You run the risk of making a “dead” save file and leaving you with no option but to start all over again. However, if you have been bitten by the aforementioned creepy crawlies or are running out of resources, reconsider saving, or at least saving over a file instead of creating a new one. There is no autosave in Green Hell, leaving it up to you to manually save by visiting a hammock, shelter, or one of the many little constructs you can build from your notebook. Watch the ground at all times, a sound cue is also a good sign to run the opposite direction. Spiders, snakes, and scorpions can end your life out of nowhere, poisoning you with it often being difficult to find the right herbs to create a cure and your life depleting pretty quickly. However, the most dangerous of them all might be creatures that you don’t even see before it’s too late. There are dangers everywhere in Green Hell, from hostile tribesmen to jaguars and plenty in-between. To avoid some early frustration, especially as Green Hell is a game that improves considerably the deeper into its depths you plunge, some beginner’s tips are in order to stop you from losing your sanity - in-game and also quite literally. The Amazon rainforest is designed to test and, ultimately, break you if you don’t know what you’re doing. Even on its medium difficulty, it’s not exactly a walk in the park - once you think you have one thing under control, another ten pop up. Graduating today from Early Access, Creepy Jar’s Green Hell is a rock-hard survival game that only the crazy would go into completely blind.
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