Zenless Zone Zero Ye Shunguang Mastery Updated Teams W Engine Guide

 


Ye Shunguang Mastery Updated Teams W‑Engine Guide

Ye Shunguang is a high‑impact Honed Edge on‑field DPS whose kit rewards uptime, precise timing, and careful stat tuning. She converts Enlightened Mind windows into devastating Basic Attack chains and benefits enormously from physical penetration and Crit DMG scaling. Built correctly, she clears miasma and shielded enemies faster than most alternatives and remains a top pick for players who prefer a straightforward, mechanical playstyle that scales well into endgame content.

This guide is a complete, original, and practical walkthrough for players at every stage: from free‑to‑play progression to endgame optimization. It covers W‑Engine choices, Drive Disc tuning, team compositions, rotations, stat targets, and troubleshooting. Wherever possible I use clear examples, comparison tables, and actionable targets so you can apply the advice immediately.


How Ye Shunguang works at a glance

Ye’s damage profile centers on sustained Basic Attack output amplified by Enlightened Mind and multiplicative bonuses from W‑Engines and Drive Discs. She has innate crit sources in her kit, which means raw Crit Rate is often already high; the common mistake is stacking Rate beyond usefulness and neglecting Crit DMG and PEN. Her strengths are:

  • Consistent on‑field damage that scales multiplicatively with ATK, Crit DMG, and PEN.

  • Excellent performance vs miasma and shielded enemies due to kit mechanics that bypass or shred defenses.

  • Simple, repeatable rotations that reward timing rather than complex inputs.

Her weaknesses are predictable: she needs safe windows to maintain Enlightened uptime, and she benefits far more from penetration than from raw elemental multipliers. That makes W‑Engine choice and Drive Disc tuning the single most important decisions for maximizing her output.

W‑Engine priorities and why they matter

W‑Engines change how Ye’s damage multiplies. The right W‑Engine turns her from “very good” into “top tier.” The three practical tiers to consider are Best‑in‑Slot, Strong Alternatives, and Budget/Utility.

Best‑in‑Slot: Cloudcleave Radiance This W‑Engine provides physical RES penetration and a large damage window that multiplies Basic Attack output. Because Ye’s kit is primarily physical and benefits from penetration, Cloudcleave directly increases effective damage against high‑DEF targets. If you have it, make it your default.

Strong Alternatives: The Brimstone and Severed Innocence The Brimstone stacks ATK reliably and is easier to obtain; it’s a strong fallback that still scales well with Drive Disc ATK and Crit DMG. Severed Innocence offers large Crit DMG scaling and pairs well with builds that already have sufficient penetration from Drive Discs or team buffs.

Budget and Utility options If you lack the above, choose W‑Engines that increase ATK or provide consistent multipliers. They won’t match Cloudcleave’s peak, but they keep Ye competitive while you chase better gear.

Why W‑Engine choice is the single biggest upgrade W‑Engines apply multiplicative effects to her on‑field damage and often supply crit or penetration that Drive Discs can’t. A single W‑Engine swap can outperform several incremental Drive Disc upgrades, so prioritize W‑Engine pulls or targeted upgrades when possible.


Drive Disc sets and stat tuning

Drive Discs are where you shape Ye’s stat profile. Because she has innate crit, the goal is to avoid Crit Rate overcap and instead funnel value into Crit DMG, ATK, and PEN.

Recommended set baseline Aim for a 4pc White Water Ballad as your baseline. It provides balanced offensive stats and pairs well with a 2pc that supplies PEN or Crit DMG depending on your needs. If you can’t complete a 4pc, prioritize the pieces that give ATK and Crit DMG.

Main stat priorities by slot

  • Disc 6 (main): ATK% — highest single contribution to raw damage.

  • Disc 5 (main): PEN ratio or Physical DMG — increases effective damage vs armored targets.

  • Disc 4 (main): Crit DMG — because Rate is often already high, DMG yields more value.

Substat priorities

  • Crit Rate only until you reach a safe cap (see stat targets below).

  • Crit DMG next, then ATK%, then PEN. Avoid stacking flat ATK or HP unless you’re filling a specific gap.

Reforging and roll management If your Drive Discs roll Crit Rate beyond the safe cap, reforge those rolls into Crit DMG or ATK. The marginal value of extra Rate past the cap is near zero and wastes potential.

Stat targets and how to measure them

Set concrete targets so you know when to stop chasing one stat and start another.

Practical stat targets (general guidance)

  • Crit Rate: 60–75% effective total (including innate sources). If your kit gives 20–30% crit, aim for 40–55% from gear.

  • Crit DMG: 150–220% depending on your total Rate. Higher Crit DMG is always valuable once Rate is safe.

  • ATK%: Maximize on Disc 6 and through substats; aim for 120–200% total ATK% depending on your Drive Disc pool.

  • PEN: 30–60% effective penetration is a strong target for endgame content; less is fine for early progression.

How to calculate effective crit Add up crit from passive skills, Drive Disc sets, and W‑Engine. If the sum is near or above 75%, stop adding Rate and switch to Crit DMG.

Why penetration matters more than raw ATK in many fights Against high‑DEF bosses, penetration multiplies your effective damage far more than raw ATK. If you’re stuck on a boss, prioritize PEN over small ATK gains.

Team composition philosophy

Ye wants long, uninterrupted windows on field. Teams should be compact, reliable, and built to create those windows while supplying penetration or ATK buffs.

Core team roles that pair well with Ye

  • A swap support who can pause Enlightened Mind timers and provide quick heals or shields.

  • A buffer who increases ATK or PEN for the duration of Ye’s uptime.

  • A crowd control or stun anchor to lock enemies during Ye’s burst windows.

Example team archetypes

  • Sustained shred trio: Ye on field, a swap support to pause Enlightened, and a buffer who provides PEN. This team is simple and effective for long fights.

  • Burst window trio: Ye plus a stun anchor and a damage amplifier who times their buff with Ye’s W‑Engine window. Use this for multi‑target or timed encounters.

  • Utility hybrid: Ye with a healer/shielder and a debuffer who reduces enemy RES. Use this for content with heavy interruptions.

Free‑to‑play friendly team A practical F2P team pairs Ye with Anby (or another accessible buffer) and a stun/support like Nicole or Zhao. The goal is to create safe windows and stack PEN through team buffs and Drive Discs.

Rotations and practical playstyle

Ye’s rotation is straightforward but timing sensitive. The aim is to maximize Basic Attack chains during Enlightened Mind and to align Ultimates with W‑Engine windows.

Core rotation principles Enter Enlightened Mind and immediately begin Basic Attack chains. Use EX/Special to maintain Culmination stacks and reserve Ultimates for multi‑hit phases or when the W‑Engine damage window is active. If you need to swap out, use your swap support to pause Enlightened timers so you don’t waste uptime.

A sample rotation (endgame) Start with a buffer’s ATK/PEN buff, enter Enlightened, chain Basic Attacks, weave EX to refresh Culmination, use Ult when the W‑Engine window peaks, and swap out only when necessary. Repeat.

Micro‑timing tips

  • Time your Ultimates to land in the middle of W‑Engine windows for multiplicative gains.

  • Avoid entering Enlightened right before a forced interruption; instead, wait for a safe window.

  • Use swap supports to pause Enlightened when you must leave the field.


Comparison and stat tables

Below are concise tables to help you choose W‑Engines and Drive Disc priorities quickly.

W‑Engine comparison

W‑EnginePrimary benefitBest for
Cloudcleave RadiancePhysical RES penetration and large DMG windowPeak endgame DPS
The BrimstoneATK stacking and reliable scalingAccessible high ATK builds
Severed InnocenceLarge Crit DMG scalingCrit DMG focused setups
Gilded BlossomBalanced ATK and utilityFree or budget players

Drive Disc main stat priority

SlotPrimary main statWhy
Disc 6ATK%Highest raw damage increase
Disc 5PEN ratio / Physical DMGIncreases effective damage vs armored foes
Disc 4Crit DMGBest value once Crit Rate is safe

Progression roadmap: from free to endgame

This section gives a step‑by‑step plan so you know what to chase at each stage.

Early progression (first 0–2 months) Focus on completing a 4pc White Water Ballad if possible. Use accessible W‑Engines that boost ATK. Prioritize ATK% on Disc 6 and get enough Crit Rate to feel consistent (around 50–60% total). Learn her rotation and practice timing Enlightened entries.

Mid progression (2–6 months) Start chasing PEN on Disc 5 and swap Disc 4 mains to Crit DMG. Acquire The Brimstone or Severed Innocence if Cloudcleave isn’t available. Build a reliable trio with a swap support and a buffer.

Endgame (6+ months) Aim for Cloudcleave Radiance, refine Drive Disc rolls to hit Crit DMG and PEN targets, and optimize substats. Practice advanced timing to overlap W‑Engine windows with Ultimates. Consider alternate builds for specific content (e.g., pure PEN vs pure Crit DMG) and refine team comps for boss fights.

Troubleshooting common problems

If Ye feels weak or inconsistent, check these common issues.

Problem: Low burst despite high ATK Likely cause: insufficient PEN or Crit DMG. Solution: reforge Drive Disc rolls into PEN and Crit DMG; consider swapping to Cloudcleave.

Problem: Frequent interruptions and lost Enlightened uptime Likely cause: poor team composition or timing. Solution: add a swap support to pause Enlightened or a stun anchor to lock enemies during your windows.

Problem: Crit Rate overcap Likely cause: stacking Rate from Drive Discs and W‑Engine without checking innate crit. Solution: calculate total crit and reforge excess Rate into Crit DMG.

Problem: Struggling vs high‑DEF bosses Likely cause: low penetration. Solution: prioritize PEN on Disc 5 and use W‑Engine with RES pen or team debuffs that reduce enemy DEF.

Build examples

Below are three practical builds: Budget, Balanced, and Endgame. Each is tuned to different player resources.

Budget build (accessible pieces) W‑Engine: Gilded Blossom or The Brimstone Drive Disc: 4pc White Water Ballad + 2pc with PEN if possible Main stats: Disc 6 ATK%, Disc 5 PEN/Physical, Disc 4 Crit DMG Playstyle: Conservative Enlightened entries, focus on consistent Basic Attack chains.

Balanced build (mid progression) W‑Engine: The Brimstone or Severed Innocence Drive Disc: 4pc White Water Ballad + 2pc Crit DMG or PEN Main stats: Disc 6 ATK%, Disc 5 PEN, Disc 4 Crit DMG; substats: Crit Rate to safe cap, then Crit DMG. Playstyle: Aggressive uptime, time Ultimates with team buffs.

Endgame build (best in slot) W‑Engine: Cloudcleave Radiance Drive Disc: 4pc White Water Ballad + 2pc PEN or Crit DMG depending on content Main stats: Disc 6 ATK%, Disc 5 PEN, Disc 4 Crit DMG; substats: Crit DMG, ATK, PEN. Playstyle: Maximize W‑Engine windows, weave EX/Special to maintain Culmination, reserve Ultimates for multi‑hit phases.

Advanced tips and niche interactions

Ye has a few niche interactions that can push her performance further when mastered.

Timing Ultimates with multi‑hit phases Many bosses have predictable multi‑hit windows. Save your Ultimates for those windows and align them with Cloudcleave for multiplicative damage.

Using swap supports to extend effective uptime A well‑timed swap can pause Enlightened timers and let you re‑enter with full duration. This is especially useful in fights with forced movement or scripted interruptions.

Stacking PEN through team synergy If your Drive Discs lack PEN, use a teammate who debuffs enemy RES or applies vulnerability. These team effects stack multiplicatively with your PEN and W‑Engine.


Frequently asked questions

Is Ye Shunguang worth pulling for new players Yes. She’s mechanically approachable, scales well with gear, and remains relevant across many content types. If you enjoy on‑field DPS and straightforward rotations, she’s a strong long‑term investment.

Which W‑Engine should I chase first If you can, chase Cloudcleave Radiance. If not, The Brimstone is the best accessible fallback. Prioritize W‑Engines that supply penetration or Crit DMG that complements your Drive Disc pool.

How do I avoid Crit Rate overcap Add up crit from passive skills, Drive Disc sets, and W‑Engine. If the total is near or above 75%, stop adding Rate and reforge excess into Crit DMG or ATK.

What Drive Disc set should I use if I can’t get White Water Ballad Use any 4pc that supplies ATK and Crit DMG; then pair with a 2pc that supplies PEN. The exact set matters less than hitting the stat priorities: ATK% on Disc 6, PEN on Disc 5, Crit DMG on Disc 4.

How do I build Ye for single target vs multi‑target For single target, prioritize PEN and Crit DMG. For multi‑target, favor ATK% and W‑Engine windows that increase multi‑hit damage or provide AoE multipliers.

Final checklist before you go into battle

  • Confirm total Crit Rate and reforge excess into Crit DMG.

  • Ensure Disc 6 is ATK%, Disc 5 is PEN or Physical DMG, Disc 4 is Crit DMG.

  • Use a team that provides a swap support and a buffer for ATK or PEN.

  • Time Ultimates to overlap with W‑Engine windows, especially Cloudcleave.

  • Practice entering Enlightened Mind only when you have a safe window to avoid wasted uptime.

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Path of Exile 2 Monster Zoo Companion Build 0.5 Spirit Walker Meta

 


Unlimited Companions Zoo Build POE 2 0.5 Walkthrough

This Spirit Walker Monster Zoo stacks multiple companions to convert single-target pets into a pack‑wiping engine using Minion Splash, companion crit, and the new sceptre that removes the one‑per‑type limit. The build is exceptionally strong for both mapping and bossing because it turns every companion hit into area damage while letting a single unique beast (like Mighty Silverfist) handle boss nukes.

What you will accomplish with this guide

  • A leveling route that transitions smoothly into the zoo playstyle.

  • A passive and ascendancy plan tailored to Spirit Walker minion scaling.

  • Gem links and socket priorities for clear speed and bossing.

  • Gear tiers from budget to endgame, including how to use Sylvan’s Effigy and weapon choices.


Build concept and core mechanics

The Monster Zoo centers on three pillars:

Companion stacking — remove the one‑per‑type cap and field multiple companions to multiply hits per second. Sylvan’s Effigy is the keystone item that enables this strategy and grants additional marks that speed boss kills.

Minion Splash and Minion Crit — support gems convert single‑target companion strikes into pack clear while minion crit jewels and crit modifiers on captured beasts turn single-target companions into boss nukes.

Support playstyle — you act as the commander: buff auras, apply curses, manage spirit reservation, and kite when necessary. Your survivability is secondary to keeping the army alive and empowered.

Early game leveling (Acts 1–3)

Start as a Huntress or whichever base class you prefer for Spirit Walker ascendancy access. The early goal is to reach Tame Beast and the Jungle Ruins where you can capture your first powerful companion.

  • Use a fast attack weapon (crossbow or bow) and a simple clear skill until you can tame a companion.

  • Prioritize life, movement speed, and resistances on gear.

  • Pick up early minion nodes when available but don’t force expensive gear yet.

Key milestones

  • Reach Tame Beast and capture a high‑damage companion.

  • Swap to a sceptre or weapon that supports minion skill levels as soon as you can.

  • Acquire a helmet or amulet with + to minion skill levels if possible.

Midgame transition (Act 4–Maps)

This is where you assemble your zoo and lock in core supports.

  • Equip Sylvan’s Effigy as soon as you can afford or craft it; it removes the one‑per‑type limit and grants the Marian Wolf, enabling full menageries.

  • Slot Minion Splash, Minion Damage, Increased Area of Effect (for clear), and Minion Crit supports where appropriate.

  • Use a weapon with + to level of minion skills or minion damage mods. A high‑damage weapon that converts a portion of your damage to minions (e.g., upgraded Tyranny’s Grip) is ideal for scaling single‑target output.

Play priorities

  • Capture or craft companions with crit or high base damage for bossing.

  • Balance spirit reservation so you can run essential auras (Haste, Extra Physical Damage, etc.).


Endgame setup and scaling

Endgame focuses on maximizing companion quantity, minion crit, and gem levels.

  • Sylvan’s Effigy remains mandatory for the full zoo. It also applies marks that accelerate boss kills.

  • Use minion‑crit jewels and craft or capture companions with crit modifiers. A crit‑rolled Mighty Silverfist or similar unique companion becomes your boss killer.

  • Push gem levels via +level gear and invest in high‑quality support gems for Minion Splash and Minion Damage.

  • Consider two weapon sets: one for mapping (AoE/minion splash) and one for bossing (single‑target minion crit focus).

Passive tree and ascendancy highlights

Spirit Walker ascendancy nodes that boost companion damage, survivability, and utility are the core. Prioritize nodes that:

  • Increase minion damage and minion life.

  • Grant aura reservation efficiency so you can run multiple auras.

  • Provide defensive layers for your character (life, evasion, ES) so you can survive while your army fights.

Gem setups and socket priorities

Mapping (clear) link

  • Companion SkillMinion SplashMinion DamageIncreased Area of EffectFaster Attacks (or Multistrike if applicable)

Bossing (single target) link

  • Companion SkillMinion CritMinion DamageConcentrated EffectIncreased Critical Strikes (or Greater Multiple Projectiles if companion uses projectiles)

Utility and aura setup

  • Haste, Extra Physical Damage aura companions, and a curse (e.g., Vulnerability or Mark of Death) to amplify companion damage.

Gear tiers and recommendations

Budget

  • Rare sceptre or helmet with + to minion skill levels. Life and resistances on all slots.

  • Cheap weapon with decent base damage.

  • Life and movement speed boots.

Mid‑tier

  • Sylvan’s Effigy (if affordable) or a crafted sceptre with +minion levels.

  • Weapon with minion damage or + to minion skill levels.

  • Jewels with minion damage or minion crit.

Endgame

  • Sylvan’s Effigy + a high‑damage weapon like upgraded Tyranny’s Grip for damage conversion.

  • Minion crit jewels and captured companions with crit mods.

  • Helmet/amulet with +2/+3 to minion skills and high life/ES.


Companion roles and when to use them

CompanionPrimary roleWhen to pick
Marian WolfFast clear and extra companion countEarly zoo filler; granted by Sylvan’s Effigy.
Mighty SilverfistBoss nuker with massive single-target damageCapture with crit mods for boss fights.
Elephant/ChargerHeavy single-target burstUse for bossing and tanky encounters.
Tortoise/ProtectorTanking and sustainUse when you need a durable front line.

Sample stat comparison (mapping vs bossing)

MetricMapping setupBossing setup
Hits per secondVery high due to many companionsModerate but high per‑hit damage
Area coverageWide with Minion SplashNarrow but concentrated
Single-target TTKSlower unless Silverfist presentExtremely fast with crit companion
SurvivabilityHigh (army soaks damage)High if tortoise/protector used

Playstyle and micro tactics

  • Summon and position: Summon companions before engaging and position yourself so the army is between you and enemies.

  • Aura rotation: Turn on Haste and damage auras for mapping; switch to boss‑focused buffs and single‑target supports when needed.

  • Capture and reroll: Capture companions with desirable mods (crit, attack speed) and reroll until you get high‑value stats for bossing.

Budgeting and crafting tips

  • Prioritize + to level of minion skills on helmet, sceptre, and amulet early.

  • Save currency for Sylvan’s Effigy or trade for one; it’s the single biggest power spike for this zoo concept.

Common pitfalls and how to avoid them

  • Spirit reservation overload — plan aura reservation carefully; use reservation efficiency nodes and gear.

  • Overreliance on one unique — keep a backup companion set for when your main unique is unavailable.

  • Ignoring minion crit — without minion crit scaling, bossing performance drops significantly; invest in jewels and capture mods.

Example endgame character sheet targets

  • Life: 3,000+ (or hybrid with ES)

  • Minion DPS: maximize via gem levels and minion damage multipliers

  • Companion count: 5–8+ with Sylvan’s Effigy and captured beasts

  • Resistances: capped for maps; chaos as needed


FAQ

How essential is Sylvan’s Effigy? Sylvan’s Effigy is the build’s defining item because it removes the one‑per‑type companion cap and grants extra companions and marks that speed boss kills. It’s the most important single purchase for the zoo meta.

Can I play this on a budget? Yes. The build functions on rares with +minion levels and life, but it becomes exponentially stronger with Sylvan’s Effigy and minion‑crit jewels.

Which companion should I capture first? Capture a high‑damage companion with crit or attack speed for bossing (Mighty Silverfist if available), and fill the rest with wolves, chargers, and protectors for mapping.

Is this viable in group play? Yes, but coordinate auras and marks so you don’t overlap inefficiently; your army still contributes massive DPS while you support.

How do I handle spirit reservation issues? Invest in reservation efficiency nodes, use auras sparingly, and consider gear that reduces reservation or grants additional spirit.

Final checklist before you go

  • Acquire Sylvan’s Effigy or plan to trade for one.

  • Capture at least one high‑crit companion for bosses.

  • Slot Minion Splash and Minion Crit supports and push gem levels.

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Borderlands 4 How To Solo UVH7 With Reaper Vex


Reaper Vex UVH7 Ultimate Build Guide

This guide is a complete, solo‑focused walkthrough for the Reaper Vex that reliably clears UVH7 content in Borderlands 4. It covers the philosophy behind the build, exact gear priorities, firmware and repkit choices, a detailed skill allocation and rotation, boss-specific tactics, survivability tuning, farming routes for the required legendaries, and a practical FAQ. The content below is written to be actionable and original, with clear comparisons and stat tables where they help decision making. Bold and italic emphasis highlights the most important keywords and choices.

Build philosophy and what makes it OP

The Reaper Vex excels at converting action skill and minion synergies into explosive melee windows. The build’s power comes from stacking three things that scale multiplicatively in UVH7: Reaper uptime, melee damage scaling, and action skill duration. When these align, the Reaper minions hold aggro while you close in and land converted melee hits that bypass many of the usual damage ceilings. The result is repeatable one‑shot windows on bosses and near-instant clears of high-health targets.


This approach is especially potent in UVH7 because enemy health and damage scale dramatically; raw sustained DPS is less efficient than timed, massive bursts that exploit stagger and invulnerability frames. The Reaper Vex build is designed to create those windows reliably and repeatedly.

Core goals for the build

  • Maximize Reaper uptime so minions tank and generate stacks.

  • Convert as much of your damage into melee as possible through specializations and firmware.

  • Keep action skill duration and cooldown reduction high to repeat windows.

  • Maintain survivability so you can stay in melee range and preserve full‑health bonuses.

Essential gear and why each slot matters

Weapons and gear choices are about synergy, not just raw numbers. Below are the prioritized slots and the reasoning behind each pick.

Primary weapon A legendary shotgun with a built‑in melee proc is the single most important weapon choice. The shotgun’s melee proc converts a portion of the weapon’s damage into a melee trigger that benefits from your melee scaling. Choose a shotgun that pairs high base damage with a fast melee proc rate.

Secondary weapon A fast-firing elemental SMG or pistol for add clear and stagger. This weapon keeps trash mobs down while you wait for cooldowns and primes elemental weaknesses for boss windows.

Grenade A grenade that primes or applies a melee‑judgement style effect is ideal. Grenades that apply DoT or elemental status help with stagger and open windows for melee follow-ups.

Shield High capacity with fast recharge and a melee resist or melee‑on‑kill effect. Shields that restore health on kill or reduce incoming damage while action skills are active are excellent.

Class Mod A Reaper‑focused class mod that increases Lingering Embers, minion melee damage, or action skill duration. This is the single most impactful mod for scaling the build.

Repkit and Firmware Repkits that add melee damage on kill, increase action skill duration, or convert weapon damage to melee are top-tier. Firmware that reduces cooldowns and increases action skill uptime completes the set. Aim for three-piece firmware synergies where possible.

Skill allocation and specializations

Below is a recommended allocation and the reasoning behind each major node. This is written as a conceptual path rather than a strict point-by-point list so you can adapt to your level and available gear.

Core skill focus

  • Lingering Embers: Max this node. It’s the primary multiplier for minion and melee synergy.

  • Reaper Capstone: Take the capstone that summons the Grim Reaper or equivalent minion; the minion’s presence is central to holding aggro and creating safe melee windows.

  • Action Skill Duration: Invest heavily to keep Reapers active longer.

  • Melee Conversion/Scaling: Any node that converts gun damage to melee or increases melee damage should be prioritized.

  • Sustain Nodes: Blood Magic or life‑on‑kill nodes are important to keep you at full health for performance specializations that reward full‑health play.


Specialization choice

Choose a performance specialization that either converts a portion of your ranged damage into melee or grants a large damage bonus while at full health. The synergy between staying at full health and delivering a massive melee window is the backbone of the solo strategy.

Playstyle and rotation — the repeatable loop

This section explains the exact sequence you should practice until it becomes muscle memory. The loop is designed to be resilient and repeatable across different boss fights.

Open the encounter at range to build Recurrence or similar stacking mechanics. Use your secondary weapon to clear adds and apply elemental priming. When the boss is ready, prime with your grenade to apply DoT or a status that increases stagger. Summon the Reapers and let them draw aggro. Swap to your melee‑proc shotgun and close the distance.

Time your melee window to coincide with the boss’s stagger or vulnerability phase. Land the shotgun melee proc and follow with a short melee combo if available. If the boss survives, back out to reset and heal, then repeat. Use your shield and sustain nodes to maintain full health and keep performance bonuses active.

Survivability tuning

Survivability is not about stacking raw health only; it’s about staying alive long enough to create and repeat your burst windows. Use firmware or repkits that grant health on kill, damage reduction while action skills are active, or fast shield recharge. If you find yourself dying before you can finish a window, shift one firmware slot to survivability and consider a shield with health regen on kill.

Comparison table of top gear choices

SlotTop PickWhy it’s best
Primary WeaponLegendary melee‑proc shotgunConverts weapon damage into melee triggers for burst
Secondary WeaponFast elemental SMGAdd clear and stagger; primes elemental weaknesses
GrenadeMelee‑judgement style grenadePrimes boss for melee follow-up
Class ModReaper/minion melee modDirectly scales Lingering Embers and minion damage
RepkitMelee on kill / action skill durationExtends windows and increases burst frequency
ShieldHigh capacity with fast rechargeKeeps you in melee range longer

Firmware and repkit tuning

Firmware and repkits are the final layer of scaling. Aim for sets that complement your class mod and weapons. A three-piece firmware set that grants melee on kill, action skill duration, and cooldown reduction is ideal. If you can’t complete a set, prioritize action skill duration and melee scaling first, then cooldown reduction.

Boss tactics and UVH7 adjustments

UVH7 bosses have huge health pools and hit hard. The Reaper Vex strategy is to force stagger windows and then deliver a melee one‑shot. Below are boss archetypes and how to handle them.

Staggerable heavy bosses

Bait heavy attacks and use your Reapers to hold aggro. When the boss staggers, close and execute the melee window. If the boss has a phase where it becomes invulnerable, use that time to reposition and refresh cooldowns.


High mobility bosses

Use grenades to slow or root, then summon Reapers to distract. Keep your secondary weapon ready to interrupt and reapply status effects. Mobility bosses require more patience; don’t overcommit to melee unless you have a clear stagger.

Add‑heavy encounters

Clear adds with your SMG and grenades, then summon Reapers to tank while you build stacks. Use short melee windows to pick off priority targets and then return to range.

Farming routes and how to get the key pieces

Farming the right shotgun and class mod is the most time-consuming part. Focus on endgame bosses and weekly rotations that drop Reaper‑synergy class mods and melee‑proc shotguns. Community drop lists and boss guides are helpful; prioritize bosses that historically drop the Mantra‑style shotguns and Reaper class mods.

Practical tuning checklist before a UVH7 run

  • Class Mod: Equipped and optimized for Lingering Embers/minion melee.

  • Primary: Legendary shotgun with melee proc and high base damage.

  • Repkit: Action skill duration + melee on kill or cooldown reduction.

  • Shield: Fast recharge and survivability firmware.

  • Specialization: Full‑health or melee conversion spec active.

  • Consumables: Health boosters and damage buffs for boss windows.

Small stat table for quick reference

StatPriority
Melee DamageVery High
Action Skill DurationVery High
Reaper UptimeVery High
Cooldown ReductionHigh
Health Regen / On KillMedium
Shield CapacityMedium

Advanced tips and micro‑optimizations

  • Use movement and cover to bait boss attacks into predictable windows. The Reaper minions will hold aggro; use that to your advantage.

  • If your shotgun has an elemental component, match it to the boss’s weakness for extra stagger.

  • Keep one firmware slot flexible: swap to survivability when learning a new boss, then revert to pure damage once you’re consistent.

  • Practice the melee timing on lesser bosses to internalize the animation windows and hit registration quirks.

Minimal bullet list of do’s and don’ts

  • Do keep Reaper uptime high.

  • Do prioritize melee conversion and action skill duration.

  • Don’t overcommit to melee on mobility bosses.

  • Don’t ignore shield and sustain tuning.


FAQ

Can I solo every UVH7 boss with this build? Yes, with optimized gear and practiced timing you can reliably solo most UVH7 bosses. Some encounters require more patience and firmware swaps for survivability, but the core loop scales well.

What’s the single most important item to farm? A legendary shotgun with a reliable melee proc. It’s the keystone that converts your damage into the one‑shot windows.

How do I handle bosses that resist melee? If a boss has high melee resistance, rely on stagger windows created by grenades and elemental priming. Use your SMG to chip away and wait for a vulnerability phase. Consider swapping one firmware to increase elemental damage or stagger.

Is this build viable in co‑op? Yes. In co‑op you’ll still be powerful, but coordinate Reaper windows with teammates to avoid overlapping burst windows and wasting uptime.

What if I keep dying before I can finish a window? Shift one firmware slot to survivability, equip a shield with health on kill or fast recharge, and add sustain nodes. Practice the rotation to avoid unnecessary exposure.

How long until I can farm the required gear? Farming time varies. Expect several hours to a few dozen hours depending on RNG and whether you target specific weekly bosses.

Closing notes and next steps

This build is designed to be repeatable and forgiving once you master the timing. The Reaper Vex’s strength is in creating safe, repeatable melee windows that scale extremely well in UVH7. If you want, I can produce a formatted, printable PDF or a step‑by‑step leveling and farm route document that includes exact skill point allocations by level, firmware targets for each slot, and a prioritized boss farm list.

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Battlefield 6 Best Weapon Setup For All Playstyles

 


One Loadout To Rule Battlefield 6 Matches

This guide is built around a single, repeatable system that covers nearly every match: a versatile primary optimized for close-to-mid engagements, a suppressed long-range secondary for sightlines and overwatch, and a high-damage close-quarters backup for building clears and spawn fights. Learn the attachment rules, practice the drills, and use the map-specific tuning sections. You’ll spend less time swapping guns and more time winning fights.

Why one adaptable system outperforms constant swapping

Battlefield 6 maps and modes produce a predictable distribution of engagement distances: most fights occur inside 0–60 meters. Weapons that excel in that band and remain flexible for extremes will win more matches than niche builds that only shine in rare scenarios. Mastery of recoil, ADS timing, and movement with one primary yields consistent TTK (time-to-kill) and situational awareness advantages. The goal is not to find a single “best gun” forever, but to adopt a single system that adapts quickly to map and role.


The blueprint: one system to cover everything

Primary: Versatile Carbine — balanced damage, fast ADS, controllable recoil, and strong mobility. Secondary 1: Suppressed DMR or semi-auto rifle — for long sightlines and objective denial. Secondary 2: Shotgun or fast-draw pistol — for room clears and last-stand fights. Gadgets: one entry gadget (stun/flash) and one sustain gadget (medpack/ammo crate). Perks: sprint-to-fire, faster reload, reduced flinch.

This blueprint is intentionally simple. The primary handles the majority of fights, the suppressed DMR covers open sightlines and vehicle windows, and the CQB option secures buildings and close spawns. Gadgets and perks are chosen to maximize uptime and survivability.

Attachment rules that actually matter

Attachments are where most players waste time. Focus on attachments that change how you play rather than tiny stat bumps. The following rules are the backbone of every effective loadout.

  • Muzzle: Use a suppressor for objective and flank play. It removes muzzle flash from the minimap and reduces enemy awareness, enabling safer rotations and surprise engagements. Remove it only when you need maximum bullet velocity for extreme-range shots.

  • Barrel: Choose a short-to-medium barrel for mixed maps to preserve ADS speed and mobility. Long barrels are for committed marksman roles.

  • Grip/Underbarrel: Pick an angled or lightweight grip to improve ADS stability without crippling sprint recovery.

  • Optic: Default to 1–2x reflex or hybrid for generalists. Use 3–4x only for DMR/sniper roles.

  • Magazine: Use extended mags when you expect sustained fights or suppression roles; otherwise keep standard mags to reduce weight and recoil.

These rules prioritize staying off the minimap, winning the most common engagement ranges, and preserving mobility. They are intentionally conservative: they work across maps and modes.

Choosing the right primary class for your role

Carbines, SMGs, ARs, DMRs, LMGs, and shotguns each have clear roles. Below is a practical guide to when to pick each.

Carbines are the best all-rounders. They combine mobility with enough range to contest midfields and are ideal for mixed maps where you’ll fight in buildings and open streets.

SMGs excel in close-to-mid range with superior hip-fire and sprint recovery. Pick SMGs for urban maps and aggressive flanking play.

Assault rifles are versatile but demand recoil discipline. They shine when you can tap-fire or engage at medium distances with single-fire discipline.

DMRs and snipers are for overwatch and long sightlines. Use them when you can commit to positioning and team support.

LMGs are suppression and sustained-fire tools. Use them to lock down objectives and provide covering fire.

Shotguns are for room-clearing and spawn traps. Use them in tight maps or when you expect repeated close-quarters fights.


Example meta loadouts tuned to playstyle

Below are three complete loadouts that follow the blueprint. Each is tuned for a specific role but follows the same attachment rules so you can switch roles without relearning fundamentals.

Aggressive Flanker (SMG-focused) Primary: High-RoF SMG with suppressor, short barrel, angled grip, 1x reflex, fast mag. Secondary 1: Suppressed DMR for quick long-range picks. Secondary 2: Fast-draw pistol for CQB. Gadgets: Stun grenade and medpack. Playstyle: Sprint-slide into buildings, clear rooms, and avoid long sightlines. Use the DMR to deny snipers and pick exposed enemies.

Objective Anchor (Carbine-focused) Primary: Balanced carbine with suppressor, medium barrel, lightweight grip, 2x optic, extended mag. Secondary 1: Semi-auto rifle with 3–4x optic for overwatch. Secondary 2: Shotgun for building clears. Gadgets: Ammo crate and deployable cover. Playstyle: Hold capture points, provide mid-range cover, and rotate to support teammates.

Marksman Support (DMR-focused) Primary: Semi-auto DMR with 4–6x optic, long barrel, bipod if available. Secondary 1: Fast pistol for CQB. Secondary 2: SMG for aggressive pushes. Gadgets: Recon gadget and medpack. Playstyle: Overwatch objectives, pick high-value targets, reposition after shots.

Comparison table for primary choices

Primary TypeMobilityEffective RangeBest Attachment Focus
CarbineHighClose–MidSuppressor; medium barrel; angled grip
SMGVery HighClose–MidSuppressor; short barrel; fast mag
Assault RifleMediumMid–LongRecoil comp; 2–3x optic; controlled fire
DMRLowLongLong barrel; high zoom optic; bipod
LMGLowClose–MidExtended mag; heavy barrel; bipod
ShotgunHigh (short range)Very CloseChoke; fast reload; hip-fire tuning

Map-specific tuning and decision logic

Maps in BF6 vary widely. The following guidance helps you tune the blueprint quickly.

Urban and indoor maps: Favor SMGs or short-barrel carbines. Prioritize hip-fire stability and sprint-to-fire perks. Use stuns and flashbangs to clear rooms.

Open and vehicle-heavy maps: Use DMRs or ARs with long barrels and high-zoom optics. Prioritize bullet velocity and range. Expect to trade stealth for raw damage.

Mixed maps: Carbines with hybrid optics and suppressors are ideal. Play for mid-range control and rotate with your squad to cover blind spots.

When you arrive at a match, quickly assess the map’s dominant engagement distances and pick the primary that wins most fights in that band. If the map is mixed, default to the carbine blueprint.

How to tune attachments for specific scenarios

If you need more range, swap the medium barrel for a long barrel and trade the suppressor for velocity. If you need more mobility, remove heavy attachments and choose lightweight grips and shorter barrels. If you expect sustained fights, add extended mags and a bipod or underbarrel that improves stability.

A simple rule of thumb: change only one attachment between matches and play five rounds to evaluate the impact. This isolates variables and reveals what truly improves your performance.

Recoil control and aiming drills

Recoil mastery is the single biggest skill gap between average and great players. Spend 10–15 minutes in the firing range each session. Focus on short bursts at 30–50 meters and controlled single-fire at longer ranges. Practice tracking moving targets while strafing and resetting your aim after each burst. Learn the vertical and horizontal pattern for your chosen primary; most carbines and ARs have predictable vertical climb that can be countered with steady mouse/analog stick movement.

Movement and positioning that multiply weapon effectiveness

Weapon choice matters, but movement and positioning multiply its value. Use cover, peek rather than wide exposure, and reset after each engagement. Flank when possible; a suppressed primary makes flanking far more effective. When anchoring objectives, use deployables and sightlines to deny enemy approaches rather than chasing kills.

Teamplay and role synergy

Your loadout should complement your squad. If you’re the anchor, bring ammo and a mid-range primary. If you’re the flanker, bring stuns and a fast SMG. If you’re overwatch, bring a DMR and recon gadget. Communicate with your squad to ensure you cover each other’s weaknesses.

When to ditch the suppressor

The suppressor is powerful for objective play, but it reduces bullet velocity and sometimes damage falloff at extreme ranges. If you’re playing a pure marksman role or need to hit vehicles at long range, remove the suppressor and fit a long barrel and high-velocity ammo. This trade-off increases detectability but improves one-shot potential at extreme ranges.

Minimal pre-match checklist

Before every match, confirm the following: primary matches the map, suppressor on for objective play unless you’re marksman, optic keeps most fights in your sight picture, and gadgets match your role. Keep the checklist short and repeatable.

Advanced tuning: attachments and stat trade-offs

Understand the trade-offs. A long barrel increases range and velocity but slows ADS and mobility. A suppressor hides you but reduces velocity. Extended mags increase sustained fire but add weight and recoil. Choose attachments that align with the role you intend to play that match.

Common mistakes and how to fix them

Players often over-attach for range on mixed maps, making them slow and easy to flank. Fix this by returning to the carbine blueprint and prioritizing mobility. Another mistake is swapping guns mid-match; instead, adapt attachments between rounds. Finally, many players ignore recoil patterns; fix this with short, focused practice sessions.

Quick mental model for weapon choice

Ask three questions before you spawn: what is the dominant engagement range, what role will I play for the next five minutes, and what gadgets will help my squad? Answering these quickly will guide your loadout and attachments.

Printable loadout cards (ready to copy)

Aggressive Flanker: SMG, suppressor, short barrel, angled grip, 1x optic, fast mag; stun, medpack. Objective Anchor: Carbine, suppressor, medium barrel, lightweight grip, 2x optic, extended mag; ammo crate, deployable cover. Marksman Support: DMR, long barrel, 4–6x optic, bipod; fast pistol, recon gadget.

Stats and decision heuristics

Prioritize these stats in order for most BF6 matches: TTK at 0–30m, ADS speed and sprint recovery, recoil pattern predictability, and suppression/stealth utility. If a weapon loses in two of these four categories for your typical map pool, switch primaries.


FAQ

What single weapon should I master first? Master a versatile carbine. It covers most scenarios and lets you learn recoil, ADS timing, and movement that translate to other classes.

Is the suppressor always the best choice? No. Use it for flanking and objective play; remove it for dedicated long-range marksman roles.

How many attachments should I change between maps? Change only what the map demands: barrel and optic are the most common swaps. Keep a core setup and tweak one variable at a time.

Are SMGs better than carbines overall? SMGs dominate close quarters; carbines win mixed engagements. Choose based on map and role.

How do I improve recoil control quickly? Practice short bursts, learn the weapon’s vertical/horizontal pattern, and use angled/lightweight grips. Spend 10–15 minutes in the range daily.

What gadgets should I always carry? One entry gadget (stun/flash) and one sustain gadget (medpack/ammo) are the most universally useful.

Closing strategy and next steps

Commit to the blueprint: one adaptable primary, two situational secondaries, and a small set of attachment rules. Track your performance for a week and change only one variable at a time. Use the printable loadout cards to swap quickly between roles. The meta will shift, but a disciplined, adaptable approach keeps you competitive across patches and maps.

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Destiny 2 FREE Vex Armor For Everybody How To Get The New Vex Set


 

Claim The New Vex Armor Fast In Destiny 2 For Free

This guide is a complete, practical, and up-to-date walkthrough for getting the new Vex armor set for free in Destiny 2. Whether you’re a returning Guardian who missed the launch login bundle or a fresh player who wants to collect the full set across all classes, this guide covers every step: what to claim, where to buy, how to farm the currency, the fastest routes, recommended loadouts, and answers to every common question players ask. Read on for a full plan you can follow in a single session or across a week of focused play.

Quick summary and what you need to know first

At a glance: the Vex armor ornaments are obtainable through the Monument of Triumph and Tenet vendor system. The Monument awards Legendary Marks for completing Triumphs and milestone objectives. Tenet vendors in the Tower Courtyard sell the Vex ornaments for Legendary Marks. A one-time login bundle tied to the Monument often grants enough Marks to buy one class ornament immediately; the rest require farming Triumph credit and repeatable activities.

If you want the short checklist before the deep dive, here it is in plain terms: claim the Monument login bundle, visit the Tenet vendors, confirm the Vex ornament price (usually 50 Legendary Marks per class), buy the one you can, then follow the farming plan below to get the remaining Marks and claim the rest.


How the Monument of Triumph and Tenet vendor loop works

The Monument of Triumph is a persistent reward hub that tracks a wide range of in-game accomplishments. Triumphs are the checklist items that reward progress toward cosmetic unlocks, emblems, and currency. The Monument periodically grants a starter bundle—a login reward that includes Legendary Marks and sometimes other cosmetic tokens. Tenet vendors are the cosmetic merchants tied to the Monument; they accept Legendary Marks for ornaments and other items.

The system is designed to be accessible: the Monument gives you a head start, and the Tenet vendors make the cosmetics purchasable with in-game currency rather than real money. That’s why this Vex armor set can be free for everyone who completes the required Triumphs and uses the Monument rewards wisely.

Where to buy the Vex armor ornaments and vendor mechanics

The Tenet vendors are located in the Tower Courtyard. There are four Tenet plaques—Bravery, Devotion, Sacrifice, and Death—and each Tenet holds a rotating inventory of cosmetics. The vendors are locked behind a simple mechanic: making a purchase at one Tenet (commonly Tenet of Bravery) unlocks the rest of the Tenet stalls for your account. After unlocking, you can browse all Tenet inventories and purchase ornaments with Legendary Marks.

Important practical notes:

  • Check all Tenets before spending your Marks. The Vex ornament may appear under any Tenet and sometimes rotates between stalls.

  • The price is fixed per class. Expect to spend the same amount of Marks for Hunter, Titan, and Warlock ornaments.

  • If you have the Monument starter bundle, use it to buy the class you play most first, then farm for the others.

How many Legendary Marks do you need and what the starter bundle covers

The typical cost for a Tenet ornament like the Vex set is 50 Legendary Marks per class, though vendor prices can vary slightly with seasonal updates. The Monument starter bundle usually grants 50 Legendary Marks at launch, which means you can immediately buy one class ornament. To collect the full set for all three classes you’ll need roughly 150 Legendary Marks total.

If you missed the initial login bundle, don’t worry. The Monument’s Triumphs are repeatable and persistent; you can still earn the Marks by completing the listed objectives. The key is to prioritize Triumphs that give the most progress per time invested.

The fastest ways to earn Legendary Marks and Monument progress

Earning Marks efficiently is the heart of this guide. Below are the most reliable and time-efficient methods, ordered by practical speed and repeatability.

Public events and destination objectives are the quickest early-game sources. They’re short, predictable, and often cluster together on a destination, letting you chain several in a single loop. Lost Sectors and scenic Triumphs are low-effort and stack quickly.

Ritual playlists (Strikes, Crucible, Gambit) and Pantheon-style rotations give steady progress and are great when you want to mix variety with Triumph credit. Dungeons and raids yield high-value Triumphs but take longer per run; they’re best when you already have a group and want to clear multiple Triumph objectives at once.

For players who want a focused two-hour session, the recommended loop is: pick a destination with multiple scenic Triumphs and public events, run the public events until they’re complete, clear nearby Lost Sectors, and then switch to a ritual playlist that overlaps Monument objectives.


Two-hour farming route example (practical plan)

Start at a destination with clustered objectives, such as a planetary hub or a destination with multiple public events. The goal is to maximize Triumph credit per minute.

Begin with scenic Triumphs and destination objectives. These are quick to check off and often require only a short traversal. Next, trigger and complete public events in the area. If a public event is a Strike-style or boss event, bring a fireteam or use a build optimized for area damage to finish faster. After public events, clear any nearby Lost Sectors and pick up destination bounties that align with Monument objectives. Finish the loop with a 30–45 minute ritual playlist run (Strikes, Gambit, or Crucible) that awards Triumph progress.

This loop is repeatable and scales well with a small fireteam. Expect to earn a steady stream of Monument progress and Legendary Marks if you keep the loop tight and avoid long detours.

Loadout and build recommendations for efficient farming

To speed up public events and Lost Sectors, use builds that excel at crowd control and area damage. Weapons with strong add-clear potential and supers that wipe groups quickly are ideal. Consider the following archetypes:

  • Area-clear kinetic: A rapid-fire auto rifle or a high-impact pulse for consistent add clear.

  • Heavy burst energy: A fusion or grenade launcher for clustered enemies.

  • Power weapon: A rocket or sword for event bosses and Lost Sector champions.

  • Subclass: Choose a subclass with a fast, wide-area super (e.g., a well-rolled Void or Solar build depending on current sandbox balance).

Bring bounties that overlap Monument objectives. If a Monument Triumph requires specific activity completions, pick bounties that reward the same activities to double-dip on progress.

Team composition and multiplayer tips

A small, coordinated fireteam of two to three players is the sweet spot for speed. With two players you can trigger and finish public events quickly while still being nimble. With three players you can split roles—one clears adds, one focuses on objectives, and one handles boss damage.

If you’re solo, prioritize destinations with predictable public events and use builds that can self-sustain. If you have friends, coordinate Tenet runs so each player buys a different class ornament and then swaps accounts or helps farm Marks for the others.

Timing and rotation considerations

Tenet inventories rotate and Monument Triumphs can be updated with seasonal patches. That means the Vex ornament might appear in different Tenet stalls over time. If you don’t see the ornament immediately, check back after a reset or after unlocking the Tenet stalls by making the initial purchase.

If you’re aiming to collect all three class ornaments quickly, plan your play sessions around weekly resets and seasonal events that add Monument Triumphs. Weekly resets often refresh activities and bounties that feed Monument progress, so a focused session right after reset can be highly efficient.

Comparison table of mark sources and expected yield

SourceTypical time per runBest forRelative Marks yield
Public events loop5–12 minutesQuick, repeatable progressModerate
Scenic Triumphs & destination objectives1–5 minutes eachFast checklist itemsHigh (per minute)
Lost Sectors5–10 minutesSolo-friendly, consistentModerate
Ritual playlists (Strikes/Gambit/Crucible)15–30 minutesVariety and Triumph overlapModerate–High
Dungeons and raids45–120 minutesHigh-value TriumphsHigh (per run)

This table helps you choose the right mix depending on how much time you have and whether you’re solo or in a fireteam.

How to avoid common pitfalls and wasted Marks

Don’t spend your starter Marks on low-priority cosmetics before confirming the Vex ornament price and availability. Always check all Tenet stalls before making purchases. If you’re unsure whether the Vex ornament will return, prioritize buying the class you play most first.

Avoid long detours during farming loops. Time is the limiting resource; a tight route that completes multiple Triumph objectives per minute is far more efficient than chasing a single high-value target across multiple destinations.

Visual customization and transmog tips

Once you own the Vex ornaments, you can apply them to your armor pieces via the appearance system. If you want a cohesive Vex look, match shaders and ornaments across all armor slots. Some shaders make the Vex aesthetic pop more than others—look for metallic, glowing, or circuit-like shaders to emphasize the Vex theme.

If you plan to collect the set across all classes, consider which class silhouettes you prefer for screenshots and showcase. Hunters often have sleeker lines, Titans have bulkier silhouettes, and Warlocks have flowing robes—each presents the Vex ornament differently.

Long-term collection strategy and account management

If you play multiple characters, plan purchases across your account. Buy the ornament for the character you play most first, then farm Marks to buy the others. If you have alternate characters, you can transfer armor via the vault after purchasing ornaments, but remember that ornaments are class-specific in many cases.

Keep a running checklist of Monument Triumphs you’ve completed and those you still need. Monument progress is persistent, so tracking your progress helps you avoid repeating low-value tasks.

Example two-week plan to collect all three class ornaments

Week 1: Claim the Monument starter bundle and buy one class ornament. Run daily public event loops and complete scenic Triumphs. Spend 4–6 focused sessions of 1–2 hours each on ritual playlists that overlap Monument objectives.

Week 2: Continue public event loops and add one or two dungeon or raid runs if you have a group. Finish remaining Triumphs and spend Marks on the remaining class ornaments.

This plan assumes moderate playtime and a focus on Monument objectives. If you have more time or a dedicated fireteam, you can compress the plan into a few long sessions.

Troubleshooting: what to do if you don’t see the ornament

If the Vex ornament isn’t visible:

  • Confirm you unlocked the Tenet stalls by making the initial Tenet purchase.

  • Check each Tenet plaque; the ornament may be under a different Tenet.

  • Wait for a vendor rotation or a Monument update; some cosmetics rotate between Tenets.

  • Ensure you claimed any Monument login bundle or starter rewards tied to your account.

If you still can’t find it after these steps, continue farming Marks and check back after a reset or patch.

Aesthetic and roleplay ideas for the Vex set

The Vex aesthetic is mechanical, geometric, and glowing. For roleplay or screenshot sessions, pair the Vex armor with environments that emphasize artificial or machine-like backdrops—Vex-infested zones, metallic interiors, or neon-lit areas. Use shaders that highlight circuitry and glow to make the Vex motifs stand out.

For PvP, the Vex look can be intimidating and sleek. For PvE, it pairs well with builds that emphasize precision and control, reinforcing the theme of calculated machine efficiency.

Minimal-bullet quick checklist (one-line items)

  • Claim Monument starter bundle immediately.

  • Unlock Tenet stalls by making the first Tenet purchase.

  • Check all Tenet vendors for the Vex ornament.

  • Spend starter Marks on your main class ornament.

  • Run public event loops, scenic Triumphs, and Lost Sectors to farm Marks.

  • Use ritual playlists and dungeons for high-value Triumph credit.

  • Coordinate with a small fireteam for fastest runs.

  • Match shaders to emphasize the Vex aesthetic.


Frequently Asked Questions

Do I need to spend real money to get the Vex armor set No. The Vex ornaments are purchasable with Legendary Marks, an in-game currency earned through Monument Triumphs and activities.

How many Marks do I need for all three classes Plan for roughly 150 Legendary Marks total—about 50 Marks per class—though vendor prices can vary slightly with seasonal updates.

What if I missed the initial login bundle You can still earn Marks through Monument Triumphs and the repeatable activities listed in this guide. The Monument is persistent and designed to be accessible over time.

Which activities give the most Marks fastest Scenic Triumphs and destination objectives are the fastest per minute early on. Public events and ritual playlists provide steady progress. Dungeons and raids yield high-value Triumphs but take longer per run.

Will the ornament return if I don’t buy it now Tenet inventories rotate and Monument Triumphs are updated periodically. The ornament will likely reappear or similar opportunities will return through Monument updates.

Can I buy the ornament for a different class later Yes. After you earn enough Marks, you can purchase the ornament for other classes from the Tenet vendors.

Any tips for solo players Choose destinations with clustered objectives, use self-sustaining builds, and focus on public events and Lost Sectors that you can clear quickly.

Should I prioritize any particular Tenet Make the initial Tenet purchase to unlock the rest, then check all Tenet stalls before spending Marks. The Vex ornament can appear under any Tenet.

Final checklist and closing strategy

If you want to get the full Vex set as quickly as possible, follow this condensed strategy: claim the Monument starter bundle, unlock Tenet stalls, buy the ornament for your main class, then run tight public event and scenic Triumph loops while stacking destination bounties and ritual playlists that overlap Monument objectives. Coordinate with friends for dungeon or raid runs to clear high-value Triumphs faster.

This guide gives you the practical route, the loadouts, the timing, and the mindset to collect the Vex armor without spending a dime. The system is intentionally friendly to players who invest time and focus, and with a few focused sessions you can have the full set across your characters.

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