Solo-Only Cheats That Flip Crystal of Atlan on Its Head
Cheats
Cheat Engine tables popped up fast for Crystal of Atlan, and they’re surprisingly feature-rich—as long as you stick to Story/Solo. Multiplayer has anti-cheat, so don’t risk it.
What these tools can do:
Spawn goodies on demand: collectibles, monsters, and treasure can appear right next to you. Zero wandering, all reward.
Break cooldowns: tweak skill cooldown values so abilities are basically always ready.
Crank crits: bump both physical and magical crit rate to sky-high levels and stack crit damage.
Tank mode: reduce incoming damage via damage resistance modifiers.
Hyper-speed animations: push animation speed up to wild levels (some tables bind this to a hotkey).
Multijump madness: jump multiple times mid-air for easy platforming and flashy air combos.
Good to know:
Tables are version-specific. If your client updates, your table may crash or just stop working until it gets updated.
Some features behave differently depending on your zone or gear.
Enabling too many toggles at once can cause instability.
Using any of this in online modes can risk your account. Keep it offline.
If you’re going to experiment, back up your settings, toggle features on one at a time, and don’t brag about it in public lobbies.
Par: Dave
Pick the Right Class Early, Master the Camera, and Don’t Waste Resources
Indices
Class choice matters, but the game lets you test-drive before you commit. Take advantage.
Class picks and upgrades:
You can try Mage, Warrior, Gunner, and Puppeteer before locking one in.
At level 15, you unlock advanced classes (like Berserker, Starbreaker, Warlock, etc., based on your base class).
You can demo advanced classes and freely switch them until level 42. After that, it’s permanent—experiment now.
Combat mastery:
The game leans into verticality with true air combos. Learn launchers, mid-air strings, and safe landings.
Many bosses counter ground-only play—mix jump-cancels, i-frames, and aerial finishers.
Dial in your camera:
3D RPG: Wider view; great for dungeons and add control.
3D Act: Most responsive for tight timings and boss fights; narrower FOV.
2.5D: Overhead control; good for PvP spacing.
Consider turning off heavy assists (auto lock-on/centering) once you’re comfy for more precise inputs.
Resource wisdom:
Don’t push early gear past +2; save your Voucher Tickets (including those tempting +12 ones) for post-level 55 upgrades when items stick around longer.
Create multiple characters early. Each has its own stamina pool, and some resources (like Arcanites) are shareable. This smooths over time-gated walls starting in Chapter 2.
Quality-of-life habits:
Keybind dodge to something comfortable; it’s your lifeline.
Practice aerial routes in safe zones, then bring them to boss arenas.
Rebind camera sensitivity per mode—boss fights like a slightly higher vertical speed.
Par: Dave
Treasure Chest Routes Worth Your Time (Early to Mid Game)
Guides
Treasure chests are an early-game power play—steady materials, gold boxes, and circuit components without praying to RNG. The map design is layered and a bit dark, so it’s easy to miss them. Here’s what to prioritize.
Where to look:
Valley Ruins (starter zone): About a dozen chests scattered across 15 levels. Expect Circuit and Gold supply boxes, with the occasional Advanced Component/Stellar Circuit. Some are gated during the story—come back in Exploration Mode to grab the rest.
Lumiville: Just one chest, southeast of the Village Entrance teleport. Push through the camps, keep left, then swing right near a protruding mountain—chest is tucked behind enemies.
Oreton: Multiple chests. The standout is a 4-pillar puzzle around an elevator—activate the pillar to your immediate right first, then go counter-clockwise to open the door.
Ruins: Halls (Secret Passage chest): Only opens in Exploration Mode. Rewards include a Gold Supply Box and a Universal Adventure Insignia Bag.
Ruin Atrium (Fault chest): Ride moving platforms and hop onto an archway when the height lines up.
Pro tips:
Run chest routes after unlocking nearby teleports.
Make it part of your routine—players see roughly 30% more resources doing this alongside quests.
Chests often tie into puzzles or platforms—watch for visual cues and odd side paths.
Going for 100%? Many exploration achievements track these pickups.
Par: Dave
Achievement Hunter’s Roadmap: From Easy Pops to Brutal Grinds
Guides
Crystal of Atlan’s trophy list mixes freebies, skill checks, and long-haul grinds. Plan smart and you’ll save hours.
Know the landscape:
Tiers: Bronze and Silver pop naturally; Gold demands mastery; the single Platinum caps your collection.
Quick wins: The Platinum-style “begin your journey” unlocks during the early story beats.
Timed gauntlet: “End of Tyranny” asks you to clear HexChess Checkmate – Elite under 20 minutes. Tight routing and burst DPS are key.
PvE climbers: “Eliminate! Advance!” wants Tempered Trials floor 210. Build sustain, memorize patterns, and bring a boss-killer setup.
HexChess clears: “Kingslayer” is doable with clean mechanics and optimized rotations.
Fashion grind: “Stylist” (5 S-grade outfits) is manageable; “Fashion Icon” (5 SS-grade) takes patience or lucky pulls.
PvP marathons: “Peak of the Mountains” (1,000 ranked wins) and “Ruthless Headhunter” (100 Ancient Battlefield wins) reward consistency and a stable duo/team.
Solo skill check: “Best Gladiator” requires clearing the Challengers’ Cup final round solo—tight dodges, perfect combos.
Social wildcard: “Superstar” (5,000 likes) depends on your network as much as your gameplay.
Priority plan:
Knock out exploration and gathering (“Gathering Expert”) while farming chests and materials.
Slot in HexChess and Tempered Trials as your build matures.
Save the PvP and SS-grade cosmetics for later, once your account power spikes.
Keep long-term goals in view (like Resonance Level 200) and chip away daily.
Crystal of Atlan hidden achievements guide: unlock Beast Master, Ghost Operation, and Miraculous Journey with step-by-step tips to speed up your trophy progress and complete your achievement roadmap.