Arena Breakout: Infinite is Tencent's PC extraction shooter directly competing with Escape from Tarkov, bringing the mobile Arena Breakout formula to a full PC experience with improved graphics, larger maps, and deeper weapon modding. The core loop — gear up, enter a map, loot valuable items, survive against AI and other players, and extract with your haul — is enhanced by a realistic medical system and granular weapon customization. The game entered Early Access in 2025 with strong gunplay mechanics and a more accessible approach to the extraction genre compared to Tarkov's notorious learning curve.
This guide covers everything you need: core mechanics, the best characters, weapons worth investing in, location progression, and the tips that actually make a difference.
Core Mechanics
extraction shooter
You load into matches with your own gear (or nothing) and must reach one of several extraction points on the map within the time limit. Anything you carry out — weapons, armor, valuables — is kept permanently. Death means losing everything you brought in unless it was insured. Each raid lasts 25-40 minutes depending on the map.
loot economy
Items have dynamic market values based on supply and demand. Rare weapon attachments and medical supplies command high prices. Your secure container preserves a small number of items even on death. Managing your stash space and selling strategically is as important as shooting well.
weapon modding
Weapons are modular with interchangeable barrels, stocks, grips, sights, muzzle devices, and internal components. Each attachment affects specific stats — a compensator reduces vertical recoil, an angled grip reduces horizontal recoil. Building a gun from scratch requires understanding which stats matter for your engagement distances.
medical system
Damage is localized to body parts — head, thorax, stomach, arms, legs. Each body part has its own HP pool. Blacked-out limbs cause effects: blacked legs reduce speed, blacked arms reduce accuracy, blacked stomach drains hydration. Specific medical items treat specific conditions — bandages stop bleeding, splints fix fractures, surgery kits restore blacked limbs.
map extraction points
Each map has 3-5 extraction points, some available to all players and some conditional (requiring a key, specific gear, or timed availability). Learning which extractions are open and routing toward them is essential. Extraction camping is a real threat — approach extraction points cautiously.
Characters Overview
| Role | Tier | Playstyle | Key Stats |
|---|---|---|---|
| Assault Build | S | Push aggressively into contested loot areas, engage players at medium range, extract with high-value loot. | Recoil Control, Ergonomics, Armor Class |
| Sniper Build | A | Hold overwatch positions on high ground, engage targets at 200+ meters, relocate after shots to avoid counter-sniping. | Accuracy, Ergonomics, Aim Speed |
| Pistol Runner | B | Avoid PvP, loot high-value items in quiet areas, extract quickly with a full container. | Speed, Stealth, Container Space |
| Loot Goblin | A | Rush to high-value loot spawns, fill containers quickly, extract through the nearest safe point. | Movement Speed, Container Space, Key Collection |
| Team Player | A | Stay with the squad, provide medical support after firefights, share ammo and meds with teammates. | Armor Class, Medical Supplies, Communication |
Assault Build (S-Tier): The most versatile loadout for players comfortable with PvP engagements. A fully modded assault rifle with level 4 armor lets you handle most encounters. Mid-range engagements favor assault builds due to recoil control and fire rate.
Sniper Build (A-Tier): Long-range loadout effective on open maps like Farm and Valley. The SVD's semi-auto fire gives faster follow-up shots than bolt-actions. Requires patience and map knowledge to find advantageous positions.
Pistol Runner (B-Tier): Minimum investment loadout for budget raids. A Glock 17 and no armor means you lose almost nothing on death but can still kill geared players with headshots. The go-to approach when your stash is low on funds.
Loot Goblin (A-Tier): Maximizes extraction value by carrying the largest backpack and rig with the most container slots. Moderate combat loadout with focus on speed to reach loot spawns before other players.
Team Player (A-Tier): Loadout optimized for squad play with extra medical supplies and shared resources. Carries surgical kits and extra meds to keep teammates alive through extended fights.
For full build breakdowns with gear and stat priorities, see our Arena Breakout: Infinite builds guide.
Weapons Guide
| Weapon | Why It Matters | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| AK-47 | High damage per shot with significant recoil. | Assault Build |
| M4A1 | Lower damage than the AK but dramatically better recoil control, especially when modded. | Assault Build, Team Player |
| SVD Sniper | Semi-automatic sniper rifle firing 7. | Sniper Build |
| MP5 | Compact 9mm SMG with low recoil and fast fire rate. | Loot Goblin, Pistol Runner (upgrade) |
| Glock 17 | Standard 9mm pistol costing almost nothing. | Pistol Runner |
AK-47: High damage per shot with significant recoil. The 7.62 round kills in fewer hits than 5.56 weapons but horizontal recoil makes full-auto inaccurate beyond 50 meters. Modding with a recoil pad and compensator tames it considerably.
M4A1: Lower damage than the AK but dramatically better recoil control, especially when modded. The 5.56 round has faster velocity for easier ranging. Best all-round assault rifle for players who prioritize accuracy over raw damage.
SVD Sniper: Semi-automatic sniper rifle firing 7.62x54R. Two-shots to the thorax with level 4 armor, one-shot headshot at any range. The 10-round magazine limits sustained fire but semi-auto allows fast follow-ups compared to bolt-actions.
MP5: Compact 9mm SMG with low recoil and fast fire rate. Budget-friendly and effective in close quarters but the 9mm round struggles against level 3+ armor. Best used for its lightweight allowing larger backpack carry capacity.
Glock 17: Standard 9mm pistol costing almost nothing. With an extended 33-round magazine, it becomes a viable CQB weapon. Headshots kill regardless of armor, making it lethal in skilled hands despite being the cheapest gun available.
Location Progression
| Location | Level Range | Key Rewards |
|---|---|---|
| Farm | Beginner-Intermediate | Weapon attachments, food supplies, fuel containers |
| Valley | Intermediate | Military loot, electronics, rare attachments |
| Armory | Advanced | Top-tier weapons, level 5 armor spawns, weapon cases |
| North Town | Beginner-Intermediate | Medical supplies, household valuables, safe loot |
| TV Station | Intermediate-Advanced | Electronics, broadcast equipment, computer components |
Farm: A rural map with open fields, barns, and farmhouses. Long sightlines favor snipers and marksman rifles. High-value loot spawns in the central barn complex but it's a hotspot for PvP encounters.
Valley: A mountainous map with a river valley cutting through the center. The bridge crossing is the most contested point on any map. Flanking through the forest edges avoids the bridge entirely but takes longer.
Armory: An urban map centered around a military storage facility. The highest concentration of weapon and armor spawns in the game. Extremely high PvP density — expect contact within the first 2 minutes.
North Town: A suburban town map with houses, shops, and a central plaza. Good balance of loot variety and moderate PvP activity. The locked pharmacy requires a key but contains the best medical loot in the game.
TV Station: An industrial complex with a broadcast tower and surrounding warehouses. Dark interiors create tense close-quarters encounters. The station's server room contains high-value electronics worth significant money.
Tips That Actually Matter
- Insure your gear before every raid. Insurance returns your items if no other player extracts with them (AI scavs don't take insured items). It's cheap relative to replacement cost.
- Learn one map thoroughly before moving to others. Knowing every loot spawn, extraction point, and common player route on one map is more valuable than basic knowledge of all maps.
- Headshots kill regardless of armor tier with almost any weapon. Aim for the head in every PvP engagement — it equalizes budget and premium loadouts.
- The secure container saves items on death. Put your most valuable find in the container immediately, even if you haven't extracted yet.
- Sound design is extremely detailed. Walking on metal, glass, wood, and gravel all make distinct sounds at different volumes. Slow-walk on hard surfaces near enemies.
- Check the magazine by inspecting your weapon — it shows approximate ammo count. Don't reload mid-fight unless absolutely necessary; the animation locks you.
- Extract with something rather than dying with everything. If you have valuable loot and hear nearby gunfire, head to extraction rather than pushing for more.
- Budget runs with a Glock and no armor are positive expected value. You risk almost nothing but can extract with thousands in loot. Run these when your stash needs rebuilding.
- Pre-med before expected fights. Popping a painkiller before combat ensures you maintain movement speed even if your legs get shot.
- The flea market prices fluctuate based on player trading volume. Sell items when prices are high (usually weekend evenings) and buy when they're low (weekday mornings).
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Going into raids with your best gear every time. Gear fear is bad, but so is bankruptcy. Use mid-tier loadouts for general raids and save top-tier gear for squad play.
- Standing still while looting. Always check surroundings before opening containers. Looting animation makes you a stationary target for other players.
- Ignoring the medical system until you're dying. Pre-bandage bleeds immediately — bleeding damage accumulates fast and burns through your health pool in seconds.
- Filling your backpack with low-value items. A backpack full of cheap items is worse than half a backpack of rare items. Learn which loot is worth the space.
- Sprinting through buildings. Indoor footstep sounds travel far and alert nearby players. Walk or crouch-walk inside buildings unless you know the area is clear.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Arena Breakout: Infinite like Escape from Tarkov?
Very similar core gameplay — extraction shooter with persistent loot, weapon modding, and medical systems. ABI is generally more accessible with clearer UI, better tutorials, and less punishing early game. Tarkov has deeper systems and more content from years of development.
Is Arena Breakout: Infinite free to play?
The base game has a purchase price for Early Access. Check the current Steam page for pricing. There are no pay-to-win elements — all gear is earned through gameplay.
Can you play Arena Breakout: Infinite solo?
Yes, solo play is fully supported and many players prefer it. Maps have both solo and squad players in the same instance. Solo players can use stealth and patience to avoid or ambush squads.
What happens when you die in Arena Breakout: Infinite?
You lose everything you brought into the raid and everything in your backpack, except items in your secure container. Insured items may be returned after a timer if no other player extracted with them.
What to Read Next
- Best Arena Breakout: Infinite Builds — Detailed breakdowns with gear, stats, and playstyle guides
- Arena Breakout: Infinite Tier List — Current meta rankings
- Arena Breakout: Infinite Walkthrough — Step-by-step progression from start to endgame
- Arena Breakout: Infinite Beginner's Guide — First session essentials
- Arena Breakout: Infinite Tips & Tricks — Advanced strategies and hidden mechanics



