Keyboard and Mouse Layout
PC controls in Ability Wars follow standard Roblox FPS conventions. WASD moves your character, spacebar jumps, and the mouse aims the camera. Left-click performs M1 punch attacks—the primary damage source and Punches currency generator in every fight. Right-click has no default combat function in Ability Wars, though some players bind it through external tools; the game itself expects left-click for all punching.
Ability moves occupy the E, Q, and R keys on the top row of your keyboard. These three slots are consistent across every ability in the game, which simplifies switching between kits. When you equip Portal after grinding with Robot, your muscle memory for ability activation stays the same even though the moves themselves change completely. Spend time in the lobby reading your pedestal description so you know which key triggers which effect before entering combat.
Shift Lock: The Most Important PC Setting
Shift lock is a Roblox-wide camera mode that Ability Wars players treat as mandatory. When enabled, pressing Shift toggles a locked camera that stays oriented relative to your character while still allowing mouse-driven rotation. This decouples where you look from where you walk—a critical advantage in free-for-all arenas where opponents attack from every angle.
Without shift lock, your camera follows character facing directly. During a forward-facing duel, you cannot see the player approaching from behind until they are already punching you. With shift lock active, a quick mouse flick reveals third-parties while you continue strafing your current target. The setting also helps on maps with vertical terrain: checking the Pool and Cave areas for ambushes becomes a camera rotation rather than a full character turn that telegraphs your attention shift.
To enable shift lock, open Roblox settings (Escape menu in-game), find the Shift Lock Switch option, and set it to On. Toggle lock mode with the Shift key during gameplay. Some players leave shift lock permanently on; others toggle it when entering combat. Either approach works—consistency matters more than the specific toggle habit.
M1 Combo Chains and Punch Mechanics
M1 attacks form a sequential combo when you hold or rhythmically click left mouse button. Each hit in the chain deals base punch damage modified by your ability's passive stats. Completing the full sequence matters because partial chains leave damage on the table and give opponents more time to escape or counter with their own abilities.
The standard offensive pattern practiced by experienced players follows three beats: approach and open with a full M1 chain, commit an E or Q ability during the opponent's hitstun or recovery, then either finish with another M1 chain or disengage based on remaining cooldowns. Abilities with knockback or stun effects—Bomb, Gravity, Magnet—pair especially well with M1 openers because they keep opponents in range for follow-up punches.
Punches earned from M1 hits and kills fund your ability collection. Players grinding toward expensive unlocks on our grinding tier list should prioritize M1 efficiency over flashy ability spam. A clean M1-to-E combo that kills an opponent earns the same Punches as a prolonged ability exchange, but completes faster and reduces third-party interference.
E, Q, and R: Ability Move Keybinds
Every active ability move in Ability Wars maps to one of three fixed slots. E typically holds the primary attack or utility move. Q often carries secondary effects like area denial, buffs, or repositioning tools. R serves as the third slot for abilities with three actives—teleport finishers, self-heals, or powerful cooldown abilities that define a kit's identity.
Cooldown awareness separates intermediate players from advanced ones. Each key press triggers a visible cooldown timer on your UI. Burning all three slots simultaneously leaves you punching-only until timers expire—a vulnerable state in crowded servers. Hold R for escape scenarios, use E and Q for controlled engagements, and always know your remaining cooldowns before committing to a fight near map hazards like the Crystal Cavern edges.
Some abilities rely on passives instead of active keys. Default has no E, Q, or R moves at all. Soda boosts stats passively while using E for an active attack. Read each ability's full profile before equipping—our punch abilities guide and badge abilities guide break down every moveset so you enter fights with accurate keybind expectations.
Advanced PC Techniques
Edge guarding exploits map geometry to earn kills without direct combat. Abilities like Shift and Gravity can knock opponents off cliffs on rotating maps, earning Punches through environmental kills. Shift lock helps you track falling opponents and predict whether they will recover or die to the void. Map familiarity from our maps overview identifies the best edge-guard positions on each layout.
Third-party management is the highest-level PC skill. When two players fight nearby, the optimal play is often waiting for both to spend cooldowns, then entering with a fresh M1 chain and full E/Q/R available. Shift lock lets you monitor the original duel while positioning for the cleanup kill. This patience-driven approach works especially well with burst abilities ranked highly on the PvP tier list.
Recommended PC Settings Checklist
- Enable shift lock in Roblox settings before joining combat servers
- Set mouse sensitivity for comfortable 180-degree camera sweeps
- Reduce music volume to hear ability activation audio cues
- Test your equipped ability's E, Q, and R in the lobby each session
- Review the controls overview when switching from mobile to PC