories. Each of these unlockables requires player input and advancement, and the need to dive in and combat opponents in any one of the multiplayer modes is sure worth the effort. Aside from weapons to customize and weapons to earn and show off, players also are rewarded with medals, ribbons, and particular weapons and skills from assignments that are completed through certain actions. The drive to unlock these designated assignments can be really addicting, for they sometimes require the player to go in-depth with their play styles to earn said rewards. It's always worth the effort applied. No matter what the reward is, it's always pertinent to the overall merriment of the game. It can be overwhelming and tough to get involved in the first stages, but it grows the more it's played.
Contributor
Contributor

Ryan Glenn is an amateur writer in pursuit of a career in both the writing and graphic design fields. He currently attends the Art Institutes of Illinois and looks to go back for a degree in journalism. A reader of an exhaustive library of books and an adept music and video game lover, there's no outlet of media that he isn't involved in or doesn't love.