Mechanics

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Pocket attacking enemies from above
An item build made for Yamato

Mechanics in Deadlock are a combination of third-person-shooter and MOBA mechanics. Broadly speaking, the macro mechanics are akin to a MOBA, whereas micros are that of a TPS.

Overview[edit | edit source]

The overall objective of Deadlock, is to destroy the enemy team's Patron. This is done over the course of the game, where two teams battle across four lanes, that teams can navigate using Ziplines. Each lane contains both Guardians and Walkers that a team will need to destroy to ultimately destroy the Patron.

Teams battle AI controlled Creeps, that release Souls when killed. Souls are used to Level-up and buy items.


Macros[edit | edit source]

Laning[edit | edit source]

Laning is the process of fighting in your lane, collecting souls from creeps, and pushing the lane to the enemy Patron.

There are 4 lanes. From left to right they are York (yellow), Greenwich (green), Broadway (blue), and Park (purple). Any part of a lane controlled by the opposing team will be red on your map.

Troopers[edit | edit source]

A wave of troopers are spawned at each team's side every 25 seconds. They ride the zipline until it stops being supported, or if they are damaged by an enemy, and then continue on foot in the lane. They stop and fight if they encounter an enemy. It takes roughly 4 seconds for a squad to reach the standard start of the lane. Every wave of troopers has a healer and 3 ranged troopers. The healer has a flag on its back and heals all nearby friendly units every few seconds. Ranged troopers target the nearest enemy with each shot. This is speculation, but they seem to preferentially target enemy troopers.

When you score the last hit on a trooper, you gain some souls, and a green blob is spawned at the trooper's location. The blob floats upward until it is shot or hits the auto-collection ceiling, roughly 4 meters above where blob spawned. When it breaks, the blob awards the same amount of souls as the last hit awarded.

If you last-hit a trooper with a melee attack, no floating blob is spawned, you just get the souls automatically. This is an excellent way to secure souls without granting your laning opponent a chance to deny.

A trooper's health bar becomes lighter and starts flashing the lower health they are. Troopers self destruct at 10% health and deny any souls they would have given.

If an enemy last-hits one of your troopers, they gain souls, and an orange blob is spawned that functions like the green ones. You can shoot souls of any color to collect their soul value. If the soul reaches the auto-collection ceiling, the souls it contained are credited to the player who last hit the trooper that spawned the soul. Shooting the souls of an enemy team is called a "deny," as you are denying them some souls.

Souls can be used to purchase items at your shop. There is one behind every first Guardian in each lane on both teams. When a Guardian is killed, the shop behind it closes permanently.

The further your troopers are able to travel down the lane, the further your zipline is active.

Breakables[edit | edit source]

Breakables are found all around the map in the form of a crate or a golden Buddha statue. Break them for a power-up or a trooper's worth of souls.

This is speculation, but the power-ups last the whole game and can seriously buff your character if you're hitting all of them.

Lane Objectives[edit | edit source]

Guardian[edit | edit source]

The first objective of the lane is the Guardian, who has a laser attack, a melee attack, and a slam attack.The slam attack does AoE damage to enemies near the Guardian.

This is speculation, but it seems that the laser attack re-casts every few seconds. It channel on the original target until it dies, or the channel ends. It will recast and select a new target in both cases.

This is speculation, but it seems like the Guardian doesn't preferentially target heroes unless they get into melee range.

This is speculation, but the guardian will use a melee attack if enemies are in close range. This attack does not seem parryable in sandbox mode.

When all enemy Guardians on the map are defeated, everyone on your team gains a Flex Spot in their Inventory.

Walker[edit | edit source]

The second objective of the lane is the Walker who has a laser attack, a Volcano Salvo, and a slam.

The Walker's Slam does damage and stuns enemies for X seconds within a large radius. This ability has a cooldown.

This is speculation, but the laser attack works similar to the guardian.

The volcano attack is where the walker throws fireballs randomly around itself. This attack will be stopped by any buildings in the trajectory of the fireball.

The Walker fires X attacks in one Volcano Salvo.

When the second enemy Walker on the map is defeated, everyone on your team gains a Flex Spot in their Inventory.

When all enemy Walkers on the map are defeated, everyone on your team gains a Flex Spot in their Inventory.

Double Guardians[edit | edit source]

The Third objective of the lane is two Guardians that are stronger than the first one. They use the same attacks as the first Guardian but are beefier.

When both of these enemy Guardians fall in a lane, the zipline for allies in that lane becomes significantly faster.

Shrines[edit | edit source]

The fourth objective is the Shrines, they have no attacks. There are two shrines, the two leftmost lanes lead into the left shrine, the two rightmost lanes lead into the right shrine. They both need to be destroyed in order to weaken the Patron, allowing you to kill it and win the game.

When the first enemy Shrine on the map is defeated, everyone on your team gains a Flex Spot in their Inventory.

Patron[edit | edit source]

The fifth and final objective is the Patron, which ends the game. It has two modes, normal and weakened. You can not damage a patron in its normal state, it must be weakened by killing both shrines in the base.

The Patron also has 2 phases. The first phase it is upright and firing lasers and such at people. The second phase is just the head and it lands in the pit in the enemy's base, which also uses laser attacks.

Jungle[edit | edit source]

Jungle is the general term for neutral creep camps. Neutral creep camps are located across the map and are denoted by cyan triangle icons. The number of lines beneath the icon indicates the difficulty of the camp: zero lines for easy camps, one line for medium camps, and two lines for hard camps.

When in lane you want to secure as many souls from each wave as possible. If you can get out and take a jungle camp as well that's a nice bonus.

Mid-Boss[edit | edit source]

The mid boss is located in the center of the map and is quite strong. It needs x attacks per second to be damaged.

When the mid boss dies it drops the Rejuvenator. You must use a charged melee attack to collect it (hold Q). Securing the Rejuvenator awards your team with the Rejuvenation Credit that buffs you and your team with the following:

  • Rejuvenation Credit Buffs
    • 50% faster respawn timer (one time).
    • Additional fire rate (3 minutes).
    • 50% more HP for your team's troopers (3 minutes).

Soul Urn[edit | edit source]

The soul urn is located on the inner side of the furthest left or right (yellow and purple) lanes. The first urn spawns in at 10 minutes and every 5 minutes afterwards. It spawns in the air and slowly floats down to it's spawn location (it takes 30 seconds). This means the first soul urn is grabbable at 10:30, with the next at 15:30, and so on. To capture the soul urn, you must grab the soul urn and carry it to the other possible spawn location. Once captured, it provides your team with an amount of souls that scales based on match length and difference in team net worth. The player who captures the urn also gains an additional 25% souls and 1 AP (Ability Point). Carrying the urn prevents you from using items, abilities, or your gun. However, you can still use your melee (Q) while you are carrying it.

Temporary Buffs[edit | edit source]

Temporary buffs spawn on the bridges overlooking the soul urn locations. There are four types of buffs.

  1. Survival Buff
    • Grants temporary health and health regen.
      • +400 Max HP
      • +1% HP Regen
      • Duration: 160s
  2. Gun Buff
    • Grants temporary magazine size and fire rate.
      • +40% magazine size
      • +20% fire rate
      • Duration: 160s
  3. Casting Buff
    • Grants temporary cooldown reduction and spirit power.
      • +20% cooldown reduction
      • +25 spirit power
      • Duration: 160s
  4. Stamina Buff
    • Grants temporary extra stamina and sprint speed.
      • +2 stamina charges
      • +30% stamina regeneration speed
      • +3m/s sprint speed
      • +50% zipline boost speed
      • Duration: 160s

Ganking[edit | edit source]

Ganking is the act of moving from one lane to another to help kill enemy heroes who are over extended, or who are simply ripe for the picking.

The process of organizing players in the laning phase (see: "Strategy").

Team Composition[edit | edit source]

The process of choosing which heroes to play.

Item Management[edit | edit source]

The process of forming an item build.

Micros[edit | edit source]

Uptime[edit | edit source]

Uptime relates to farm camps (either Troops or Neutrals), to advancing lanes, to harassing enemies, to taking down towers etc. Everything that doesn't make you idle and generate value could be considered Uptime;

Space[edit | edit source]

  • Creating space will define which areas are controlled by your team, which Neutral camps are safe to farm, the length of your Zipline, the vision you have on your map etc. This concept is really broad, but what is important to understand is using Space in your favor and deny any enemy advance of Space;
  • During the Laning phase, this concept is even more important, since Space will define how far your Troops advance, it will impact ultimately on your last hits/denies and hero killing opportunities;

Line of Sight[edit | edit source]

Famous LoS of shooters, meaning the ability of the enemy to target you on their screen; Being in LoS of the enemy is dangerous in many situations and will create kill opportunity for the enemy team. This can be denied by using Corners and Walls (in most of cases);

Cover Usage[edit | edit source]

Like any shooter, using corners and walls allows you to be covered against almost all skills and items, since most of them require Line of Sight to be activated or cause damage. In other words, corners and wall usage can be translated as unbreakable shields for both Weapon and Spirit protection;

Target Prioritization[edit | edit source]

This concept is situational and depends on different factors. The main idea here is to focus your fire on the most important part of the fight. Some examples:

  • Heroes with a number of unsecured Souls, since they can turn the table in team fights. Additionally, the reward for killing this hero will be greater;
  • Heroes with disruptive ults - like Dynamo's, Pocket's etc - should be a primary target to either prevent the usage of these abilities or to force them to use in a not-optimal situation for the enemy;
  • Heroes with low HP, since allowing them to live will prevent your team to get souls and will allow the enemy to have uptime;

Distance Management[edit | edit source]

Understanding heroes (and abilities) which work in short range vs long range is key. Some examples:

  • Pocket's shotgun will do huge damage from short range, while almost zero damage from mid/long range;
  • Vindicta's ult can target long range target without significant damage fall off. Same happens with Grey Talon's first ability;

Aiming[edit | edit source]

Some heroes require more accuracy and skill expression regarding aiming - such as Vindicta -, but overall aiming is a crucial part of Deadlock.

Cooldown Management[edit | edit source]

Ideally, skill and item usage should be maximized, since they bring a big advantage in gaining souls and gaining Space. At the same time, cooldowns are your way to create space, to secure kills and escape from dying. So, Cooldown management is key to finding a balance between soul farming usage and enemy hero usage;

Map Knowledge[edit | edit source]

Crucial for many aspects in the game. Learning veil locations, Rune locations, Teleport locations, which buildings can be camped from rooftop etc., is a huge advantage for farming, securing kills, escaping, pursing enemies and so many other aspects of Deadlock.

Rotations[edit | edit source]

Can be defined as the creation of opportunities by surprising the enemy. A terminology from Dota calls Gank the art of appearing from a fog of a jungle to surprise - and potentially kill - enemies, but rotations are broader than that and can be related to creating space in different lanes and other related concepts;

Movement[edit | edit source]

  • The process of moving and positioning your hero.
  • Involves ziplines and stamina usage in addition to sliding.

Troop Management[edit | edit source]

  • The process of killing enemy troopers whilst denying the enemy from getting souls from yours.
  • Can also be referred to as Creep Management.

Creep/troop denial is a crucial part of the game's laning phase and involves shooting the souls of one's own trooper when they are killed. This prevents enemy laners from obtaining soul orbs by killing troopers.


See also[edit | edit source]