Signal Translator is one of the latest additions to Lethal Company, and it’s a very pricy ship upgrade. In this guide, we’ll explain the benefits of the Signal Translator in Lethal Company and if you should use it or not.

How to Use Signal Translator in Lethal Company

If you want to use the Signal Translator in Lethal Company, approach the Terminal and use the following command:

where “XXXXXXXXX” is the message you want to transmit to everyone else and is limited to nine characters, including spaces. This is why you need to be creative with the messages you write. For example, “PRIMAGAMES” cannot fit. The message gets cut off after the 9th character. This, of course, doesn’t mean that you cannot spam your crewmates with consecutive messages to finish your thoughts, but it’s for the best if you can write short messages that will be immediately understandable.

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Unfortunately, this is a one-sided way of communication (similar to what Pagers were being used for back in the 1990s), so make sure to have walkie-talkies for more efficient communication.

How to Unlock and Buy Signal Translator in Lethal Company

Signal Translator (dubbed Signal Transmitter by a part of the community) can be unlocked and bought in the ship’s Store. It can be seen in the bottom section under Ship Upgrades, and its regular price is 255 credits.

After you buy the Signal Translator in Lethal Company, a device that looks like a radio will appear on your ship, which you can move around if you want to.

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Best Uses for Signal Translator in Lethal Company

Here are some ideas on how you should use the Signal Translator in Lethal Company:

Be creative with this. If you are playing with the same people over and over again,you can agree on certain “codes” that will greatly increase the efficiency of the messages sent through this emergency broadcast system…

If you need more tips, check out ourtips and tricks article for Lethal Company.

Nikola has been a Staff Writer at Prima Games since May 2022. He has been gaming since being able to hold an Amiga 500 joystick on his own, back in the early 90s (when gaming was really good!). Nikola has helped organize dozens of gaming events and tournaments and has been professionally attached to gaming since 2009.