Rule 1: Keep an open cone
Try to keep enemies within a 120° cone in front of you. If you have targets behind you, you’re already losing control of the wave.
Surviving longer isn’t about perfect aim—it’s about spacing, priority, and never getting surrounded.
Wave shooters punish greed. The moment you chase one target too far, you open your back to the rest of the wave. Your goal is to keep the fight in front of you, keep distance, and take safe damage trades.
Think in three questions:
In wave survival, distance is the real health bar. Even if you’re at full health, being close to multiple enemies is “low health” in practice. Use these spacing rules:
Try to keep enemies within a 120° cone in front of you. If you have targets behind you, you’re already losing control of the wave.
Corners and narrow paths feel safe until they don’t. If you can’t turn around and sprint out, it’s not a safe position.
When overwhelmed, don’t “fight harder.” Create separation, then handle a small group at a time.
The easiest way to survive longer is to aim your attention, not just your crosshair. Use this priority list as a default:
Tip: if a target is hard to hit and not immediately dangerous, reposition first. Better angle beats stubborn aim.
Most deaths happen because movement becomes reactive (panic). Use patterns that keep you in control:
When in doubt: move first, shoot second. One second of safe repositioning is often worth more than one extra kill.
Reloading at the wrong time is the most common beginner death. Use this simple rule:
If you find yourself reloading in the open, it’s usually because you waited too long. Make reload a planned action, not a desperate one.
Grenades are most valuable when they save you time and space. Don’t throw them “because you have them.” Throw them when they achieve one of these goals:
If your version includes explosive enemies or throwers, keep grenades for “panic resets” rather than chasing perfect value.
Most versions of Squid Shooter reward you with money (or progress) that you can convert into better weapons. The key is to upgrade at the right time, not “as soon as possible.”
If enemies take too long to drop, you’ll get surrounded. Faster kills reduce risk.
Don’t spend everything. Having a backup option (or a next upgrade) prevents a single bad wave from ending your run.
Close-range waves often want fast handling; tougher waves may require stability and consistent damage.
For a deeper breakdown of weapon types and purchase timing, read: Weapons & Upgrades Guide.
This routine is short enough to repeat daily, and it targets the exact skills that matter for wave survival.
If you want aim-specific drills (tracking + strafing), continue with: Aim & Movement Guide.
Play a few waves with one goal: never get surrounded. Your score will follow.
Play Squid Shooter