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yeah... this game is a lot more complex... if you wanna do the challenge your doing you got a LOT to learn in order to pull it off...
There's a reason it's called "unfair." Even on normal, there's ridiculous stat-block inflation, and if you're not familiar with the Pathfinder system, even story mode might be a challenge. Like, learn the game before you decide to challenge yourself. It's not a platformer or shooter. You can't just jump in feet first on the hardest setting and hope skills you learned in other games will carry you.
People already did solo Unfair runs. Witch of the Veil+Kinecist is popular, for hit and "run"(turn invisible) strategy.
Unfair is not for people that have never played the game. Rather than looking for advice on how to play the game, just play on normal mode first and if you want more challenge put it on daring or core difficulty. Expect the start of the game to be rough whatever you choose. It's designed that way.
Also, it's pathfinder, so best familiarize yourself with the system before starting. It kinda sounds like you have no idea what you're doing.
Best difficulty to begin the game with is Normal, if you never played it before. If you're into always picking the maximum difficulty and really love challenge, use Core. That's a rough equivalent of max difficulty in many other games. All above that requires you to have a really good idea of what you're doing.
What class exactly did you start with? Not everything works on Unfair.
For a reasonably comfortable playthrough, you should start by disabling XP share for skill checks in difficulty options. That way, when you disarm traps or pass dialogue checks with your main character, all the XP will go to you, and you will reach levels 2 and 3 much faster - this is crucial to get through the beginning.
The easiest option is probably to go Witch of the Veil 2 (get Shrouded Step) + Rowdy Rogue (Vital Strike) and put all your skill points into Stealth. You can experiment with the rest of the 17 available levels and distribute them as you wish, as Vital Stirke from Shrouded Step with a bow/crossbow will carry you to the level cap. It requires some practice to work.
Another viable build is a Sylvan Sorc with a Leopard. A buffed pet shreds the entire Acts 1 and 2 and remains competitive throughout the rest of the game. Your sorc is more of a secondary character and a buffing machine until you get access to level 8 and 9 spells, but after that, you one-shot entire rooms, provided that you built your char properly (for Unfair specifically, you need to beat the enemies' sky-high DC, which means you likely want to invest in Expanded Arsenal for Illusion/Evocation).
If you really want to learn the solo Unfair tricks, I'd recommend starting with Kingmaker - it lends itself better for a new playthrough like this, there are fewer difficulty spikes, the game world opens up sooner, and you can just play a Magus with a Monk dip from start to finish. You'll have a better time there.
So smart.