Dirty Money · Game Toolkit
Dirty Money Escape Route Guide - When to Leave, How to Reset, and What to Carry Out
Use safer Dirty Money escape routes by planning the leave call early, protecting the rear, and carrying tools that still matter after the loot room is finished. This page exists because many profitable runs are lost only in the final third.
Quick summary
Use safer Dirty Money escape routes by planning the leave call early, protecting the rear, and carrying tools that still matter after the loot room is finished. This page exists because many profitable runs are lost only in the final third.
Steps
- Decide who calls the leave before the crew gets rich enough to argue. Escape routes fail most often when everyone agrees the run is dangerous but nobody wants to be the first person to end it.
- Keep one player mentally anchored to the way out instead of letting every teammate tunnel on one more container, one more safe, or one more corner clear. Someone has to remember the run already has value.
- Carry utility that still matters on retreat. In Dirty Money, panic exits are usually not clean sprints, so a tool that buys one reset or creates one safe angle can be worth more than marginal extra damage.
- Do not let the slowest looter silently set the pace. If one player is overloaded, indecisive, or already shaky in fights, the exit path should protect that weakness rather than pretending the whole crew is equally stable.
- When you break contact, keep the team compact enough to trade space for survival. A split crew often dies in sequence, while a disciplined retreat at least forces danger to deal with multiple players at once.
- Review late-run failures with one specific question: did we die because the route was bad, because we left too late, or because we tried to leave with the wrong resources still in hand.
Tips for Dirty Money
- The best escape route is the one your whole crew can repeat under pressure, not the one that only works when everyone stays calm.
- If the run already paid for your next loadout improvement, the burden of proof shifts to staying alive, not to squeezing one last greedy play.
- Rear security matters more than pretty pathing. Most ugly but organized exits outperform stylish routes taken too late.
- A team that knows when to leave will progress faster than a team that only knows how to enter.