As a first-person shooter, if you don’t have any ammo inStalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl, you won’t be doing much shooting. The game’s economy is also such that you’re often better off spending your hard-earned money on upgrades, healing items, and repairs than ammo. Knowing where and how to get excess ammo is therefore paramount, especially on higher difficulties.

It’s lucky, then, that amassing huge piles of ammo is fairly easy, even if the quality of the ammo might be lacking. There’s no hack to getting massive stacks of the best ammo in the game, but neither is it difficult to do.There are more than enough enemies out in the world more than willing to part with their bullets, and several other simple methods of collecting the ammunition you need to progress.

The store screen in Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl.

Buy It

The obvious answer, yes, butthere’s no more consistent way to get ammo in the Zone than to visit a settlement and buy it. Every weapon merchant in Stalker 2 will have several stacks of ammo of various kinds, with the more remote and dangerous-to-reach locations having more and better choices.

Keep in mind thatbuying ammo is also the least optimal use of your money. Repairing and modifying your weapons and armor should be your primary concern, but there will be times after a long run in the Zone when your stores are exhausted and spending some coupons is the only option you have to put the fire back in your firepower.

Unloading ammo in the open world in Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl.

The other benefit of buying your ammo rather than scavenging is thatyou’re only likely to need to spend money on bullets after you’ve spent a long time in the wildernessand have lots of loot to offload. There are few things more satisfying in Stalker 2 than returning to safety, selling your collection, and leaving with more cash than you came in with.

Loot It From Enemies And Their Guns

Most of the enemies in the early game don’t have the best ammo, but they are plentiful, and they’ll always have at least a few rounds on them when looted.you may also unload their weapon’s magazinesby opening the contextual menu on the inventory screen and selecting Unload or holding down the interact button when looking at a weapon on the ground.

That’s all there is to actually looting enemies and their weapons for ammo, but here’s a trick to making a bit of extra money while ammo farming. Whenever you take out a human enemy andgo over to loot them, pick up their weapon before rifling through their things.

An ammo box on a shelf in Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl.

Once you’re in the inventory screen,quickly check to see whether the gun you picked up has a yellow or red broken shield icon. Red ones you may’t sell right away, but yellow ones you can. Empty them of bullets and then, if you have the inventory space and weight limit, add it to your pack.

As long as you’re able to make it back to a settlement safely,you’ve collected extra ammo and made a tidy profitby selling the guns.

A stash in a junk pile in Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl.

Loot Loose Ammo And Crates In Enemy Bases

The least efficient but most high-value method of gathering ammo is toexplore the world and loot all the enemy bases that litter the Zone. Look for warehouses in the distance, broken-down factories, and other large structures that don’t seem like they’d be on the main story quest.

Make sure you check every room for the green boxes on shelves and on the floor. These are ammo crates, and you’ll know them by the yellow bullet symbol on their tops.

A stalker holding a shotgun in town in Stalker 2: Heart of Chornobyl.

you’re able to break these boxes open by shooting them or, preferably, by hitting them with your knife. Some will have sub-par ammo, and others will have the good stuff.

Enemy bases are also likely to house plenty of loose loot as well, from food to ammo of all kinds. Whenever you clear an optional enemy encampment,search every open room and floor for spare rounds. You’re bound to come away with more than you expect and can use.

Loot Stashes

Stashes are one of the many optional loot sources in the game, andthere are dozens of them per region in the Zone, many of them respawning or randomly assigned. Most stashes, even in the Lesser Zone, have a dozen of rounds from weapons you can find in that region, and if you’re hurting for ammo, anything will do.

The bespoke stashes, those linked to PDAs or optional quests in the open world,will always have more and better ammo than the ones the game generatesand sometimes have weapons to boot. Even if all you do is sell the contents of the stash, you’re closer to a stack of better ammo no matter what.

Don’t Waste What You Have

One of the best ways to always have ammo on hand is tonot use what you already have, and if you have to fight, only use the absolute minimum of what you need.

In practice, that meanskeeping all of your weapons in single-fire mode, even against mutants. Firing full-auto can quickly cause your aim to be go off-target, but tap-firing remains an efficient way to fight without wasting bullets.

You can alsostick only to your favorite pistoland keep your primary weapons for tougher fights like heavily armored humans or the tankyBloodsuckerandPoltergeistmutants.

Considerkeeping a powerful single-shot primary weapon handy for mutants, as well. A rifle or SMG is good for fighting other human enemies, but because mutants tend to stick relatively close to you and have such high health pools, a shotgun can be a better choice of supplementary firepower than another rifle.

That’s not to say there aren’t moments when you should mag dump an enemy, and against something like a Controller, you’ll need to put a lot of lead downrange to put the beast down. That, among many other reasons, is whyyou should always have as much ammo for your equipped weaponsas you can get your hands on.