Dragon's Dogma 2 (DD2) Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
Getting Started
Dragon’s Dogma 2 (DD2) is a masterpiece of open-world action RPG design, but it famously refuses to hold your hand. From the moment you wake up in the village of Melve after the Dragon strips you of your heart, you are thrown into a harsh, systemic world. Your first steps set the tone for the entire adventure: exploration is rewarded, caution is mandatory, and the Pawn system is your greatest asset.
Character Creation
Before you even touch a weapon, you will spend a significant amount of time in the character creator. In DD2, your character's Height and Weight directly impact gameplay mechanics. Taller, heavier characters have a longer melee reach, can carry more weight, and can sprint through shallow water without being slowed. However, they burn through stamina faster and are easier targets for large enemies. Conversely, shorter, lighter characters regenerate stamina much faster, making them ideal for dodge-reliant classes like the Thief, but they will struggle to carry heavy loot without moving at a crawl.
You will also create your Main Pawn—your AI companion who will be with you for the entire game. Your Main Pawn cannot have the same Vocation (class) as you at the start of the game, so pick a complementary class. If you plan on playing a melee Fighter, make your Pawn a Mage to handle healing and crowd control. Furthermore, your Pawn's appearance matters: other human players will recruit your Pawn online, and Pawns with striking, memorable designs are recruited more frequently, netting you highly valuable Rift Crystals.
Your First Hours in Melve and Vernworth
The prologue in Melve serves as a brutal wake-up call. You will fight a massive Cyclops with very little gear. Focus on attacking its shins and avoiding its sweeping attacks. Once you are deposited into the wider world, your immediate goal is to reach the capital city of Vernworth. Do not ignore the small camp you wake up in; speak to the NPC wearing the headscarf to initiate the "Wake of the Sphinx" quest early, as it becomes highly lucrative later. As you travel to Vernworth, stick to the main roads during the day. The wilderness is incredibly dangerous at night, and getting ambushed by wolves in the dark is a quick way to lose your hard-earned gold.

Core Mechanics
Dragon’s Dogma 2 is built on a foundation of interlocking systemic mechanics. Understanding these systems is the difference between a frustrating experience and a legendary adventure.
The Pawn System
Pawns are the defining feature of this franchise. Your Main Pawn learns from your behavior—if you frequently throw explosive barrels at enemies, your Pawn will eventually start doing the same. Beyond your Main Pawn, you can recruit up to two Support Pawns from the Rift (accessible at any Rift Stone). Support Pawns belong to real players but do not level up or lose gear. You should constantly swap out Support Pawns to match the biome or enemies you are facing. Heading into a crypt? Bring a Mage with Halidom (cures Undead possession) and Pentad (makes holy weapons). Fighting a Golem? Bring a Fighter or Warrior with heavy physical attacks to break its glowing medallions.
Crucially, always rate your Support Pawns before dismissing them. Giving a Pawn 5 stars rewards the creator with Rift Crystals, and high ratings increase a Pawn's "Bestiary Knowledge," making them more useful to future players.
Weight Management and Inflation
DD2 features a ruthless encumbrance system. If your inventory exceeds your "Light" limit, your stamina regeneration drops significantly. If you hit "Heavy," you will barely be able to sprint or dodge. You must manage your inventory aggressively. Do not hoard upgrade materials you aren't actively using. Store extra weapons and armor at innkeepers. Perfumes and Curatives weigh almost nothing but sell for a decent price, making them perfect pocket money.
Furthermore, the game features a dynamic inflation economy. As the main story progresses, the price of goods at shops and inns will steadily rise. What costs 100 gold early on might cost 500 gold later. You cannot rely solely on quest rewards for income. You must pick up everything you find, sell it to merchants, and invest in your own passive income streams.
Resting and the World State
Time passes whenever you rest at an inn or a campsite. This means the world state updates: vendors restock their limited items, quests advance, and the position of certain enemies resets. Resting at an inn fully heals you, saves your game, and applies a temporary "Rested" buff to your maximum health and stamina. Resting at a campsite only heals you and passes time—it does not save your game. If you die at a campsite without saving at a checkpoint, you will lose progress. Always save at a nearby checkpoint before engaging in dangerous campsite activities.

Early Game Tips
The first 10 to 15 hours in DD2 are an exercise in survival. If you want to hit the ground running, prioritize these actionable tasks.
- Unlock the Oxcart: Shortly after reaching Vernworth, you will unlock the ability to ride oxcarts between major cities. Always use this when traveling between safe zones. It costs a small amount of gold, but it saves massive amounts of time, prevents ambushes, and passes time quickly so you can restock wandering merchants.
- Seek Out Your First Portcrystal: Unlike the first game, DD2 features fast travel via Portcrystals, but they are incredibly rare. You will find your first one for free by completing the quest "The Crag of the Blighted" in the southern desert region of Bathral. Do this as early as your Vocation level allows. Place this Portcrystal in Vernworth. From then on, you can use a Ferrystone to instantly teleport back to the capital to sell loot and rest.
- Invest in the Vocation Guild: As soon as you have 1,000 Disciplines, go to the Vocation Guild in Vernworth and buy the Thief vocation (if you are playing a physical class) or Sorcerer (if playing a magical class). The Thief's Masterful Kill skill allows you to parry attacks with a massive stamina return, making early-game boss fights trivial. The Sorcerer's orbital spells deal devastating area-of-effect damage.
- Gather Everything: Fruit, herbs, and minerals respawn after a few in-game days. Grabbing Seaweed, Morningtides, and Greenwarish allows you to craft potent curatives that weigh a fraction of standard healing potions.
- Talk to Everyone Twice: NPCs have dynamic schedules. If an NPC has a quest marker but you can't start the quest, wait until morning or night and try again. Talking to NPCs multiple times as you progress the story often unlocks new dialogue options and side quests.

Common Mistakes to Avoid
Dragon’s Dogma 2 plays by its own rules, and players accustomed to standard open-world RPGs often fall into these traps.
- Ignoring the "Go to Bed" Mechanic for NPCs: If an NPC is standing in front of their house at night telling you to go away, do not wait around. Go to an inn, sleep until the next morning, and come back. Many critical quests are time-locked to daytime schedules.
- Fighting Everything on the Main Roads: You will repeatedly encounter a massive Minotaur on the road to Vernworth early in the game. You are not supposed to kill it yet. Run past it, use a Wakeport Rift Stone if you die, and come back when you are level 15+. Fighting unwinnable battles wastes your curatives and frustrates your Pawns.
- Selling Wakestones: Wakestones are incredibly rare items used to revive dead NPCs—and occasionally, dead Arisen. Never sell them. Store them in your bottomless chest at the inn until you absolutely need them to complete a specific quest or save a crucial character.
- Hoarding Rift Crystals: Rift Crystals are used to hire higher-level Support Pawns and purchase unique items from the RPC (Rift Pawn Corporation) merchant in Vernworth. Do not be afraid to spend them to hire a level 20 Pawn when you are level 10 to carry you through a tough boss fight. You will naturally accumulate hundreds of them just by playing and rating other players' Pawns.
- Sleeping at Camps Without Saving: It cannot be stressed enough: dying at a campsite without a manual save at a checkpoint stone means you lose all loot acquired since your last save. Camps are for emergency healing or passing time to wait for a specific weather/time of day, not for ending your play session.
- Over-relying on your Map: The minimap does not show you everything. It does not show sheer cliff faces, hidden caves, or the precise location of floating treasure chests. Look up from the screen. The game’s visual language—such as breakable wooden barriers, suspicious ledges, and glowing beetles indicating hidden paths—is your best navigation tool.
- Ignoring Pawn Inclinations: Pawns have hidden "Inclinations" that dictate their AI behavior. A "Scather" pawn will charge the strongest enemy immediately (often getting killed), while a "Medicant" will over-prioritize healing. Use "Potion of Realignment" items to fix a Main Pawn whose AI has become corrupted or unhelpful.

Essential Controls & Settings
DD2’s default settings are serviceable, but tweaking them drastically improves the experience, especially on PC where the performance can be demanding.
Key Bindings to Know
- Light Attack / Heavy Attack: The foundation of combat. Combos are dictated by the timing between these two inputs, varying wildly depending on your Vocation.
- Call Pawn (Hold): Holding the pawn command button brings up a radial menu. Use this constantly. You can command Pawns to "Go," "Come," "Help," or target specific enemies. Commanding a Fighter to "Go" on a Cyclops will cause them to cling to its face and blind it.
- Interact / Sprint: Sprinting drains stamina, but you can cancel the animation into a dodge roll (if your Vocation has one) to maintain momentum while avoiding damage.
- Grip / Mount: This is the most unique control in the game. Pressing this near a large enemy allows you to grab onto them. Once grabbed, you can climb to weak points (like a Chimera's snake tail or a Dragon's heart) to deal massive burst damage.
Recommended Settings
- Camera Sensitivity: Increase the default camera sensitivity by at least 30%. The default speed is too sluggish to effectively track fast-moving enemies like wolves or harpies.
- Subtitles: Absolutely turn these on. DD2 features a staggering amount of ambient NPC dialogue, and Pawns frequently shout out enemy weaknesses (e.g., "The tail is its weakness!" or "It fears fire!") via voice lines that are easily drowned out by combat music.
- Auto-Aim: Leave this on. While manual aiming is more precise for bows, auto-aim is invaluable for locking onto flying enemies or large bosses when you are climbing and trying to manage your stamina.
- Display (PC): If you are struggling with frame rates, prioritize lowering "Shadow Quality" and "Vegetation Quality" before touching texture resolutions. The game's visual identity holds up perfectly with lowered shadows, and the gameplay feels significantly smoother.
Progression System
Understanding how your character grows in DD2 is vital, as it operates on a dual-layered system that can permanently affect your late-game stats.
Character Level vs. Vocation Level
When you kill enemies, you earn Experience Points (XP). XP increases your Character Level. Character Level determines your base stats (Health, Stamina, Strength, Magick). Crucially, your stat gains per level are determined by the Vocation you are currently playing when the level-up occurs. If you play a Fighter for 50 levels, your character will have incredibly high Strength and Health, but low Magick. If you switch to a Sorcerer at level 50, your Magick stat will grow, but you will never catch up to a character who leveled as a Sorcerer from level 1. Therefore, if you want a "Spellblade" (a hybrid magic/melee class) later in the game, you should spend your early levels splitting time between Fighter and Mage to build a balanced foundation.
Alongside XP, you earn Discipline. Discipline is currency used exclusively at the Vocation Guild to buy new weapons, armor, and skills for that specific Vocation. Discipline does not carry over if you switch classes; a Fighter's Discipline pool is separate from a Mage's pool.
Unlocking Advanced Vocations
You start with four basic Vocations: Fighter, Archer, Mage, and Thief. As you explore, you will find Vocation Maisters—unique NPCs who will grant you access to Advanced and Hybrid Vocations, provided you meet the requirements.
- Warrior / Sorcerer / Magick Archer: These are Advanced Vocations. They are unlocked simply by speaking to their respective Maisters (found in Vernworth, the southern desert, and the elven forest) and paying a Discipline fee.
- Mystic Spearhand / Trickster / Warfarer: These are Hybrid Vocations. The Mystic Spearhand is found early in Vernworth and acts as a magic-melee duelist. The Trickster is found in the Volcanic Island and specializes in illusions and manipulating enemies into fighting each other. The Warfarer is the ultimate secret class, unlocked very late in the game, allowing you to switch between any weapon loadout on the fly.
Augments (The Real Progression)
The true secret to breaking the difficulty of DD2 lies in Augments. As you level a Vocation, you unlock passive skills called Augments. The game allows you to equip Augments from any Vocation you have unlocked, regardless of your current class. For example, the Thief Vocation offers an augment called Legality, which increases your climbing speed. The Fighter Vocation offers Vigor, which slows stamina depletion. By combining Augments from multiple classes, you can create wildly overpowered builds, such as a heavy-hitting Warrior who climbs as fast as a Thief and regenerates stamina like a Mage. Always prioritize buying new Augments over new weapons when you visit the Vocation Guild.
Resources & Where to Find Help
Dragon’s Dogma 2 is dense, and you will inevitably hit a wall, get lost, or wonder if you missed a crucial item. Because the game does not feature a traditional quest log that tells you exactly where to go, external resources are highly recommended.
Interactive Maps
The most valuable tool at your disposal is an interactive map website like Map Genie. DD2 features hundreds of hidden treasures, oxcart stops, Rift Stones, and scavenging spots that are nearly impossible to find organically. Using Map Genie to track which treasure chests you have opened in a region prevents you from backtracking through dangerous areas looking for missed loot.
Community Wikis
For detailed numbers on stat growths, augment effects, and exact locations of Vocation Maisters, the Dragon’s Dogma 2 Wiki (hosted on Fandom) is the most comprehensive database. If you are trying to min-max your character’s stats or figure out exactly which materials are needed to upgrade a specific weapon tier, the wiki’s crafting tables are indispensable. Additionally, the wiki maintains updated lists of "Biome Knowledge" requirements, which is vital if you want your Main Pawn to be highly rated by other players.
Reddit and Discord
The r/DragonsDogma subreddit is a massive, active community that serves as the best place for build guides and theorycrafting. If you want to know how to build an effective Magick Archer or how to defeat a specific late-game boss without exploiting terrain, searching the subreddit will yield dozens of detailed, text-based guides. For real-time help, the official Capcom Discord server has dedicated channels for Pawn sharing, where you can post your Main Pawn's details and have hundreds of players recruit them to help you farm Rift Crystals.
Pawn Sharing Sites
If you are struggling with a boss and need a specific level 30 Support Pawn with exact skills, do not rely on the in-game Rift search alone. Visit community-driven Pawn sharing sites like PawnSHARE. These websites allow you to filter Pawns by their exact Vocation, level, inclinations, and skills. You can find a Pawn perfectly tailored to counter the boss you are fighting, copy their Pawn ID, and search for them directly in the Rift.





