2022-07-31
We are going to talk about how to use LDPlayer 9 to enhance your Tales of Grimm experience; we will explain how to play the game with improved graphics, how to automate the gameplay, and how to use macro commands, multi-instance sync, and multiplayer tool. The story of Tapplus' Tales of Grimm takes place in the land of Ozzy, as the opening cinematic describes.
Content
Even though the story of Tales of Grimm is fascinating, the game has so many events and things to do when you start to play; if you don't take your time to read everything at the beginning of the game, it can overwhelm you. You can check this Tales of Grimm Beginner's Guide for Getting Started to understand the game, And if you'd like to learn how to play the game with style, then we invite you to keep reading.
Let's Start with the fun part first; the Tales of Grimm has taken the idle side of the game to the next level by allowing the game's battles to run without any interaction from the player. So why stop there? We can enhance it further with the LDPlayer 9 Operation Record function.
For a start, we will help you go through the game's Adventure part because the battles are automated; why not other parts? Ok, let's start.
The game adventure part has only two different starts. It's either the dialogue part or sending you straight into the battle part. We are going to make two different records and merge them to automate the adventure battles successfully.
Step 1: To use Operation Record, press Ctrl+8, start recording, and do one battle simulating; choosing the adventure tab and closing the battle; when you come out of the battle, stop the record.
Step 2: Now play manually until you meet the dialogue part; as soon as you encounter it, press Ctrl+8, then start recording before going any further after the record begins, click skip, and then click challenge. After the battle ends, terminate the record.
Step 3 - use the merge script option and merge the two macros. And edit the script settings by clicking on the gear symbol, putting the tick mark on the run until stopped, then save and run the macro.
After the tutorial part has finished, this works 100%, but unfortunately, you have to check on it from time to time because the game does not let you click anything until you click where they ask you to click during the tutorial. But with this working in the background, you can do other things, watch a movie or chat with friends, and come in once in a while to upgrade your heroes and collect the idle rewards.
And if you did not know that Tales of Grimm lets you run several types of battle at once; if you create a record for all starting points and endings for battles and run them in intervals, you can easily play the whole game leaving you only to collect the reward and upgrade heroes.
For example, the script we created earlier can be created a whole lot differently to make things more complicated but doing that over a text is not simple. So to create this, the simplest information you need to know is when you create a record and merge it, the delays or settings you set before merging the record will be applied and executed the same as you would run two different scripts simultaneously.
Still, the first script you created will be the first one to execute in the merged script, so ensure the first record you want to execute is the first pattern you want to simulate.
While you were playing Tales of Grimm, did you feel that if you could press your mouse less and do everything with the keyboard? For example, changing from different tabs and closing or skipping dialogues while playing, didn't you feel that if you had the option to press ESC or another key to close rather than dragging the mouse pointer all the way up there?
Suppose you did want something like that; you are in luck because you can use LDPlayer's Keyboard Mapping feature to help you do this. Before creating this, you should know that with each key you place, it simulates your touch on the screen when you press the assigned button, so Instead of touching the screen, with Key Mapping, you can execute game options with the keyboard.
So to use Key Mapping, find the keyboard icon from the toolbar right side of the LDPlayer. When you click on it, another window will pop out with different icons on it, drag the icon with the "A" symbols on it to places where you want to click; for example, to skip dialogue, place the key on the place skip option appear and asinine “space bar” as the key and save. Now you can skip conversations easily with the space bar.
Place keys on the main four tabs and assign 1,2,3,4 to them to navigate easily with keys rather than dragging the mouse pointer and clicking on them.
After you automate the Tales of Grimm, you have the total freedom to do whatever you need. But what if you need to play another game, this is where the LDPlayer's Multi-Instance Manager help is required; you can easily create a clone of the LDPlayer and run another game or use your favorite application.
But before running multi-instance, go to LDMultiplayer, click on optimization, and put tick marks to "Disable sound to use less CPU as multiple LDplayers run" and "Use fewer graphics memory and Ram" options if you have a PC with less performance.
Using the latest version of LDPlayer 9, you no longer have to worry about being unable to use high-quality game settings due to your device having lower requirements. Because LDPlayer 9 uses a very powerful graphics rendering technology that optimizes graphics problems such as blurred images, low quality, and red dots. It solves those issues and even allows low-end PC users to run the Tales of Grimm in optimum quality.
Unlike in the old days, you don't have to play games restricted to 90 fps just because it is a mobile game; with the new LDPlayer 9, you can get 120 FPS for any game you like before enabling 120 fps though you have to allocate a little bit more resources than LDPlayer comes with.
First, click the pentagram symbol From the right side of the toolbar to go to the settings of LDPlayer. Then go to the "Advanced tab" and allocate as many resources as possible according to your pc performance; for example, if you have 4 GB ram and your CPU has six cores, give 2 GB of RAM and four cores.
Then move on to the "Game setting" tab of the LDPlayer and put the tick mark on "Enable high frame rate" and set the FPS to 120; if you have a device with good performance, also put the tick mark on "Enable vertical sync to prevent screen tearing" option.
In order to get the best graphics out of your computer, you must first upgrade your graphics card. The graphics driver is the software that enables your operating system and applications to take advantage of your computer's graphical capabilities. For the emulator to render gaming graphics using LDPlayer, your graphics driver must be up-to-date on your computer. The best graphics performance is achievable for the players with an update done to the graphics driver to the newest version.
Here, we will conclude on how to use LDPlayer 9 to enhance your Tales of Grimm experience. We genuinely hope that every player will now be able to go through Tales of Grimm more easily and enjoy it more. The game is continuously evolving and expanding, so if you can think of any new ways to complete the tasks listed here, you shouldn't be scared to try them out; after all, no innovation is ever implemented without failing all the time.