![]() ![]() (You can also destroy the steel crates with magnesis, though they never contain anything for us.) Paraglide down to the center alcove, and defeat any bokoblins left standing. Use magnesis and the the steel crates to damage the red bokoblins on the center alcove. Pick up the exploding barrel and throw it over the ledge onto the center alcove to damage the red bokoblins there. ![]() Use the woodcutter’s axe to carefully smash the barrels, making sure you don’t blow yourself up in the process. (If they fall into the chasm, you can’t collect their weapons.) Use it to defeat the two bokoblins, making sure not to knock either off the ledge. Head to the back to get out of the line of sight of the archer and grab a boko club. Jump off the starting platform and ride the updraft over to the alcove on your left. It’s just a matter of planning your route, which starts to your left (as you enter) and continues to the lower platform.Īs soon as you start on this floor, you’ll be spotted by a bokoblin archer shooting fire arrows. Underground Floor 1 walkthroughĪs you can see in the video above, you can get through Middle Trials: Underground Floor 2 without taking damage. It’s also a preview of what’s to come in the next few levels, all of which include massive, area-spanning updrafts, revolve around your paraglider and a require a plan for killing and avoiding enemies in the best possible order (and from the best possible position to collect their drops). ![]() It’s different from the Beginning Trials, but you’ll catch on soon. Its strapline above it reads: “Terror turns on dictator.Trial of the Sword: Middle Trials: Underground Floor 1 starts off with a crash course in what to expect from the in The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild’s The Master Trials DLC’s Middle Trials: lots of enemies, more danger and much more complex levels. The Sunday Mirror has “Putin pushed to brink” on its front page, alongside pictures of the two main figures the Russian president and Prigozhin. It referred to a State Department memo sent to its overseas missions: “The United States has no intention of involving itself in this matter.” It noted the west’s stance, which might best by described as “stand well back” and avoid any suggestion of taking sides. The Wall Street Journal said the Ukraine war had “backfired on Putin” in its main digital headline. It added: “After more than two decades of autocratic rule, Putin’s hubris has repeatedly clouded his judgment - both in invading Ukraine and in misjudging whether Prigozhin could pose a threat.” The Washington Post cast the past 24 hours as the gravest threat to Putin’s presidency “that till now has thrived on Putin’s ability to divide and rule by pitting rival groups against each other and serving as the ultimate arbiter among feuding elites”. Correspondent Peter Baker noted the dangers and the opportunity the volatility presented to the US the danger being an under-threat president in charge of nuclear missiles, and the opportunity a weakening of Russia’s war effort, to Ukraine’s gain. The New York Times carried analysis on what the short-lived mutiny said about Putin’s hold on power. Its subhead reads: “The putsch attempt in Russia and what that means for us.” Die Welt and Der Spiegel both speak of a “power struggle” in Russia on their front pages. Tomorrow’s front page /9CF8WRfiS6- The Observer June 24, 2023īild in Germany has the headline: “Uprising against Putin” next to images of Wagner fighters.
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