Key Takeaways
- Indiana Jones and the Great Circle lets players earn XP by photographing cats.
- While the opportunities to do so are plentiful, cat pictures are only a minor source of XP in the game.
One Indiana Jones and the Great Circle player was recently pleasantly surprised to learn that the game allows them to earn XP by taking cat pictures. Their discovery promptly made the rounds on social media just as the Indiana Jones and the Great Circle early access period was coming to an end.
The first Indiana Jones game in nearly 15 years—since Zynga’s Facebook-exclusive Indiana Jones Adventure World, released in 2011—has officially been released earlier today, December 9. However, anyone who (pre-)purchased its Digital Premium edition upgrade, priced at $34.99, has been able to play it up to three days early.
Related
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle Answers Decades-Old Lore Question
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle answers a common lore question that fans of the franchise have been asking since the 1980s.
Among these early adopters of Indiana Jones and the Great Circle is Reddit user Dull-Caterpillar3153, who has recently discovered that the game lets them earn XP by photographing cats. Their realization quickly reached the front page of the r/gaming subreddit, garnering thousands of upvotes and hundreds of comments praising this feature. Elaborating on this discovery, the player noted that Indiana Jones and the Great Circle includes many felines that Indy can immortalize in a picture in order to earn XP.
Cat Pictures Only Offer Minor XP Rewards in Indiana Jones and the Great Circle
According to Game Rant’s own testing, photographing cats isn’t a big source of XP in the newly released action adventure. While the game offers opportunities to do so fairly consistently, cat pictures XP rewards tend to be fairly small relative to solving Indiana Jones and the Great Circle‘s puzzles or completing side quests, which the game classifies as “fieldwork.”
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle’s XP System Has Some Curious Peculiarities
While most games with a leveling system and combat tend to combine those two elements together and reward players with XP for defeating enemies, MachineGames’ latest title resists this well-established convention. Instead, combat in Indiana Jones and the Great Circle doesn’t have any intrinsic rewards and simply serves as one of the ways to progress through an area. Confrontation is hence often discouraged, with the only benefit of dispatching enemies being the ability to pick up whatever weapon they were holding. While this can aid in tackling additional foes, it is generally inadvisable, as Indy can easily be overwhelmed when outnumbered.
MachineGames previously estimated that a typical playthrough of Indiana Jones and the Great Circle will be longer than any of its previous games, which would put it in the ballpark of 15 to 20 hours. But seeing how the newly debuted action adventure also offers a plethora of side content, completionists might find themselves playing Indiana Jones and the Great Circle for even longer than that.
Leave a Reply