How To Beat The Forsaken Giant in Once Human

The Forsaken Giant is the moment Once Human stops pulling punches. Up until now, you can brute-force most encounters with decent gear and passable aim, but this boss exists to check whether you actually understand positioning, stamina management, and sustained DPS under pressure. It’s not just a damage sponge; it’s a mechanical gate designed to punish sloppy play and underprepared builds.

You’ll feel it immediately when the fight starts. The arena limits your movement options, the Giant’s hitbox covers half the screen, and every mistake costs a massive chunk of health. This is where many mid-game runs stall, not because the boss is unfair, but because it exposes habits that worked earlier and no longer do.

Where to Find the Forsaken Giant

The Forsaken Giant is encountered in a contaminated late-mid-game zone tied directly to main progression and high-value resource unlocks. You can’t skip it without stalling your account’s power curve, since key crafting materials and progression systems are locked behind its defeat. If you’re under-leveled or walking in with mismatched gear, the game will make that painfully clear.

The arena itself is deliberately hostile. Limited cover, uneven terrain, and wide-open sightlines mean you can’t kite endlessly or hide to reset aggro. Whether solo or in co-op, you’re forced to engage the boss head-on and respect its space control.

Why the Forsaken Giant Exists as a Progression Check

This boss is designed to test three things simultaneously: your damage consistency, your defensive planning, and your ability to read animations. The Forsaken Giant hits hard enough that tanking is not an option, but its health pool is large enough that burst-only builds fall apart without sustained uptime. If your build relies on cooldown dumping and praying for crit RNG, this fight will expose it fast.

It also pressures your stamina economy. Dodging every swing without thinking will drain you dry, while mistimed rolls get clipped by lingering hitboxes. The fight rewards controlled movement, proper I-frame usage, and knowing when to reposition instead of panic-dodging.

Core Attack Patterns and Phase Behavior

The Forsaken Giant revolves around slow but devastating melee attacks with deceptive reach. Wide horizontal swings punish players who stay glued to its legs, while overhead slams create shockwaves that catch greedy DPS attempts. These attacks are telegraphed, but the wind-ups are intentionally long to bait early dodges.

As the fight progresses, the Giant becomes more aggressive, chaining attacks with shorter recovery windows. Environmental pressure increases, and safe zones shrink, forcing you to actively manage spacing instead of circling mindlessly. This is where many players lose control of the fight and get snowballed by consecutive hits.

Why Players Get Stuck Here

Most players hit a wall because their loadout is optimized for clearing mobs, not extended boss encounters. Low armor penetration, poor elemental synergy, or relying on glass-cannon setups turns the fight into a war of attrition you cannot win. Healing items alone won’t save you if your DPS can’t keep pace with the boss’s phase scaling.

Co-op doesn’t automatically fix this either. Poor aggro control and overlapping dodges can make the arena more chaotic, not safer. The Forsaken Giant demands coordination, role clarity, and builds that actually complement each other rather than stacking raw damage and hoping for the best.

Recommended Player Level, Power Score, and Loadout Expectations

By the time you’re consistently reading the Forsaken Giant’s animations, the next wall players hit is raw preparedness. This fight is tuned to punish under-leveled characters and half-finished builds, even if your mechanics are solid. Going in “almost ready” turns every mistake into a run-ending hit.

Minimum Player Level and Power Score

Solo players should be at or near the upper end of the current regional progression curve before attempting this fight. If you’re under-leveled, your damage falloff becomes obvious during later phases, where the Giant’s aggression ramps up but your DPS plateaus. You want enough levels that your core passives, weapon traits, and defensive nodes are fully online.

Power Score matters more here than in most world encounters. Treat the Forsaken Giant as a soft gear check; if your Power Score is significantly below what elite zone enemies expect, your attacks will feel like chip damage. In co-op, you can flex this slightly, but at least one player needs to comfortably meet the intended Power Score to anchor the fight.

Weapon Expectations and Damage Types

Sustained DPS beats burst every time in this encounter. Weapons with consistent uptime, manageable recoil, and predictable damage windows outperform high-risk, high-RNG builds. If your weapon requires perfect crit chains or stationary channeling, the Giant’s constant pressure will break your rotation.

Elemental and armor-penetration synergies are especially valuable. The Forsaken Giant’s size comes with thick defensive scaling, so flat damage bonuses fall off hard. Prioritize weapons that can reliably apply debuffs or shred defenses over flashy peak numbers you can’t maintain.

Armor, Mods, and Defensive Thresholds

You do not need to be a tank, but you cannot be fragile. Your armor should be tuned to survive at least one partial hit without instantly forcing a full retreat. Lingering shockwaves and clipped hitboxes will happen, and your build needs margin for error.

Mods that reduce stamina costs, improve dodge recovery, or mitigate heavy-hit damage shine here. Raw health stacking helps, but mitigation and stamina efficiency are what keep you alive across long phases. If your stamina bar empties after two panic dodges, your loadout is not ready.

Consumables and Prep That Actually Matter

Healing items are mandatory, but regen-over-time consumables are more valuable than instant heals. The fight’s pacing gives you windows to recover safely if you don’t overextend. Buffs that enhance stamina recovery, armor penetration, or sustained damage provide more value than short burst boosts.

Do not underestimate repair kits and durability buffers. The Forsaken Giant is a long fight, and weapon degradation mid-encounter can quietly sabotage an otherwise clean run. Enter fully repaired and over-prepared, not hoping to scrape by.

Solo vs Co-op Loadout Expectations

Solo players should build for self-sufficiency. You need balanced damage, survivability, and stamina control because there is no room to offload responsibility. If your build relies on someone else pulling aggro or applying debuffs, it will collapse the moment pressure spikes.

In co-op, roles matter more than raw numbers. One player should consistently control aggro and positioning, while others focus on sustained DPS and safe flanking. Overlapping glass-cannon builds create chaos, not efficiency, and the Giant will exploit every misstep.

Understanding the Forsaken Giant’s Core Mechanics and Weak Points

Once your build is locked in, the real fight begins with understanding how the Forsaken Giant actually functions. This boss is less about reaction speed and more about pattern recognition, stamina discipline, and exploiting predictable openings. Players who try to brute-force DPS without respecting its mechanics usually hit a wall fast.

The Forsaken Giant is designed to punish greed. Its massive health pool masks the fact that it has very clear internal rules for how it attacks, repositions, and exposes weak points. Mastering those rules turns the encounter from overwhelming to methodical.

Attack Patterns and Hitbox Behavior

Most of the Giant’s damage comes from wide, delayed swings and ground-based shockwaves rather than direct hits. These attacks have deceptively large hitboxes that extend beyond the visual impact zone, which is why clipped damage feels so common. Dodging late is safer than dodging early, since many swings have a lingering active frame.

Vertical attacks are the most dangerous because they chain into follow-ups. A slammed fist or weapon strike often leads directly into an AoE pulse, catching players who rush back in too quickly. Treat every heavy attack as a two-step sequence, not a single dodge check.

Phase Transitions and Escalation

The Forsaken Giant operates on health-based phases rather than timers. At roughly 70 percent and again near 35 percent health, its behavior shifts noticeably. Attack chains get longer, recovery windows shrink, and shockwave frequency increases.

During later phases, the Giant also becomes more aggressive with repositioning. It will rotate faster to track targets and punish players who tunnel its back legs for too long. This is where stamina management becomes more important than raw DPS, especially for melee builds.

Core Weak Points and Damage Windows

The Giant’s primary weak point is its upper torso, specifically the chest and head region during recovery animations. These zones take increased damage when the boss is locked into a missed heavy swing or finishing a slam. Consistent, controlled damage here outperforms risky attempts to stay glued to its legs.

Secondary weak points appear briefly after certain attacks, especially ground slams that leave the Giant momentarily stationary. These windows are short but reliable, making them ideal for sustained fire or status application rather than burst dumping. If you are reloading or stamina-starved during these moments, you are losing free damage.

Elemental and Status Vulnerabilities

The Forsaken Giant has strong resistance to raw physical burst but noticeably weaker tolerance for stacking debuffs. Defense shred, slow, and stamina-drain effects dramatically increase your effective DPS over time. This is why earlier build choices around debuff consistency matter more here than anywhere else.

Elemental damage that applies lingering effects performs better than single-hit procs. Damage-over-time continues ticking during repositioning and attack animations, smoothing out phase transitions. Avoid builds that rely on RNG-heavy crit spikes, as the Giant’s armor scaling dampens their payoff.

Positioning Rules That Decide the Fight

Optimal positioning is slightly off-center in front of the Giant, not directly underneath or directly behind. This angle gives you clearer reads on arm swings while keeping escape paths open. Standing too close to its feet increases the chance of eating invisible shockwave edges.

In co-op, spreading out slightly reduces the chance of overlapping shockwaves and erratic aggro flips. One player baiting frontal attacks creates cleaner damage windows for everyone else. Solo players should constantly micro-adjust their position after every dodge to reset spacing and avoid cornering themselves.

Why Most Wipes Happen

Most failed attempts are not due to low damage, but stamina collapse. Panic dodging during chained attacks leaves players unable to capitalize on recovery windows. Once stamina is gone, even perfect knowledge of mechanics cannot save the run.

The second most common failure point is overcommitting during phase transitions. Players see a health threshold approaching and try to force a push, only to get caught by an empowered attack pattern. Respect the transition, reset your position, and let the fight breathe before re-engaging.

Phase Breakdown: Attack Patterns, Transitions, and Environmental Hazards

Understanding the Forsaken Giant’s phases is what turns this fight from a stamina-draining wall into a controlled damage check. Each phase introduces new attack chains and environmental pressure, but the Giant remains predictable if you respect its transitions. This is where disciplined positioning and resource management finally pay off.

Phase One: Establishing Tempo

The opening phase is deceptively simple and exists to test your spacing. The Giant relies on wide horizontal arm sweeps, slow overhead slams, and short-range shockwaves that punish players standing directly under its hitbox. Every attack in this phase has generous wind-up, making it ideal for learning dodge timing and stamina pacing.

Your primary goal here is not damage racing, but debuff setup. Apply slows, defense shred, and damage-over-time effects early and keep them rolling. These ticks will carry value later when movement becomes more restricted and DPS windows shrink.

Avoid attacking from directly behind. The Giant frequently pivots with low-telegraph backhand swings that clip greedy players. Stay slightly off-center in front to maintain visibility and consistent dodge angles.

First Transition: Enrage Pulse

At roughly two-thirds health, the Forsaken Giant triggers its first transition with a ground slam followed by a delayed shockwave. This shockwave expands outward unevenly, with deceptive edges that extend farther than the visual effect suggests. Dodging late or trying to iframe through it often results in partial hits and stamina loss.

Back off as soon as the health threshold is crossed. Do not attempt to squeeze damage during this animation. Reset your stamina, reload if needed, and re-enter once the shockwave dissipates.

Phase Two: Chained Pressure and Area Denial

Phase two introduces faster attack chains and environmental hazards. The Giant begins chaining arm sweeps into stomp combos, leaving lingering ground cracks that deal damage and apply slow if you linger. These zones restrict movement and punish panic dodging.

This is where positioning discipline becomes critical. Kite the Giant laterally rather than retreating backward, keeping escape paths clear. Solo players should circle consistently, while co-op groups should fan out to avoid overlapping hazard zones.

Damage windows now appear after longer attack chains rather than single swings. Commit to short, efficient bursts and disengage immediately. Overextending here is the fastest way to lose stamina and control of the fight.

Second Transition: Arena Disruption

At around one-third health, the Giant disrupts the arena with repeated slams that spawn multiple shockwave lines and unstable terrain patches. These hazards stack quickly and can corner players who are not actively repositioning.

This transition is lethal to players tunnel-visioning the boss. Your focus should shift entirely to survival for several seconds. Identify safe ground, conserve stamina, and wait for the pattern to end before reapplying pressure.

Phase Three: Desperation and Punish Windows

The final phase is aggressive but more honest. The Forsaken Giant gains speed and shorter recovery times, but its attack patterns remain consistent. Missed swings and failed grabs now leave longer punish windows if you are positioned correctly.

Environmental hazards persist, shrinking safe zones and forcing constant movement. This is where lingering damage effects shine, continuing to tick while you reposition. Co-op teams should assign one player to bait frontal attacks, creating clean back-angle damage opportunities.

Victory here comes from restraint. Dodge with intention, strike only during guaranteed windows, and let debuffs do the heavy lifting. If you reach this phase with stamina intact, the Giant is already losing the war of attrition.

Optimal Weapons, Mods, and Builds for Consistent Giant Damage

With survival fundamentals locked in, the fight now becomes a numbers game. The Forsaken Giant does not reward bursty, reckless DPS. It rewards builds that maintain pressure while respecting stamina, spacing, and long reposition windows.

Your goal is consistent damage uptime during punish windows, not chasing max crit screenshots. Weapons, mods, and passives that keep dealing damage while you move are disproportionately powerful here.

Best Weapon Types for the Forsaken Giant

High-mobility ranged weapons dominate this encounter. Assault rifles and tactical SMGs with controllable recoil let you chip weak points without committing to long animations. Shotguns and heavy melee builds struggle to stay in optimal range once the arena fills with hazards.

Precision rifles can work, but only if you are disciplined with positioning. The Giant’s hitbox is massive, yet its weak points shift constantly during swings and stomps. Missing shots during punish windows is a direct DPS loss that slower weapons cannot recover from.

Avoid slow-charge weapons and stationary channeling tools. Any weapon that roots you in place will get punished during late-phase stomp chains, even if the raw damage looks appealing on paper.

Elemental and Damage-Type Priorities

The Forsaken Giant is highly susceptible to damage-over-time effects. Burn, corrosion, and bleed effects continue ticking during repositioning, which directly complements the fight’s movement-heavy pacing. These effects also remain active during arena disruption phases when direct damage is unsafe.

Explosive damage is inconsistent here. The Giant’s armor scaling reduces its effectiveness, and splash damage often fails to connect cleanly due to terrain deformation. Prioritize elemental consistency over burst volatility.

If your build supports debuff amplification, this is one of the best fights to lean into it. Stacked damage-over-time effects can account for a massive portion of your total DPS by phase three.

Must-Have Mods for Sustained DPS

Stamina efficiency mods are non-negotiable. Reduced dodge cost, stamina-on-hit, or faster stamina regeneration directly translate into more damage windows. Running out of stamina during a punish window is a larger DPS loss than running a slightly weaker weapon.

Weak-point amplification mods outperform raw damage bonuses. The Giant’s recovery animations expose consistent hit zones, and multiplying those moments yields better results than flat increases. Mods that extend debuff duration are especially strong, keeping damage active while you disengage.

Defensive mods should focus on mitigation, not healing. Damage reduction while sprinting or after dodging keeps you alive without forcing downtime. Reactive healing often triggers too late during chained slam patterns.

Solo Builds vs Co-Op Loadouts

Solo players should prioritize self-sufficiency. Hybrid builds that combine steady ranged damage, stamina sustain, and at least one persistent debuff perform best. You need to survive long stretches without guaranteed aggro control or revive safety nets.

In co-op, specialization wins. One player should run a debuff-focused build, stacking burn or corrosion and refreshing it consistently. Another player can lean into sustained weak-point DPS, capitalizing on extended openings created by aggro manipulation.

Tank-oriented builds are viable but should not overcommit. Aggro baiting works best when the tank can still contribute damage while repositioning. A stationary tank simply accelerates arena saturation and limits team movement.

Recommended Passive Traits and Synergies

Passives that trigger on dodge, sprint, or reposition are extremely valuable here. The fight’s rhythm naturally activates these bonuses, effectively rewarding correct play with free damage or stamina returns. Traits that trigger on kill or shield break offer no value in this encounter.

Look for synergies that convert movement into damage. Examples include increased damage after dodging, elemental procs on reload, or stacking buffs during sustained combat. The Forsaken Giant is a marathon, and these effects scale upward as the fight drags on.

Avoid RNG-heavy passives. Crit-fishing builds feel unreliable when damage windows are short and precious. Consistency always outperforms volatility against a boss that punishes mistakes so brutally.

Build Mistakes That Kill Your DPS

Overstacking offense at the cost of stamina is the most common failure point. If you cannot dodge twice in succession during phase three, your build is incomplete. Dead players deal zero damage, regardless of their theoretical DPS ceiling.

Another trap is leaning too heavily into burst cooldowns. The Giant’s punish windows do not always align with your abilities, and holding damage for the perfect moment often results in lost uptime. Builds that deal damage whenever the boss makes a mistake are far more reliable.

Finally, ignoring debuff upkeep is a silent DPS killer. Letting burn or corrosion fall off during repositioning wastes the fight’s natural flow. Refresh effects early, then move, not the other way around.

Arena Positioning and Movement: How to Control Space and Avoid One-Shots

Once your build is locked in, the Forsaken Giant becomes a positioning check as much as a DPS race. This fight is won by controlling space, not by standing your ground. Poor movement compounds every mistake, turning manageable attacks into instant deaths.

The arena slowly punishes indecision. Every slam, shockwave, and thrown debris narrows safe zones, forcing players who hesitate into bad trades. If you treat movement as a core mechanic rather than a reaction, the Giant’s deadliest attacks become predictable and survivable.

Understand the Arena’s Soft Boundaries

The arena has no visible walls that kill you, but it does have soft death zones. Corners fill with lingering damage effects faster, and escape angles vanish when debris spawns overlap. Fighting too close to the edges limits dodge vectors and increases the chance of getting clipped by wide hitboxes.

Your default position should be mid-range, slightly off-center. This gives you room to rotate clockwise or counterclockwise depending on the Giant’s facing. Staying central also prevents forced camera swings that can break dodge timing during multi-hit combos.

Avoid hard backpedaling. The Forsaken Giant’s forward momentum outpaces sprint speed, meaning retreating in a straight line often results in getting tagged anyway. Lateral movement is always safer, even when it feels counterintuitive.

Phase One: Establishing the Movement Rhythm

In phase one, the Giant’s attacks are slower but deceptively wide. The overhead slam and ground pound both have generous hitboxes that extend slightly behind the impact point. Dodging directly backward is inconsistent here and frequently results in chip damage or full knockdowns.

Dodge diagonally toward the Giant’s non-dominant side, usually its left. This slips you past the shockwave while placing you near the leg weak points for free damage. Even ranged builds should step in briefly, tag weak points, then roll back out.

Use this phase to set the tempo. Practice dodge timing instead of panic rolling, and conserve stamina by walking between attacks. Players who sprint nonstop early often enter phase two already resource-starved.

Phase Two: Managing Space as the Arena Breaks Down

Phase two introduces chained attacks and area denial effects that punish static play. The Giant’s double slam followed by a sweeping arm attack is the most common one-shot sequence. Surviving it requires preemptive movement, not reaction dodges.

As soon as the first slam lands, rotate laterally instead of dodging immediately. The second slam tracks your last known position, so delayed movement forces it to miss entirely. Save your dodge for the sweep, which has a longer active hitbox and catches early rolls.

This is also where co-op positioning matters most. Teammates should never stack behind the same leg or flank. Spread aggro angles force the Giant to rotate more often, creating natural DPS windows and reducing overlapping damage zones.

Phase Three: Constant Motion or Death

Phase three is where most wipes occur, not because of damage output, but because the arena becomes claustrophobic. Shockwaves persist longer, debris spawns faster, and the Giant chains attacks with minimal downtime. Standing still for more than a second is a mistake.

Treat the arena like a rotating track. Always be moving in one direction unless a specific attack forces a reversal. This keeps your camera stable, your dodge timing consistent, and prevents getting boxed in by environmental hazards.

One-shots in this phase usually come from stamina mismanagement. Never dodge twice unless absolutely necessary. If you are forced into double dodges, your positioning five seconds earlier was already wrong.

Solo vs Co-Op Movement Priorities

Solo players must play tighter and closer. Staying near the Giant’s legs allows faster access to weak points and shorter dodge distances. Solo positioning is about minimizing travel time between safety and damage.

In co-op, ranged players should anchor the outer mid-range while melee rotates underneath. This split reduces erratic boss movement and prevents sudden camera snaps that cause missed dodges. Tanks should kite in shallow arcs, not circles, to avoid dragging danger zones across the team.

Communication matters here. Call out when you’re about to reposition aggressively, especially during phase transitions. Unannounced movement often causes the Giant to spin and wipe players who were mid-animation.

Camera Control Is Part of Movement

Many deaths blamed on bad RNG are actually camera failures. Lock-on can be useful early, but it becomes a liability when the Giant jumps or slams near the screen edge. Manual camera control gives you better read on attack wind-ups and shockwave spread.

Adjust camera sensitivity slightly higher than default. Faster turns help track sudden rotations without overcorrecting. If you lose visual on the Giant, stop attacking immediately and reposition until you regain line of sight.

Movement is information. Every step, dodge, and sprint should give you better data about what the Giant is doing next. Master that, and the fight stops feeling unfair and starts feeling controlled.

Step-by-Step Solo Strategy: Safely Breaking Armor and Managing Phases

Once your movement discipline is locked in, the Forsaken Giant becomes a problem of execution rather than survival. Solo success hinges on breaking armor efficiently without overcommitting, then cleanly transitioning between phases without bleeding stamina or health.

This fight punishes greed more than low DPS. Your goal is to create safe damage windows, not force them.

Step 1: Identify Armor Zones and Commit to One Side

The Giant’s armor plates are not equal. The leg and hip plating on the side opposite its weapon arm is consistently safer and easier to manage solo. Attacks from this side have longer wind-ups and fewer overlapping hitboxes.

Pick a side early and stay there. Constantly swapping sides increases camera strain and makes stomp patterns harder to read. Consistency turns chaotic animations into predictable loops.

Step 2: Bait Attacks Before Damaging Armor

Never open by attacking armor cold. Force an attack first, ideally a ground slam or forward sweep, then punish during recovery. Armor damage dealt outside of recovery frames often leads to trading hits, which is never worth it solo.

After a baited slam, you have roughly two seconds of safe uptime. Use this window for focused armor damage, then disengage before the follow-up stomp or backhand.

Step 3: Break Armor in Layers, Not All at Once

Each armor plate has internal break thresholds. You do not need to fully shatter a plate in one window. Two to three controlled damage cycles is safer and more consistent than forcing a full break.

Watch for visual cracking and debris. Once the plate shows visible damage, shift priority to survival until the next clean opening. Overstaying for the final hit is the most common cause of deaths here.

Step 4: Phase One Management – Slow and Surgical

In phase one, the Giant favors wide, readable attacks with generous recovery. This is your safest armor-breaking phase and where most of your progress should happen.

Avoid using cooldown-heavy abilities here unless they directly accelerate armor break. Saving burst tools for later phases gives you margin when the fight speeds up and mistakes are punished harder.

Step 5: Phase Transition Awareness

The transition into phase two is marked by a brief roar and posture shift. This is not a free damage window. Back off immediately and top off stamina.

Many solo wipes happen here because players try to squeeze in one last hit. The Giant’s first phase-two action often chains into an AoE stomp that catches greedy players mid-animation.

Step 6: Phase Two – Maintain Broken Armor Pressure

With armor partially or fully broken, your damage skyrockets, but so does the Giant’s aggression. Attack strings become faster, and tracking improves.

Stick tighter to the legs than before. Shorter dodge distances reduce stamina drain and keep you inside dead zones where certain sweeps whiff entirely. This phase rewards confidence, not panic rolling.

Step 7: Use Weak Points, Not Raw DPS

Once armor is broken, exposed weak points take significantly increased damage. Aim deliberately rather than spraying attacks. Precision here shortens the most dangerous part of the fight.

If you’re running a build with status effects or armor shred, this is where they shine. Apply effects during recovery frames only, then disengage cleanly.

Step 8: Final Phase – Respect the Enrage

At low health, the Forsaken Giant gains faster recovery and more frequent shockwaves. This is not a burn phase unless you have absolute control.

Prioritize survival over damage. One safe hit per opening is enough. Let impatience kill the boss, not you.

Mastering this step-by-step flow turns the fight into a controlled dismantling rather than a DPS race. The Giant doesn’t overwhelm you with randomness; it overwhelms players who stop respecting its phases.

Co-Op Tactics and Role Assignments for Fast, Clean Kills

Once you understand the Forsaken Giant’s phases and punish windows, co-op turns the fight from a war of attrition into a controlled execution. The key isn’t stacking raw DPS, but assigning clear roles that manipulate aggro, stamina pressure, and weak point uptime.

Uncoordinated groups wipe faster than solos because overlapping movement pulls the Giant’s hitboxes across the arena. Clean kills come from discipline, spacing, and knowing exactly who is allowed to be greedy.

Role 1: Primary Aggro Controller (Tank or High-Defense Bruiser)

One player must intentionally hold aggro at all times. This role positions directly in front of the Giant, baiting stomps, overhead slams, and cone shockwaves.

The goal isn’t damage, it’s predictability. By keeping the Giant facing one direction, you lock its tracking and prevent sudden spin attacks that punish flankers.

High stamina regen, damage reduction perks, and reliable I-frame dodges matter more than DPS here. If aggro drops, the fight immediately becomes unstable.

Role 2: Armor Break Specialist

This player focuses almost exclusively on legs and armored zones during phase one. Their job is to accelerate the armor break cycle while staying off the Giant’s frontal hitbox.

Position slightly behind or diagonal to the legs. Never cross directly behind the Giant unless the aggro holder has just baited a committed slam.

Weapons or builds with armor shred, impact damage, or stagger bonuses shine here. Burning cooldowns early is correct for this role, as faster armor break shortens the most dangerous phase.

Role 3: Weak Point DPS (Burst or Precision Builds)

Once armor breaks, this player becomes the primary damage engine. Weak point DPS should only engage during confirmed recovery frames, not mid-combo.

Stay patient. One clean burst per opening outperforms constant chip damage that drains stamina and invites mistakes.

Precision weapons, crit-focused builds, or status-triggered burst effects are ideal. Save everything for exposed weak points, especially during phase two when damage windows shrink.

Role 4: Utility and Control (Optional but Extremely Strong)

In four-player groups, a utility role trivializes chaos. This player focuses on debuffs, stamina pressure, healing support, or crowd control effects that slow recovery.

They float between roles, plugging gaps when someone gets clipped or forced to disengage. Smart utility play prevents wipes during phase transitions and enrage spikes.

This role should never tunnel vision damage. Awareness is their real contribution.

Positioning Rules That Prevent 90 Percent of Co-Op Deaths

Never stack players on the same leg. The Giant’s sweeps and shockwaves scale in danger when multiple hitboxes overlap.

Maintain a loose triangle around the boss: aggro in front, armor breaker to one side, DPS on the opposite flank. This spacing forces predictable attack paths and preserves stamina.

If you’re not actively attacking, you should be repositioning or recovering stamina. Standing still is how shockwaves catch multiple players.

Phase Transition Discipline in Co-Op

When the Giant roars and shifts posture, everyone disengages. No exceptions. Even one player greedily attacking can pull aggro and chain an AoE into the group.

Use this moment to reload, heal, and reset spacing. Co-op fights are won between phases, not during them.

Calling out transitions verbally or via pings dramatically reduces random deaths. Communication here matters more than damage.

Enrage Phase: Slow Down to Finish Faster

In the final phase, co-op teams often wipe because multiple players try to burn simultaneously. This causes overlapping dodges, stamina depletion, and missed I-frames.

Return to role discipline. Aggro holder controls the pace, DPS attacks only after confirmed recovery, and utility watches for panic situations.

If everyone survives, the boss dies. If one player panics, the Giant capitalizes immediately.

Common Mistakes, Recovery Tips, and Post-Fight Rewards

Even teams that understand the Forsaken Giant’s mechanics still wipe due to small, repeatable errors. Cleaning these up is the fastest way to turn a frustrating wall into a consistent farm.

Overcommitting During False Openings

The Giant baits greed constantly, especially after leg slams and missed grabs. Many players mistake recovery animations for safe DPS windows and get clipped by delayed shockwaves or backhand swipes.

If you can’t finish your combo and dodge with stamina left, you stayed too long. One clean hit is better than trading damage, because the Giant always wins trades.

Ignoring Stamina Economy

Running out of stamina is the number one cause of deaths in both solo and co-op. Sprinting constantly, panic dodging, or rolling twice when one I-frame would suffice puts you in kill range.

Treat stamina like a cooldown, not a resource to dump. Walk when you can, dodge only confirmed attacks, and disengage early instead of reacting late.

Poor Camera Control and Lock-On Abuse

Hard-locking the camera during close-range combat causes players to lose awareness of ground effects and delayed AoEs. This is especially deadly during phase two when shockwaves chain.

Manually control the camera when fighting near the legs. Seeing the ground and the Giant’s shoulders tells you more than watching his torso ever will.

Recovery Tips When Things Go Wrong

If you get clipped, do not immediately re-engage. Back off, heal, reload, and reset your stamina before re-entering the fight.

In co-op, a single player disengaging is not a failure state. Surviving stabilizes aggro patterns and prevents the Giant from entering erratic movement loops that punish the entire group.

Salvaging Near-Wipe Scenarios

When one or two players go down, stop attacking. Kite the Giant, force predictable swings, and wait for revive windows after slam attacks or roars.

Trying to burn the boss while teammates are down usually triggers enrage pressure faster than you can handle. Control first, damage second.

Post-Fight Rewards and Why This Boss Matters

Defeating the Forsaken Giant rewards high-tier crafting materials, mutation components, and a strong chance at rare mod drops tied to armor-breaking and stamina efficiency builds.

More importantly, this fight is a skill check. If you can consistently clear the Giant, you’re ready for the game’s most punishing world bosses and late-game zones.

Final Takeaway

The Forsaken Giant isn’t about raw DPS. It’s about discipline, spacing, and knowing when not to attack.

Master those fundamentals here, and Once Human’s endgame stops feeling unfair and starts feeling earned.

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