ARC Raiders Week 10 Trials (Dec. 29) – How to get three stars (Season 2 Week 2)

Stella Montis map in ARC Raiders

A new set of weekly trials is now live in ARC Raiders, and we have one week to complete five different tasks.

This is the second weekly trials of Season 2, and some of the tasks can be pretty challenging. In this guide, we’ll help you quickly get three stars for all five tasks to get the best possible rewards.

ARC Raiders Week 10 Trials guide

Here are the tasks for Week 10 Trials.

  • Throw snowballs at Rocketeers
  • Deal Damage to Shredders
  • Damage flying ARC enemies
  • Open ARC Probes
  • Destroy Fireballs

Throw snowballs at Rocketeers

This is a slightly funny task, but it can be dangerous if you aren’t careful. For starters, you’ll find snowballs on maps with the Cold Snap condition active. You’ll want to get to an elevated building since the snowballs won’t have a long range.

You can throw snowballs in the same way you throw a grenade. However, you’ll want to hit and take cover so that the Rocketeer doesn’t hit you with its rockets. Spots like the Control Tower in Spaceport are an excellent spot to kit and target Rocketeers (if you find one at the spot).

Snowballs don’t do any damage, so they don’t contribute to the third task of this week’s trial.

Deal damage to Shredders

For this task, you’ll want to play in Stella Montis. This map, by far, has the highest spawn rates for Shredders. Shredders are typically behind locked doors and rooms, but they can spawn randomly. They’re relatively complex to take down, and you’ll want to use heavy weapons.

To complete the task, you don’t need to eliminate the Shredder. However, doing so will help you get Shredder Gyros, which are required for completing the Expedition 2 project.

Damage flying ARC enemies

This is the easiest of the five tasks, since flying ARCs are easy to spot. They are found on all maps, and you can take down the likes of Hornets and Wasps as they’re easier targets. However, try to avoid targeting Rocketeers since you’re likely going to die in the process.

Open ARC probes

ARC probes are found randomly across all maps. They don’t do any damage, but make noise when you try to breach and open their inventory. This noise can attract nearby ARCs, so be careful. ARC probes also take relatively longer to breach, but they can provide you with valuable rewards.

Destroy Fireballs

Fireballs aren’t my favorite type of enemies. While they’re easy to eliminate, they often end up jumping you when you expect the least. Ideally, you can find them on all five maps, including Stella Montis. I have spotted them frequently in the residential areas of Dam Battlegrounds, like Pale Residence and Ruby Residence buildings.

To destroy a Fireball, you’ll want to keep distance and wait for it to fire. Its core will be exposed, and usually a couple of shots will do the job. Destroying Fireballs will help you get Fireball Burners, which are required to complete the Flickering Flames project.

The post ARC Raiders Week 10 Trials (Dec. 29) – How to get three stars (Season 2 Week 2) appeared first on Destructoid.

Destiny 2 Edge of Fate key art

To say Destiny 2 had a bad 2025 is quite the understatement, like saying Mint Retrograde and the Praxic Blade are just alright. This year was nothing short of a disaster for Bungie’s flagship title, even with Renegades showing signs of a recovery.

2026 will be a decisive year for Bungie, a studio whose entire 2025 was a make-or-break moment. The developer is under new direction and Marathon is finally releasing. Just keeping Destiny 2 alive isn’t the bar to aim for in 2026, especially given how much it struggled to do so with The Edge of Fate.

There’s a lot I’d love to see change inside the game come 2026. But a positive future for Destiny 2 has to fix the frayed relationship between jaded players and an embattled developer—at the risk of breeding apathy and alienating even more of its fanbase.

Less dependence on the Portal

The Portal was The Edge of Fate‘s main way of engaging with the game, and Destiny 2 struggled for it. Anything that wasn’t in the Portal was essentially useless for leveling up, and boosting your Power was the only way to get higher-quality gear.

The Portal can be a decent way of playing Destiny 2, but it should not be the only way to play the game. For a rich universe, pigeonholing players into a dozen activities that appear in a Netflix-esque menu is about the least interesting way to slice it.

Renegades already started correcting this by offering the Lawless Frontier, and it’s certainly helped keep our adventures in the Sol System far fresher than before.

More gear, destinations, and activities—even if they’re reissued

Renegades‘ praise highlights there is life outside the Portal, and next year is a prime opportunity to reissue loot from older raids and dungeons. Tier-compatible weapons and armor would go a long way toward replayability, especially if they’re not entangled in a messy web of modifiers.

Of course, there’s a lot of work involved in updating weapons’ perk pools and making armor set bonuses, and it may not be viable, but it would give us a reason to redo activities like Duality.

We’d also love to see more room for exploration returning next year. New territories are always welcome, but destinations and old seasonal activities such as The Derelict Leviathan or The Nether are ripe for that kind of adventure, especially in a non-Portal format. And what is the Lawless Frontier if not a timed, Star Wars Nether?

More unlockable cosmetics

That one is, surprisingly, something Bungie has finally been doing after years of fan requests. Nonary Engrams in Rite of the Nine, the New Malpais ornament and unique helmet in Call to Arms, Iridescent Engrams, and Renegades‘ Dark Matter Crystals are remarkable reasons to keep logging in and playing, and we’d love to see more of them going forward.

Iridescent Engrams in particular are an easy, exciting addition due to having meaningful rewards and guaranteeing new items. It’s a wonder Bright Engrams can even drop duplicates, because the only thing more riveting than a purple sparrow you’ll never use is a purple sparrow you’ll never use but already have.

Less greed

The Eververse store has been around Destiny 2 for ages, but The Edge of Fate really made it feel like it was at the forefront. Season passes started having 110 rewards for the equivalent of 150 levels, and it’s hard to forget the unforgivable Gladius set fiasco.

Bungie took a ravishing set of armor and removed it from the (free) Iron Banner PvP mode, only to sell it for premium currency as a new set, presenting a reskin of ancient armor to the mode instead. Fans would have been none the wiser about this shady practice if they hadn’t uncovered (now-deleted) concept art that showed the Gladius set with the Iron Banner logo. Bungie threw a separate would-be Eververse set in the mix, but by then, the damage was clearly done.

And the greed doesn’t just translate to how Bungie handles money, either, but how the studio seemed to want to squeeze every drop of playtime from its community. Bungie’s easiest wins were the times when it reverted The Edge of Fate‘s changes, such as toning down the egregious grind, removing a reset in Renegades, and sunsetting Unstable Cores. The relationship between player and developer isn’t as bad as it was months ago, but it still requires a lot of work. Reimplementing Dawning bounties and being more generous with Bright Dust caps would have been a good gesture.

Creating goodwill and actually building meaningful momentum

We know Bungie isn’t in its best state. We understand it doesn’t have the same workforce it once did, and it can’t deliver the same quantity or quality of content. But instead of owning it, the studio seemed intent on pretending that wasn’t happening.

Its relationship with the community in The Edge of Fate felt almost antagonistic, with predictably awful changes and an inaction that couldn’t have been an accident. Player counts kept dropping, feedback kept piling up, and the community perceived the studio as helpless. Bungie can’t afford that perception again next year.

Community manager Dylan “Dmg_04” Gafner’s infamous “we need to build momentum and maintain it” post in September became nearly a meme in the community, especially after the lukewarm Ash & Iron update the following week. Bungie hasn’t really achieved it still: even with Renegades‘ popular acclaim, the feeling may be closer to a feeble, cautious optimism caused by a fluke rather than an actual impetus forward.

Next year, I hope to see Bungie embrace more of the community that’s been with it through thick and thin. It’s about removing obstacles rather than creating new reasons to play anything else. More communication also helps, especially if that comes accompanied by timely responses that take player feedback into account. Yes, fixing issues in Renegades is good, but fixing them three months earlier, when the game was hemorrhaging players, would have been even better.

Focusing on what’s outside the game

I could write an entire grimoire on the gameplay changes I’d love to see. I’d be happy with Exotics finally being tier five, a system that lets you choose armor sets like Festival of the Lost’s masks, a tuning pass to weapons, an economy overhaul, and far more forgiving caps on Bright Dust from orders next year. But the part where Bungie really has to put in work happens before we even launch Destiny 2.

This is not the time to create any attrition or make players hesitate to open the game. It’s not the moment to leave guardians staring in apathy at the title screen and wonder if it’s worth jumping through all the hoops, like it was in The Edge of Fate.

Instead, it’s about giving players more incentive to keep coming back because they want to, not because they feel they have to. Sure, a lot of it hinges on providing meaningful, quality content for players, but that’s not all it is. Maybe that means cranking up the faucet a little and offering a lot more freebies to newcomers, lapsed players, and veterans alike. Maybe it just means not messing up in decisive moments or loosening the grip. That way, we won’t have to take a loud sigh whenever someone asks if they should start playing.

The post Destiny 2 almost died in 2025. Here’s what we want to see from it next year so it doesn’t happen again appeared first on Destructoid.

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