How You Get Stronger in Golden Tides

SHUD as a level 1 Crook and Level 100 Mafia Boss.

Hey pirates,

we've been heads down on some major system changes, and this one's a big deal. Today we're talking about how you actually get stronger during a match, and why we tore it all down and rebuilt it from scratch. Let's get into it.


Why We Rethought This

Here's something that happens in pretty much every MOBA. You queue up, you load in, and before you've even moved your character you already know exactly what you're buying. Maybe you looked it up. Maybe a plugin told you. Maybe you just memorized it three seasons ago and never changed.

And look, that's not a bad thing on its own. Those games are great. But it does mean that for a huge number of players, one of the core systems in the game isn't really a system they engage with.

We kept coming back to this question: what if your build actually responded to the match you're playing, even if you aren’t a challenger Nunu OTP? Not the match you theorycrafted for last night, but the one happening right now. The one where the enemy team is running double frontline and your usual plan isn't going to cut it.

That's what we built toward.


The Approach

We broke progression into layers. Each one gives you a different kind of decision at a different point in the match, and none of them require you to have a spreadsheet open in your second monitor.

The goal was simple. Every choice should feel like a real choice, not a solved problem. And you should be reacting to what's happening in your game, not following a script.

Here's how the layers work.


Talents: Your Hero Evolves With You

As you level up during a match, you unlock Talents. These are hero-specific choices that change how your abilities actually work.

This isn't "your numbers get bigger." This is "your ability does something fundamentally different now."

Every hero has a talent tree with real branching decisions. You pick one talent per tier, and those choices stick for the rest of the match. Do you want Ashar Sharp's movement speed passive to apply to his allies too? Do you want Harrison's Flintlock Shot to deal a little less damage but have two charges? Oakfall's shield to reflect damage, or his push to slow enemies and mess with their cooldowns?

These aren't small tweaks. They change how your hero feels to play. And because you're making these choices as the match unfolds, you can adapt to what you're actually dealing with instead of locking in a plan before the game starts.

We want every player to have that moment where they find the talent combo that just clicks for them. Where you go "oh, THIS is how I play this character." And then next game, maybe you try something completely different because the situation calls for it.

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Traits and Masteries: Building for This Match

Gold is your other progression resource, and it feeds into two connected systems.

Traits are your core stat growth. There are seven trait lanes, things like Attack Damage, Ability Power, Max HP, Cooldown Reduction. You invest gold into them throughout the match and your stats grow. Simple.

But here's where it gets interesting. You can't max everything. Going deep in one lane gets expensive, and spreading too thin means you're not specialized enough to make an impact when it matters. So you're always making a call: do I go wide or do I go deep? Do I round myself out or do I double down on what's working?

Masteries build on top of Traits. As you hit milestones in your trait lanes, you earn Mastery Points, which you spend on powerful conditional passives. These aren't stat boosts. They're playstyle modifiers. They reward you for playing a certain way, for reading the game state and adapting.

Most players will pick up one or two Masteries in a match. Maybe three if the game goes long. Every one of them is a commitment, so you want to make sure it's the right call for this specific game.

The key word there is "this specific game." We didn't want a world where there's a solved Mastery build for each hero. We wanted a world where you look at what's happening across the map and think "okay, given what they're running, I need this." 

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Items: Moments, Not Builds

This is probably the biggest departure from what you'd expect.

Items in Golden Tides are tactical. They're consumables, potions, temporary tools. They're the thing you buy because you need it right now, for this fight, for this play. Not because it's the third item in your six-slot build path.

You'll grab health potions and invisibility potions from the standard shop. But here's where it gets fun. Each island vendor across the map has their own unique inventory. Powerful items that only one player can buy per match, first come first served. And some vendors might be carrying Legendary items, gated behind boss tokens you earn from taking down the big threats on the map.

You can see from the map whether a vendor has a Legendary available. But you can't see what it is until you actually go there. Which means scouting matters. Routing matters. Controlling territory isn't just about fights, it's about access to the stuff that can swing them.

Items are how the map becomes part of your power progression. They're the reason it matters where you are, not just how much gold you have.

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What This All Adds Up To

Here's what we're going for. You load into a Golden Tides match. You pick your hero. And from there, everything about how you get stronger is shaped by what actually happens in that game.

Your Talents evolve your hero based on what you need as the match progresses. Your Traits let you invest in the stats that matter for this fight. Your Masteries let you adapt your playstyle to what you're up against. And your Items give you tactical tools tied to where you are on the map and what risks you're willing to take.

No two matches should feel the same. Decisions you make should genuinely be responsive to the game you're in. That's the goal. Real decisions, in the moment, that change how every match plays out.

We think that's way more fun than a checklist.


More soon, 

Anomie