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Hunt and Hook: Frontier Beginners Guide and Tips

The wild’s calling, Grab your gear, it’s time to Hunt & Hook!

Hunt and Hook: Frontier arrives as a breath of fresh, wild air, developed by Nexelon Inc. This game invites you to immerse yourself in a dual-experience where you hunt down rare wildlife on land and reel in aquatic beasts beneath the waves.

Whether you’re stalking deer at dawn or fishing under moonlight, the game rewards patience, precision, and preparation. For those just stepping into the frontier, this Hunt and Hook: Frontier beginners guide covers everything you need to know to start strong and stay ahead.

Experience the Hunting of Two Worlds in One Game

The essence of Hunt and Hook: Frontier lies in the combination of two distinct game modes: Hunting and Fishing. They both have their own rules, arms, and challenges. Still, they are unified in their ultimate objective: the collection of resources, the acquisition of special species, and the building of your reputation as a frontier master.

Hunting and Fishing in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Hunting and Fishing in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

With hunting mode, you’ll traverse through deserts, mountains, and forests, taking out guns, stalking elusive game, and landing high-scoring clean kills. With the fishing mode, you’ll set out rods and bait to tackle lakes, rivers, and seas, casting in the best spots to catch elusive, valuable species. Whatever you do, the most satisfying is in the interplay of the two, employing one to bolster the advantage that you possess in the other.

Biomes are more than just Scenery

Hunt and Hook: Frontier biome is its own separate world. The creatures you’ll be battling, the equipment you’ll be using, and even the time of day all vary depending on where you are.

Forests provide common but necessary habitats for deer, foxes, bunny rabbits, and many more. Mountains provide rare species of animals like wolves, bears, and exotic reptiles, and oceans provide the bottom-sea challenges that are more difficult to catch but far more rewarding.

Biomes in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Biomes in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

More than visuals, biomes also determine difficulty. Weather and time cycles, such as rainfall, wind, or dusk, influence spawn rates, visibility, and target behavior. Night hunts, for example, offer rarer animals but drastically reduce visibility, while rain may drive fish to shallower waters but make hunting harder.

Sharpening your Aim is one of the Hunting essentials

Hunting in Hunt and Hook is tactical. You start with a basic rifle, but as you progress, you’ll unlock new weapons with better scopes, higher damage, and faster reload times. The game rewards clean, efficient kills, brain shots, lung shots, and heart shots grant more points and better resources.

Wild shots or missed attempts not only scare off animals but also waste valuable ammo and time. Timing is key. Approach from downwind, and avoid shooting randomly when near potential targets.

Hunting in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Hunting in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

Advanced zones introduce animals that react to noise and movement, meaning shooting time becomes just as important as firepower. As you improve, you’ll notice how differently each species behaves. Some species have speed that helps them to flee immediately, while others are just slow with their movements. Learning their fleeing path gives you the upper hand.

Remember, Fishing isn’t just waiting around

Unlike many mobile fishing games, Hunt and Hook treats fishing as a skill-based experience. The rod you use, the bait you choose, and how you reel all affect the outcome. You’ll need to master timing, learn fish behavior, and control your line to prevent breakage.

Reeling in Fish in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Reeling in Fish in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

Heavy rods are better for deep-sea monsters, while lightweight gear works well in rivers or shallows. Different fish react to different movements; sometimes, slow pauses work, other times, a flick will trigger a strike. A few essentials to keep in mind:

  • Always check the zone’s recommended bait.
  • Monitor line tension; too much pull, and it’ll snap.
  • Time of day influences what’s biting.

Keep Upgrading and Building your Loadouts

As you complete hunts or fishing trips, you’ll earn resources, coins. These are used to enhance your gear and personalize your approach. Early game upgrades should focus on improving your rifle damage, rod power, and either scope stability or reel speed.

Gear Upgrade in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Gear Upgrade in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

Durability is also important, especially if you’re grinding frequently. In the loadouts, we should focus on the different baits and items. Baits determine the type of fish we can catch and what type of animals we can hunt. It depends on the bait. For hunting bait, carrots attract deer, rabbits, while meat attracts wolves and hyenas.

As for fishing baits, different baits help to catch different species of fish. The items we can equip can be used to slow down the time to hunt down any fast-moving animals, and a thermal scope to check out the vital organs of an animal to hunt it down faster. We can use energy drinks to enhance our stamina to reel in monstrous fish from the depths of the ocean.

Collect, Complete, and Compete

One of the most satisfying parts of the game is the collection log. Every animal and fish you capture is documented in a personal bestiary, and filling these out gives extra rewards like XP, coins, and cosmetic trophies.

Leaderboard in Hunt and Hook: Frontier
Leaderboard in Hunt and Hook: Frontier (Image by Nexelon Inc.)

There’s also a competitive side. Leaderboards rank players based on speed, rarity of catches or kills, and overall session performance. If you’re aiming to top the charts, every detail counts: weather, gear, timing, and target selection. Even if competition isn’t your thing, the collection log offers long-term goals that make each session feel meaningful.

Mistakes to Avoid in Hunt and Hook: Frontier

Many new players fall into the same early traps, and they’re easily avoidable with a little awareness.

  • Don’t use the same loadout for every biome. Each region has its challenges, and mismatched gear can ruin your efficiency.
  • Never ignore time or weather. Some species only appear under specific conditions, and wasted trips slow your progress.
  • Another common mistake is selling off rare catches too quickly. Some of them are part of higher-tier collections or upgrade paths; it’s often better to hold onto them until you know their use.
  • And finally, don’t skip the tutorials. The game doesn’t over-explain, but it does offer guidance for mechanics like advanced aiming or optimal casting. Skipping those means missing free advantages.

Final Thoughts

Hunt and Hook: Frontier is more than a wildlife sim; it’s a game of rhythm, timing, and smart preparation. Whether you’re a mobile gamer looking for something deeper or a fan of sim-style experiences, there’s a lot to enjoy here. You won’t unlock everything overnight, and that’s the point.

The game wants you to observe, experiment, and improve, not just repeat. Focus on learning your environments, refining your gear, and building a balanced skill set across both hunting and fishing. You’ll go from basic woodsman to top-tier tracker faster than you think, and have a great time doing it.

Check our other beginner’s guides below:

That’s all for our Hunt and Hook: Frontier Beginners Guide! Did you find this Hunt and Hook: Frontier Beginners Guide useful? Let us know what you think in the comments!

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