Elden Ring Nightreign turns FromSoftwareâs best-in-class boss fights into multiplayer affairs, so now your shame and frustration can be shared with others. But while lots of players have been going hours without beating the roguelite RPGâs first major encounter, others are in a race to be the sweatiest solo player out there.
â8 hours in and still havenât beaten the first nightlordâŠâ reads one of the most popular threads from the Nightreign subreddit over the weekend. âTook me 15 hours to beat the first nightlord with randoms,â one fan responded. âSurprisingly I didnât angrily tilt once, im having a blast shit is fun as hell.â Another wrote, âIâve done 20 tries and still havenât got that wolf killed very frustrating but I just gotta get good.â
My favorite post from Nightreign players sharing their long overdue Ws is from a player who went on 30 total expeditions before finally beating the first boss, a fire-wielding, three-headed hound called Gladius. But while many players have spent the opening weekend of the gameâs release bleeding out on cosmic shores, some have been making the game look trivially easy.
YouTuber Youwy decided to take on Fulghor, Champion of Nightglow solo andâmost importantlyâwithout gaining a single level (via PC Gamer). He played Executor, the dexterity-based Nightfarer who can parry attacks. The fights revolve around jumping, dodging, and managing stamina consumption like a farmer in a drought. Even more crucial was a starting build that included the Night of Miasma and Night of the Wise relics, giving a base weapon with tons of starting status ailments that can just be upgraded through the run. âI sometimes canât beat the 1st night and bro is out here doing this solo and level 1âŠWP,â one fan wrote in the comments.
Then there was YouTuber Ongbal, who used the Executor class to take out the Nightreignâs final boss without any outside help (so spoilers, obviously, if you donât want to know anything before playing it for yourself). Ongbal is well-known for Elden Ring hitless runs, but he hasnât gotten there just yet with Heolstor, a boss you can really tell FromSoftware had fun designing. Once again making use of Executorâs parry, which lets players treat Nightreign more like Sekiro, he takes the final boss down in less than six minutes. And this was before a new patch making solo play easier went live on Monday (which is already making a big difference for some players).
One thing that makes Nightreignâs boss fights so tough is the work players have to do to get to them. Unlike past games, where you can beeline for the encounter and practice over and over until youâve mastered it, Nightreign requires players to engage in a 40-minute open-world farming session beforehand. As a result, most players probably only spend about a ninth of their playtime actually learning how each Nightlord works. Some have already called for a practice mode to make training easier. Thatâs one request I donât see FromSoftwareâs granting anytime soon though.