ARC Raiders Enemy Guide — All ARC Machine Types & How to Fight Them

ARC Enemy Quick Reference
| Type | Movement | Key Threat | Weak Point | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Drone | Aerial, patrol routes | Reinforcement calls, ranged attacks | Sensor array (underside) | High — eliminate first |
| Crawler | Fast ground, erratic | Swarm damage, flanking | Exposed joint assembly (legs) | Medium — prevent flanks |
| Heavy | Slow ground, deliberate | High damage, high HP, AoE attacks | Core vents (back/sides) | Low urgency but high threat |
| Scout | Medium speed, wide patrol | Alerts nearby units, calls Heavies | Optical sensor (head) | High — silent if possible |
| Turret | Stationary | Suppression fire, locks down areas | Power coupling (base) | Situational — flank to destroy |
Understanding ARC Machine Behavior
ARC machines are not random obstacles — they operate on defined patrol patterns, response protocols, and escalation tiers. In their neutral state, ARC units patrol set routes and scan for intruders. When they detect a Raider through sight, sound, or proximity, they enter an alert state and begin actively hunting. If the alert reaches a certain intensity — through prolonged combat, reinforcement calls, or large-scale engagement — the map can enter an escalated state where additional unit types deploy and patrol density increases dramatically.
This escalation system has major implications for how you play. Small engagements — a quick knife of one patrolling Crawler using a suppressed weapon — may go undetected by nearby units. A loud, sustained firefight with multiple units will almost certainly trigger a reinforcement response. Learning to read the ARC alert state is as valuable as any weapon skill: if you see units behaving more aggressively or converging from multiple directions, you've triggered an escalation and should prioritize exiting the area.
ARC machines also interact differently with terrain. Drones don't care about walls or ground-floor obstacles. Crawlers can navigate complex geometry quickly. Heavies are slow but their attacks can reach through light cover. Understanding each unit type's movement and attack properties allows you to predict their positions and choose cover accordingly.
Drones — Eliminate First, Eliminate Quietly
Drones are the most strategically dangerous ARC unit despite not being the most immediately lethal. Their aerial position gives them broad sightlines that ground units lack, and — critically — Drones can call in reinforcements when they detect Raiders. A Drone that spots you and transmits an alert can dramatically increase the ARC presence in your area within seconds. This is why Drones should almost always be your first target in any mixed engagement.
The Drone's underside sensor array is its primary weak point. Shots to this component deal significantly increased damage and can stagger the unit, interrupting its reinforcement call. The challenge is that hitting the underside requires positioning below the Drone or catching it at a specific angle in its patrol cycle. Suppressed weapons are ideal for Drone elimination — a quiet kill prevents alert propagation to nearby ARC units and reduces the chance of triggering the reinforcement protocol.
When multiple Drones are active, prioritize the one that has most clearly detected you or is in the best position to transmit. If you take down most Drones but leave one partially alerted, it will likely complete the reinforcement call eventually. In high-ARC zones, a pre-emptive suppressed Drone sweep before looting is a worthwhile investment in a clean, uninterrupted loot phase.
Crawlers — Speed and Numbers
Crawlers are the most common ARC ground unit and the primary source of damage for Raiders who underestimate them. Individually, a Crawler is manageable — their attacks are consistent but not overwhelming, and their HP pool is relatively low. The danger is that Crawlers operate in groups, move unpredictably at high speed, and often approach from angles that create simultaneous frontal and flank pressure.
The exposed joint assembly at the base of a Crawler's leg cluster is the designated weak point. Targeting this area requires shooting at a fast-moving, low-profile target, which is genuinely difficult in close-quarters combat. For most engagements, headshots or sustained center-mass fire is more practical than attempting weak-point shots on a charging Crawler. Reserve weak-point targeting for Crawlers at medium range where precise aiming is more feasible.
When facing a Crawler group, movement is more important than positioning. Standing still while Crawlers swarm is how you take concentrated damage from multiple directions simultaneously. Keep moving, use objects for brief cover to break their targeting, and thin the group quickly rather than focusing on any single unit for extended periods. Grenades and AoE utility items are particularly effective against clustered Crawler groups.
Heavies — Slow but Lethal
Heavy ARC units are the most threatening individual enemies in the game. Their high HP, heavy armor plating, and powerful attacks make them the primary ARC threat in high-tier zones. A Heavy can absorb enormous amounts of physical damage before going down, and their attacks deal enough damage to be seriously threatening even through good armor. Engaging a Heavy head-on with physical damage weapons is inefficient — understanding their mechanics dramatically reduces the ammunition and time required to eliminate them.
The Core Vents — exposed at the back and sides of a Heavy's chassis — are the critical weak points. Hitting these components with any weapon deals significantly increased damage and can trigger a temporary stagger, providing a window to continue dealing bonus damage. The catch is that the back vents require flanking, and Heavies are designed to face their targets. Getting behind a Heavy in a solo encounter requires either bait-and-flank tactics or exceptional movement. In a squad, one player holds the Heavy's attention while another circles for back-vent shots.
Energy damage weapons have a meaningful advantage against Heavies. The Heavy's armor plating reduces physical damage more effectively than energy damage, meaning energy-type weapons deal a higher proportion of their listed damage against this unit type. If your loadout includes energy-damage options, reserve them specifically for Heavy engagements. The damage difference over a full fight is significant enough to reduce ammunition consumption substantially.
ARC Combat Priority Order
- Scouts: if a Scout is active, prioritize it before anything else — Scouts trigger the most dangerous reinforcement responses
- Drones: eliminate before they can transmit reinforcement calls; suppressed shots preferred
- Crawlers: eliminate as a group to prevent flanking; grenades accelerate this significantly
- Heavies: engage last with full focus; use energy damage and target core vents from flanking positions
- Turrets: destroy them when they lock down a route you need; otherwise circle around them rather than engaging head-on
General ARC Combat Tips
- Always identify which unit types are present before engaging — your tactics should shift completely between Crawler groups and Heavy encounters
- Use vertical positioning against Crawlers; they have difficulty navigating height changes quickly
- Drones scan on predictable rotations — time your movement to cross sightlines between scan sweeps
- Against Heavies, bait them into tight spaces where their movement is most limited, then maintain distance and circle
- ARC machines in alert state communicate with each other — engaging one often alerts nearby units even without suppressor
- After eliminating ARC, wait briefly before looting — occasionally additional units spawn or arrive from off-screen before the area fully clears
Frequently asked questions
Do ARC machines respawn after you kill them?
ARC machines do not respawn immediately within a single raid session. Cleared zones stay clear for the duration of that deployment. However, escalation events can bring in fresh units from outside the immediate area. Across different raid sessions, ARC presence resets fully.
What weapons work best against ARC Heavies?
Energy damage weapons are most efficient against ARC Heavies due to their armor interaction. If energy weapons aren't available, any weapon capable of hitting the core vents from a flanking position is effective. Sustained fire on the back vents with a high-damage AR or shotgun (at close range) outputs significant damage.
Can you sneak past ARC machines without fighting?
Yes. ARC machines operate on patrol routes and have detection cones and ranges. Crouching, moving slowly, and using terrain and structures as cover allows skilled players to bypass ARC units entirely in many situations. This is the preferred approach in early game and when loot objectives don't require clearing ARC.
What happens when a Drone calls reinforcements?
When a Drone successfully calls reinforcements, additional ARC units — often including a Heavy — deploy to the area over the next 30 to 60 seconds. The reinforcement wave composition depends on the zone and escalation level. It's generally better to eliminate Drones before they can transmit than to deal with the resulting reinforcement wave.
Do ARC enemies drop loot?
Yes. Destroyed ARC machines can drop materials, components, and occasionally equipment. Heavy units tend to drop better loot than Crawlers and Drones. Collecting ARC drops is secondary to looting containers but worth grabbing if the area is already cleared and safe.
Sources & verification
Coloured pills follow our four-tier source policy.
- ARC Raiders Community Wiki — Enemies
- ARC Raiders editor verification — guide step validated against the live build
Continue this guide path
- ›ARC Raiders Damage Types Explained — Physical, Energy & Elemental DamageNot all damage works the same in ARC Raiders. Understanding how physical, energy, and elemental damage interact with armor and ARC machine types dramatically improves your combat efficiency and loadout choices.
- ›ARC Raiders Headshots & Weak Points — How to Maximize DamageUnderstanding headshot mechanics and ARC machine weak points is the difference between burning through ammo inefficiently and eliminating targets decisively. Learn the multipliers, weapon choices, and aiming techniques to maximize every shot.
- ›How to Survive Raids in ARC Raiders — Endurance & Risk Management TipsConsistent raid survival separates good Raiders from great ones. This guide covers advanced risk management, sound discipline, the art of knowing when to extract, and how to endure long sessions without losing everything.
- ›ARC Raiders PvP Tips — How to Survive Other RaidersOther Raiders are the deadliest threat in ARC Raiders — they can outthink ARC machines and take everything you've worked for. Learn detection avoidance, engagement decisions, and how to survive encounters with hostile players.
- ›ARC Raiders Beginner's Guide — Extraction Basics, Gear & First RaidsNew to ARC Raiders? Learn the core extraction loop, how Stella Montis works as your hub, and the most important early-game priorities to survive your first raids.