A few weeks ago Behavior Interactive announced the details of the update that will change Dead by Daylight forever and that includes the rework of dozens of perks and the progress and prestige system, among many other things. Now Dead by Daylight begins to recede with this patch. This has been made known by the Canadian study in a new Blog on its website, in which it claims to have listened to user feedback to modify some specific issues. Join us in the following lines to find out what will change and what will remain intact with respect to what was announced last June.
Behavior has confirmed that, indeed, his progress and prestige rework was not well plannedso these are the changes that will be made:
- 10,000 points per category in each game instead of the current 8,000 to be able to obtain up to a maximum of 40,000 and facilitate progress.
- The “price” of each level up increases from 50,000 to 20,000 points.
- The blood point limit is increased from one million to two.
- Each prestige already achieved gives us 3 levels instead of 2.
The rest of the changes are limited to exposing changes in perks, such as the almost complete reset of Shaking chills, which Behavior decided to nerf even though it was the only ability that allowed people with hearing problems to play. Now it returns to its initial state waiting for a more permanent solution. Fajador suffers a new nerf with half the invulnerability time, making the perk even more useless. Finally, Dead by Daylight explains that the effect Endurance that is now obtained after being unhooked from a hook will also be nerfed, which will hurt solo survivors even more. The Resistance effect will now not prevent you from falling to the ground if you are already affected by Deep Wound.
Dead by Daylight asks for the opinion of fans at its most critical moment
These changes are coming to Dead by Daylight very soon and will result in a huge impact on gameplay of a title that has once again had a large concentration of users during its anniversary month, but that is returning to the declining figures of previous months.