Outlast 2 Cheats Pc

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Jul 25, 2024, 4:32:05 AM7/25/24
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This page contains a list of cheats, codes, Easter eggs, tips, and other secrets for Outlast for PC. If you've discovered a cheat you'd like to add to the page, or have a correction, please click EDIT and add it.

As you scroll down, you'll find things under titles such as [OLGame.OLEnemyPawn] and [OLGame.OLEnemyGenericPatient_G]. These are enemy titles that contain codes such as NrmAttackNormalDamage=51, NrmAttackThrowDamage=51, HardAttackNormalDamage=101, HardAttackThrowDamage=101, and so forth. You want to change those values from their current numbers to 0. There are quite a few to change, so the process could take quite some time. Make sure that you only change digits that relate to the values specified above. The end result once you change all appropriate entries is that no enemies will be able to inflict any damage.

outlast 2 cheats pc


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Alter your game files at your own risk and ALWAYS make backups!Navigate to Macintosh HD\Users\[your username]\Library\Application Support\Outlast\\OLGame\Config and you will see a file named OLEnemy. Open it and then make some changes.

Dating from 5300-2200 B.C., the artifacts were acquired by Leonard N. Stern, an 84-year-old pet supplies and real estate businessman. Most belong to the Cycladic civilization that flourished in the Cyclades islands between 3,200-2000 B.C., whose elegantly abstract but enigmatic white marble figurines inspired leading 20th century artists.

Little is known of their original function, largely because so many of the surviving Cycladic artifacts were hastily unearthed by looters. This cheats archaeologists of the clues that a proper excavation could provide.

Michael Winerip's article (May 23) on Andrew Goldstein and his chaotic existence within (or without) the mental-health system is the most scathing indictment of that system I've seen. I read it with tears and anger. I've had one sibling struggle with and die from cancer. I've had another struggle with and die from mental illness. No end of help was given the brother with osteosarcoma. Little to no help was available for the delusional brother who eventually committed suicide. The pain of watching someone lose his mind is more than I can describe. What must it be like to be that person?

MARIAN JOHNSON
New York

Winerip's article on the problems caused by insufficient funds for housing and treating the mentally ill was on the mark. He contrasted this with more adequate funds for mentally retarded individuals. I believe this difference results not from the compassion of this or that governor but from how we as a society differentiate between mental illness and mental retardation. Retardation is viewed as resulting from genetics or an accident of birth. Mental illness is regarded as somewhere between devil possession and weakness of will. There is still the idea that, as General Patton suggested, a good slap could snap them out of it. As long as we blame the mentally ill for their disease and jail them for their actions, money for treatment will be minimal.

SHELDON BLACKMAN
Staten Island

As New York has speeded up its rate of discharging patients from state mental hospitals into unsupervised settings, is it any surprise that more and more homeless and disoriented persons roam our streets, parks and subway platforms? The stupidity of giving a bottle of pills to a man who cannot read and a crisis phone number to a man without a telephone is incomprehensible. Mental hospitals are a necessity for many. A well-run, competently staffed living arrangement is imperative for most.

A characteristic that the school shooters seem to share is a demand for respect, but I have yet to read that they spent time doing anything besides playing video games like Doom and Quake (Paul Keegan, May 23). John Romero exemplifies the way in which the fantasy world of these games inflates self-esteem to illogical proportions, in his comments about waiting for a table and his imagined popularity in Japan. The important question is what happens when Romero's game-obsessed customers are not given the respect they expect. I think several of the school shootings answer that question.

GARY CASTEEL
Jefferson City, Tenn.

Jason Goodwin's attachment to the paper dollar (May 23) is as quaint as it is irrational. A dollar coin would have numerous advantages over the greenback. It would work better in vending machines. It would outlast dozens of flimsy paper dollars. Our Canadian neighbors have done away with bills of less than five dollars, substituting sturdy $1 and $2 coins, lovingly referred to as "loonies" and "toonies." Paper-money enthusiasts have no need to worry: the $100 bill will remain the world's favorite mattress-stuffer.

CHRISTOPHER GODFREY
Wellesley, Mass.

With the dollar now worth 10 cents, making it a coin makes sense. The issue of dollar coin or dollar bill may be made moot by the increasing use of credit cards, in any case.

DAVID W. BRIGGS
Marion, Mass.

Wouldn't it be advisable for Randy Cohen (The Ethicist, May 23) to suggest to J.Q. of Florida that, if his circumstances are as he describes (in particular, his innocence), he seek legal assistance to overturn his conviction. The newspapers are full of stories these days about innocent people languishing in prison. The consolation of philosophy is appropriate treatment when there is no other hope.

COLEMAN GREGORY
New York

Your issue did not present a full picture of women. That's fine, but call it what it is: white women through the millennium. Or is it not politically correct to be this honest?

M. DIANE BENTON
Ypsilanti, Mich.

In an issue devoted to the changes and advancements in the status of women over the millennium, it was a shock to see that The New York Times still sees women as intellectually inferior. Do you truly believe that we need a cheat sheet for the crossword?

MEGHAN STERN
New York

I've never been able to fill in more than a handful of words in your crossword puzzle, until you supplied "easy clues" along with the regular ones. Would you be so kind as to continue this feature?

ELAINE YAMIN
Gillette, N.J.

CORRECTION: An article on May 16 about women's economic power misattributed a statement about the distribution of black and white women in the work force in the 60's and 70's and the success of Asian women in the work force since 1980, relative to that of black and Hispanic women. The speaker was William Julius Wilson, the writer and Harvard professor, not Marta Tienda, the writer and Princeton professor. Both were among those interviewed for the article.

Letters should be addressed to Letters to the Editor, Magazine, The New York Times, 229 West 43d Street, New York, N.Y. 10036. The E-mail address is maga...@nytimes.com. All letters should include the writer's name, address and daytime telephone number. We are unable to acknowledge or return unpublished letters. Letters may be edited for length and clarity.

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