Bloxodes

Murderers VS Sheriffs Checklist

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Checklist items

  1. Open the MVS Duels Community Murderers VS Sheriffs experience

    Use the game tied to universe 7219654364 so your checklist, items, and trades stay attached to the right version.

  2. Confirm the root place opens into the main lobby

    The lobby is where you branch into duel queues, shop checks, codes, inventory, and events.

  3. Save the official Roblox game URL for future source checks

    A saved exact-game URL helps you avoid RED21, MVSD, MVS2, and clone data when checking items later.

  4. Write down the creator name before using outside value pages

    MVS Duels Community is the creator guardrail for this checklist.

  5. Ignore older Murderers VS Sheriffs item lists until they prove this universe

    Similar names are common, and a wrong-game weapon or emote list can make trades messy.

  6. Set graphics for stable duel FPS

    Aim duels punish stutter more than slow collection games do.

  7. Adjust mouse or camera sensitivity before queueing

    Use a setting you can keep consistent across aim practice.

  8. Set audio so round cues and hit feedback are easy to hear

    Even simple duel cues help you react faster when the round starts.

  9. Find the lobby path for 1v1, 2v2, and 3v3 queues

    These are the verified public queue sizes for this game.

  10. Find the inventory or cosmetics area

    You will use it later to separate weapons, packs, effects, and other cosmetics.

  11. Find the code redemption area without writing down current code names

    The code system matters, but live code rows should stay separate from an evergreen checklist.

  12. Find the shop or box area before spending currency

    You need to see prices and reward information in-game before deciding what to open.

  13. Play one full 1v1 match

    Use 1v1 for the clearest read on your own aim, dodging, and timing.

  14. Finish a 1v1 round without leaving after the first mistake

    Short duels teach more when you finish the round and notice what changed.

  15. Win or lose one 1v1 while focusing only on crosshair placement

    Keep your aim ready before the enemy appears instead of flicking late every time.

  16. Replay 1v1 until you can name your most common mistake

    A useful mistake is specific, such as over-peeking, jumping too much, or pushing with no cover.

  17. Play one full 2v2 match

    2v2 adds teammate trades without making the round too crowded.

  18. Call or mark one enemy position for your teammate

    Even a simple call makes duo rounds less random.

  19. Practice spacing away from your teammate in 2v2

    Do not stack so tightly that one enemy angle controls both players.

  20. Play one full 3v3 match

    3v3 is better for learning target choice, crossfire, and busier rounds.

  21. Avoid chasing the same target as every teammate for one 3v3 round

    Spread pressure so your team covers more than one angle.

  22. Review whether 1v1, 2v2, or 3v3 fits your current practice goal

    Pick the queue by what you need: aim clarity, duo trades, or team pressure.

  23. Check whether Pro Servers access matters to your goals

    Treat it as pass-gated access unless you verify a specific rule in-game.

  24. Do not mark Pro Servers as a better reward queue without proof

    The verified data confirms access, not special payouts or matchmaking.

  25. Capture proof before adding 4v4 to your personal queue notes

    4v4 appears in tags, but it was not verified as a child place in the checked data.

  26. Warm up with three rounds focused on steady aim

    Do not change your sensitivity during the warmup unless it feels unplayable.

  27. Hold your crosshair near likely enemy height for one match

    Pre-aiming lowers the amount of panic flicking you need.

  28. Practice one calm shot before spamming

    A controlled first shot teaches timing better than firing the moment you see movement.

  29. Track one enemy through cover before peeking

    Expect where they will appear instead of reacting only after they are visible.

  30. Use cover before crossing an open lane

    Open sightlines punish straight runs, especially in larger queues.

  31. Practice dodging without losing your aim target

    Movement helps only if you can still return pressure.

  32. Try one round where you stop over-jumping

    Jumping can help dodges, but predictable jumps make you easier to read.

  33. Test one safe knife push from behind cover

    Knife pressure works better when you close distance before exposing yourself.

  34. After a loss, name whether aim, movement, or positioning caused it

    A quick label keeps review useful instead of frustrating.

  35. After a win, name the habit that worked

    Keep the useful part instead of only chasing the next match.

  36. Record one queue you want to practice next session

    A simple next-session target beats random queue hopping.

  37. Open the in-game code redemption menu

    Verify where codes are redeemed before relying on outside lists.

  38. Redeem any available codes from the live codes table or official source

    Do not store code names in this checklist because active rewards change.

  39. Check what reward type a code gives before spending it

    Coins, crates, cosmetics, and boosts should affect different plans.

  40. Recheck codes only when you return for a real play session

    Use codes as a bonus route, not the whole reason to open the game.

  41. Finish enough rounds to see the normal reward flow

    Know what you earn from playing before buying or opening anything.

  42. Write down what the shop lets you buy with earned currency

    Only record what you can verify in your current lobby.

  43. Separate Robux purchases from earned-currency purchases

    This prevents box and pack decisions from being mixed together.

  44. Inspect the PRO Box before opening one

    The product row is verified, but you still need the in-game reward pool before judging value.

  45. Inspect the GOD Box before opening one

    Do not assume the higher price means a specific reward without visible pool or odds proof.

  46. Compare any daily or discount box row against the normal box

    Check whether the reward pool, limit, or timer is actually shown in-game.

  47. Screenshot box odds or reward pools before using them for trade advice

    A box name alone is not enough for reliable opening guidance.

  48. Open your weapon inventory and separate knife-side from gun-side skins

    The approved weapon list separates weapon roles, and your personal notes should too.

  49. Mark your favorite equipped knife skin

    Favorites help you avoid trading away something you actually use.

  50. Mark your favorite equipped gun skin

    Keep your active loadout separate from trade bait.

  51. Record whether each high-value weapon has a known source route

    Some community catalog rows still need obtainment confirmation.

  52. Check value, demand, and trend before offering a weapon in trade

    Use community values as context, not as official prices.

  53. Flag weapons with no listed value as verify-before-trading

    A missing value row does not automatically mean worthless or safe to overpay for.

  54. Check Dragon Pack contents before buying or trading for it

    The verified contents are Dragon Sword and Dragon Gun.

  55. Check Batwing Pack contents before buying or trading for it

    The verified contents are Batwing Scythe and Red Hyper Laser.

  56. Do not treat candidate bundle families as complete packs without contents proof

    Keep Duskveil, Jelly, Cupid, and similar candidates out of personal completion counts until verified.

  57. Separate death effects from weapon skins in your notes

    A death effect changes a visual moment, not your knife or gun skin.

  58. Check whether a death effect has a direct product or bundle route

    The current effect seed is strongest when the row comes from an official product name.

  59. Capture exact emote names before adding emotes to your collection notes

    The current research proves emotes as a reward category, not row-level names.

  60. Capture map names from the round UI before building a map roster

    Pool is a verified source lead, but the full map list still needs in-game proof.

  61. Confirm both sides are trading items from the MVS Duels Community game

    Do not use similarly named RED21 or clone items as proof.

  62. Ask for the exact item name before comparing values

    Small name differences can point to different item families or wrong-game rows.

  63. Check whether the item is a weapon, death effect, pack item, or other cosmetic

    Different item types should not be valued as if they are interchangeable.

  64. Check the source route before judging rarity

    A direct-purchase item, box item, event item, and trade-only item can feel very different to replace.

  65. Compare value with demand before accepting a trade

    A number is less useful if demand is low or missing.

  66. Check trend before overpaying for a rising item

    Rising interest can be real, but it can also make rushed trades expensive.

  67. Mark items with unknown availability as risky

    If you cannot tell how the item was originally obtained, slow down the trade.

  68. Keep screenshots of high-value trade offers

    Screenshots help you review exact names and avoid memory mistakes.

  69. Remove any personal notes copied from older MVSD or MVS2 pages

    Keep this checklist tied to universe 7219654364.

  70. Label community values separately from official prices

    Robux prices, game-pass contents, and community trade values answer different questions.

  71. Pause trades that depend on unverified event or emote claims

    Unnamed reward categories are not enough for a safe deal.

  72. Open the event area or event panel when one is visible

    Use the in-game UI for reward context instead of storing event dates here.

  73. Record reward categories without inventing item names

    Weapons, emotes, and death effects need row-level proof before becoming collection tasks.

  74. Capture permanent-looking event rewards before trading for them

    A screenshot can show the exact name, category, and source route.

  75. Avoid writing live event dates into your long-term checklist

    Event timing belongs to the event system, not an evergreen progress board.

  76. Screenshot a map name or voting screen when it appears

    Map rows need visible exact-game proof before a full roster is safe.

  77. After each new map, note whether it feels open, cover-heavy, or mixed

    Layout notes help future map cards explain aim and cover pressure.

  78. Check whether the map appears in 1v1, 2v2, or 3v3

    Mode pool matters because team size changes how a map plays.

  79. Review your best queue and weakest queue after a week of play

    A simple queue audit keeps practice focused.

  80. Update your inventory notes after any major shop or event change

    Keep new weapons, effects, packs, and captures separate by category.

  81. Recheck high-value trade targets before every major offer

    Value, demand, trend, and availability can change faster than your memory.

  82. Keep one final note for unresolved evidence gaps

    Track missing odds, map names, emote names, and source routes so they do not become assumptions.

Murderers VS Sheriffs is easiest to track when you separate duel practice from cosmetic chasing. Start with the correct MVS Duels Community game, learn the verified 1v1, 2v2, and 3v3 queues, then build a safe routine for codes, boxes, weapon skins, packs, death effects, and trades. Maps and emotes stay as verification tasks until exact in-game rows are captured.

1. First Session And Correct Game Setup

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Start by making sure progress, purchases, and trade notes belong to the MVS Duels Community game, not an older or similarly named Murderers VS Sheriffs experience.

1.1Join the right experience
1.2Settings and lobby scan

2. Duel Queue Practice

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Use the verified queues as a practice ladder. Learn clean aim in 1v1 first, then add teammates and crossfire in larger queues.

2.1Solo queue basics
2.2Duo and team queues
2.3Access and queue verification

3. Aim, Movement, And Round Review

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Build repeatable duel habits before chasing expensive cosmetics. Better aim and cleaner decisions make every queue and trade goal more enjoyable.

3.1Aim habits
3.2Movement and cover
3.3Post-round review

4. Rewards, Codes, And Boxes

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Check reward systems without turning evergreen progress into stale live data. Codes, coins, and boxes can help inventory growth, but prices and reward proof matter before spending.

4.1Code redemption routine
4.2Coins and spending checks
4.3Box checks

5. Weapons, Packs, And Cosmetic Inventory

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Keep cosmetic tracking organized by item type. Weapons, packs, death effects, maps, and emotes answer different player questions and should not be merged into one messy list.

5.1Weapon inventory
5.2Verified packs
5.3Effects, maps, and emotes

6. Trading And Source Safety

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Trading is where exact-game evidence matters most. Check what an item is, where it came from, and whether its value signal belongs to this universe before accepting a deal.

6.1Trade preparation
6.2Value and availability checks
6.3Wrong-source cleanup

7. Events, Maps, And Long-Term Audit

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Use events and updates as prompts to verify durable items, not as a place to hard-code live timelines. Keep the final audit focused on repeatable checks.

7.1Event-safe checks
7.2Map and mode review
7.3Completion audit