Legend has it that brave warriors who meet their demise in battle will be welcomed as heroes in the halls of Asgard where they live the rest of their lives in peace and tranquility. Not you though, clearly your invitation got mixed up along the way from Midgard with somebody else’s as you ended up in Niflheim! As you adjust to your new life in Nordic Hell and explore your base you start wondering about the vault and what you can even find in there, let alone how to open it! In this guide we’ll show you how to open that vault. Valhalla can wait for a while!
Open the Vault Guide | Niffelheim
The vault has always been in your base, along with the three digit code required to open it. Now where in Norse hell do you find such a code, and what even can be found deep within your only refuge from the outside world? Let’s find out!
Coming from the entrance, you will want to take a left and keep heading that way until you’re in between your storage chest and the alchemy station. There should be a red hole in the floor and a chain that leads downwards, activate that and wait for the skeleton to come up.
Once the skeleton is up you should be able to see it holding a piece of paper, activate that and you will get the first two digits of your code. Be mindful that the code differs per session so you might get a different set compared to what we got!
After getting the first two digits you can return to the vault and enter the numbers you got from the paper earlier. This is the part where good ol’ trial and error comes in as you already have narrowed down the combination required to open the vault. Go ahead and test out other combinations until you come across the last digit that you need to open the vault. You should be able to get at least three random items once you open it. That’s how you open the vault in your base, now go and try it out for yourself!
Here we have Alexis, he's been gaming ever since the second Famicom came out. Which is probably the reason why he goes back to platformers every now and then. Somewhere down the line he started getting more and more fascinated about looking at maps change colors for three to eight hours straight. If he's not out strategizing and beating the life out of his space bar in that order there's a good chance you can find him playing an FPS or talking someone's ear out about how game balance gets in the way of realism. You can tell that he really likes getting the full experience of whatever he gets his hands on.