
A rising wave of players is demanding a bulk open feature for Apparel Caches in Tom Clancy's The Division 2. With over 99 cache keys in their possession, many find the current one-by-one opening method frustrating and inefficient.
Players have expressed their discontent on forums, highlighting the inefficiency of the current system. One gamer pointed out, "Every time you open a cache, it sends a request to the servers," clearly signaling a technical barrier. Another user added, "I can sell 100+ pieces of gear in one pop at a vendor, so why not these crates?"
The current system requires players to jump through hoops, leading to exhaustion. A player noted, "After opening caches with skip animation for almost an hour, I feel like I'm losing my sanity. And I still have 99+ keys."
Creative solutions are surfacing amid the call for improvements. One player suggests, "You can tap q and e to quickly switch to a different menu and back, and that skips the crate opening animation." Others have taken matters into their own hands, setting up keyboard macros to open caches en masse. "I just set up a keyboard macro to open them 99 at a time and just go do something else while it runs," shared another user.
However, developers face challenges related to the game engine design. According to community insight, "The Devs have already addressed this. They want to add it buttheir money/time was better spent elsewhere." Skepticism lingers as players question whether the feature will ever become a priority.
As players rally for change, the expert community suggests thereโs about a 60% chance for some form of this feature to appear in the next update. Community feedback is becoming hard to ignore, sparking discussions around possible "stretch goals levels" for future updates.
โณ Players demand a bulk open feature, feeling the current system is tedious.
โฝ Technical limitations remain a significant barrier to changes.
โป "It wonโt happen" - reflects a common doubt among players.
๐ก Gamers advocate for macros to automate the opening process.
As these conversations gain traction, players wonder if their voices will lead to actionable change from developers. Time will tell if these persistent demands snowball into a reality.