Lock Down was originally seen as the middle ground in Arena Breakout: Infinite — a mode where players could enjoy higher stakes and better loot without dealing with the extreme sweat and fully stacked lobbies often found in Forbidden Zone.
But lately, many players feel that Lock Down is starting to lose its identity.
The Problem With Weapon Attachment Stripping
One of the biggest complaints from the community is how players are entering Lock Down with overpowered weapon builds while avoiding the real risk that should come with them.
Players are:
- Removing expensive attachments before fights
- Rebuilding weapons inside the raid
- Bringing extremely strong laser builds
- Using high-tier ammo and gear that dominate casual players
The result is a mode that increasingly feels closer to Forbidden Zone than the balanced experience Lock Down was supposed to provide.
Many players who avoid Forbidden because of the ultra-competitive gameplay are now getting deleted by meta builds and “beam” setups in Lock Down instead.
Why This Hurts the Casual Experience
Not everyone wants every raid to feel like a tournament match.
A large part of the community enjoys:
- Tactical gameplay
- Slower pacing
- Mid-tier gear fights
- More balanced encounters
But when players can manipulate gear systems to minimize risk while maximizing firepower, the experience becomes frustrating for more casual players.
If Lock Down turns into another sweat-heavy mode, many players may simply stop playing it altogether.
And that’s dangerous for the long-term health of the game.
A Possible Fix
There are several ways the developers of Arena Breakout: Infinite could improve the situation.
Lock Weapons Before Raid Start
Once entering Lock Down:
- Attachments should stay mounted
- Weapons should not be rebuildable during raids
- Players should commit to the loadout they bring
This would prevent players from abusing inventory systems while preserving the intended risk-reward gameplay.
Restrict High-Tier Ammo and Gear
Another major issue is the amount of top-tier ammo and armor entering Lock Down.
A potential solution could be:
- Limiting extremely high-tier ammo
- Restricting certain armor levels
- Creating gear caps for Lock Down
This would help separate the mode from Forbidden Zone and create healthier matchmaking for players who want competitive gameplay without the highest level of sweat.
Lock Down Needs Its Own Identity
Right now, the line between Lock Down and Forbidden Zone is becoming blurred.
Forbidden should remain the place for:
- Max-tier kits
- Hardcore PvP
- Full meta gameplay
- High-risk competitive raids
Lock Down should instead focus on:
- Balanced fights
- Tactical gameplay
- Mid-tier progression
- A less oppressive environment
Without that separation, casual and mid-core players may feel pushed out entirely.
Final Thoughts
Risk is what makes extraction shooters exciting. But balance is what keeps players coming back.
If Lock Down continues turning into a mini Forbidden Zone filled with laser builds, top-tier ammo, and low-risk attachment abuse, the mode could eventually lose the audience it was originally designed for.
The developers of Arena Breakout: Infinite have an opportunity to protect the identity of Lock Down before the gap between casual and hardcore players becomes too large.













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