Enlisted Beginner’s Guide: How to Survive Your First Battles
Enlisted is one of the most exciting World War II shooters on the market today, but let’s be honest—if you’re a beginner, your first matches can feel overwhelming. With tanks rolling in, planes soaring above, and dozens of soldiers clashing across massive maps, it’s easy to get lost and frustrated.
This guide is here to help. Whether you’re storming the beaches of Normandy or defending Moscow, these tips will show you how to survive your first battles and enjoy Enlisted to the fullest.
1. Understand the Squad System
The squad system is what makes Enlisted truly unique. Instead of playing a single soldier, you control an entire squad of AI teammates.
- When your active soldier dies, you can instantly switch to another squad member.
- Each squad has specialized roles—riflemen, engineers, snipers, gunners, or tank crews.
- Squad positioning and tactics matter just as much as your shooting skills.
👉 Beginner tip: Don’t let your AI soldiers wander around exposed. Use cover and give them commands to stay safe. Otherwise, they’ll get wiped out quickly.
2. Learn to Use Cover Effectively
Enlisted rewards smart positioning. Running into open fields is the fastest way to get killed.
- Stay behind walls, sandbags, or buildings whenever possible.
- Move from cover to cover instead of sprinting across open ground.
- Prone and crouch positions reduce your visibility and improve accuracy.
From my experience, 70% of beginner deaths happen because players forget to use cover. Treat every bullet like it’s real—you’ll last much longer.
3. Train With Bolt-Action Rifles
At the start of the game, most of your soldiers will use bolt-action rifles like the Kar98k or Mosin-Nagant. These weapons are slow but powerful.
- Aim for the chest or head—one well-placed shot is better than spraying bullets.
- Practice timing your shots and reloading smartly.
- Use iron sights instead of firing from the hip for better accuracy.
👉 Many beginners hate bolt-actions, but learning them will make you deadly early on.
4. Take Advantage of Engineers
One of the most important roles in Enlisted is the engineer. They can:
- Build rally points (forward spawn locations).
- Construct ammo boxes to resupply your team.
- Set up sandbags, barbed wire, and AT guns.
If you’re new, always keep an engineer in your squad. Nothing feels better than placing a rally point and seeing your teammates spawn safely because of you.
5. Tanks and Planes – Use With Care
Yes, driving a tank or flying a plane looks exciting, but as a beginner, they can be overwhelming.
- Tanks: Always have infantry nearby. If you push alone, you’ll get destroyed by explosives.
- Planes: They’re powerful but difficult to master. Beginners often crash quickly.
👉 My advice: focus on infantry combat first. Once you’re comfortable, then experiment with tanks and planes.
6. Play the Objective
Enlisted is not a typical deathmatch shooter. Winning depends on capturing and holding objectives.
- Always spawn near objectives.
- Don’t camp far away from the action just to farm kills.
- Even defending a capture point with your squad can make the difference between victory and defeat.
As a new player, I often made the mistake of chasing kills instead of playing the objective. Once I switched my mindset, I started winning more battles.
7. Level Up Wisely
Progression in Enlisted can feel grindy, but smart planning helps.
- Focus on leveling one campaign at a time (Normandy, Moscow, Berlin, Pacific, Stalingrad).
- Upgrade squads that you actually enjoy playing.
- Save your silver orders for weapons you really need.
👉 Avoid spreading yourself too thin. Pick a main squad and get strong with it first.
8. Communicate and Work With Your Team
While Enlisted can be played solo, teamwork is the real key to victory.
- Use voice chat or quick commands to alert teammates.
- Support your allies by building rally points or giving cover fire.
- Stick close to teammates instead of running off alone.
The first time I played with a coordinated squad, the difference was night and day. We captured objectives much faster and overwhelmed the enemy.
9. Don’t Ignore Training Matches
Enlisted offers training matches where you can practice without pressure. Take advantage of them.
- Test out new weapons.
- Learn to control tanks and planes.
- Experiment with building fortifications as an engineer.
It might feel boring at first, but practicing here will save you from frustration in real matches.
10. Common Beginner Mistakes to Avoid
- ❌ Running into the open without cover.
- ❌ Ignoring engineers and rally points.
- ❌ Spending silver orders on weak weapons too early.
- ❌ Forgetting to play the objective.
- ❌ Trying to fly planes without practice.
If you avoid these, your first battles will go much smoother.
My Personal Beginner Journey
When I first started Enlisted, I died a lot. I sprinted across fields, ignored objectives, and wasted my resources. But once I learned to slow down, use cover, and rely on my squad, the game transformed.
The moment I built my first rally point and watched my team use it to hold a capture zone—that was when I truly understood the magic of Enlisted.
Final Thoughts
Enlisted is not an easy game, but that’s what makes it rewarding. Your first battles will be tough, but with patience and strategy, you’ll quickly improve.
To recap:
- Master the squad system.
- Use cover wisely.
- Play the objective, not just for kills.
- Train with engineers and rally points.
If you stick with it, Enlisted will give you some of the most intense and realistic WWII battles you’ll ever experience in a game.⭐ My Beginner Rating: 9/10 – Steep learning curve, but incredibly satisfying once you get the hang of it.