Murderers VS Sheriffs Checklist
Checklist items
- 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.
- Confirm the root place opens into the main lobby
The lobby is where you branch into duel queues, shop checks, codes, inventory, and events.
- 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.
- Write down the creator name before using outside value pages
MVS Duels Community is the creator guardrail for this checklist.
- 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.
- Set graphics for stable duel FPS
Aim duels punish stutter more than slow collection games do.
- Adjust mouse or camera sensitivity before queueing
Use a setting you can keep consistent across aim practice.
- Set audio so round cues and hit feedback are easy to hear
Even simple duel cues help you react faster when the round starts.
- Find the lobby path for 1v1, 2v2, and 3v3 queues
These are the verified public queue sizes for this game.
- Find the inventory or cosmetics area
You will use it later to separate weapons, packs, effects, and other cosmetics.
- 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.
- Find the shop or box area before spending currency
You need to see prices and reward information in-game before deciding what to open.
- Play one full 1v1 match
Use 1v1 for the clearest read on your own aim, dodging, and timing.
- Finish a 1v1 round without leaving after the first mistake
Short duels teach more when you finish the round and notice what changed.
- 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.
- 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.
- Play one full 2v2 match
2v2 adds teammate trades without making the round too crowded.
- Call or mark one enemy position for your teammate
Even a simple call makes duo rounds less random.
- Practice spacing away from your teammate in 2v2
Do not stack so tightly that one enemy angle controls both players.
- Play one full 3v3 match
3v3 is better for learning target choice, crossfire, and busier rounds.
- Avoid chasing the same target as every teammate for one 3v3 round
Spread pressure so your team covers more than one angle.
- 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.
- Check whether Pro Servers access matters to your goals
Treat it as pass-gated access unless you verify a specific rule in-game.
- Do not mark Pro Servers as a better reward queue without proof
The verified data confirms access, not special payouts or matchmaking.
- 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.
- Warm up with three rounds focused on steady aim
Do not change your sensitivity during the warmup unless it feels unplayable.
- Hold your crosshair near likely enemy height for one match
Pre-aiming lowers the amount of panic flicking you need.
- Practice one calm shot before spamming
A controlled first shot teaches timing better than firing the moment you see movement.
- Track one enemy through cover before peeking
Expect where they will appear instead of reacting only after they are visible.
- Use cover before crossing an open lane
Open sightlines punish straight runs, especially in larger queues.
- Practice dodging without losing your aim target
Movement helps only if you can still return pressure.
- Try one round where you stop over-jumping
Jumping can help dodges, but predictable jumps make you easier to read.
- Test one safe knife push from behind cover
Knife pressure works better when you close distance before exposing yourself.
- After a loss, name whether aim, movement, or positioning caused it
A quick label keeps review useful instead of frustrating.
- After a win, name the habit that worked
Keep the useful part instead of only chasing the next match.
- Record one queue you want to practice next session
A simple next-session target beats random queue hopping.
- Open the in-game code redemption menu
Verify where codes are redeemed before relying on outside lists.
- Redeem any available codes from the live codes table or official source
Do not store code names in this checklist because active rewards change.
- Check what reward type a code gives before spending it
Coins, crates, cosmetics, and boosts should affect different plans.
- 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.
- Finish enough rounds to see the normal reward flow
Know what you earn from playing before buying or opening anything.
- Write down what the shop lets you buy with earned currency
Only record what you can verify in your current lobby.
- Separate Robux purchases from earned-currency purchases
This prevents box and pack decisions from being mixed together.
- Inspect the PRO Box before opening one
The product row is verified, but you still need the in-game reward pool before judging value.
- Inspect the GOD Box before opening one
Do not assume the higher price means a specific reward without visible pool or odds proof.
- Compare any daily or discount box row against the normal box
Check whether the reward pool, limit, or timer is actually shown in-game.
- Screenshot box odds or reward pools before using them for trade advice
A box name alone is not enough for reliable opening guidance.
- 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.
- Mark your favorite equipped knife skin
Favorites help you avoid trading away something you actually use.
- Mark your favorite equipped gun skin
Keep your active loadout separate from trade bait.
- Record whether each high-value weapon has a known source route
Some community catalog rows still need obtainment confirmation.
- Check value, demand, and trend before offering a weapon in trade
Use community values as context, not as official prices.
- Flag weapons with no listed value as verify-before-trading
A missing value row does not automatically mean worthless or safe to overpay for.
- Check Dragon Pack contents before buying or trading for it
The verified contents are Dragon Sword and Dragon Gun.
- Check Batwing Pack contents before buying or trading for it
The verified contents are Batwing Scythe and Red Hyper Laser.
- 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.
- Separate death effects from weapon skins in your notes
A death effect changes a visual moment, not your knife or gun skin.
- 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.
- Capture exact emote names before adding emotes to your collection notes
The current research proves emotes as a reward category, not row-level names.
- 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.
- Confirm both sides are trading items from the MVS Duels Community game
Do not use similarly named RED21 or clone items as proof.
- Ask for the exact item name before comparing values
Small name differences can point to different item families or wrong-game rows.
- 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.
- 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.
- Compare value with demand before accepting a trade
A number is less useful if demand is low or missing.
- Check trend before overpaying for a rising item
Rising interest can be real, but it can also make rushed trades expensive.
- Mark items with unknown availability as risky
If you cannot tell how the item was originally obtained, slow down the trade.
- Keep screenshots of high-value trade offers
Screenshots help you review exact names and avoid memory mistakes.
- Remove any personal notes copied from older MVSD or MVS2 pages
Keep this checklist tied to universe 7219654364.
- Label community values separately from official prices
Robux prices, game-pass contents, and community trade values answer different questions.
- Pause trades that depend on unverified event or emote claims
Unnamed reward categories are not enough for a safe deal.
- 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.
- Record reward categories without inventing item names
Weapons, emotes, and death effects need row-level proof before becoming collection tasks.
- Capture permanent-looking event rewards before trading for them
A screenshot can show the exact name, category, and source route.
- Avoid writing live event dates into your long-term checklist
Event timing belongs to the event system, not an evergreen progress board.
- Screenshot a map name or voting screen when it appears
Map rows need visible exact-game proof before a full roster is safe.
- After each new map, note whether it feels open, cover-heavy, or mixed
Layout notes help future map cards explain aim and cover pressure.
- Check whether the map appears in 1v1, 2v2, or 3v3
Mode pool matters because team size changes how a map plays.
- Review your best queue and weakest queue after a week of play
A simple queue audit keeps practice focused.
- Update your inventory notes after any major shop or event change
Keep new weapons, effects, packs, and captures separate by category.
- Recheck high-value trade targets before every major offer
Value, demand, trend, and availability can change faster than your memory.
- Keep one final note for unresolved evidence gaps
Track missing odds, map names, emote names, and source routes so they do not become assumptions.

