Nioh 3 Top Midgame Amrita Farms For Fast Levels And Big Gold

 


Midgame Amrita And Gold Farming The Six Most Lucrative Spots

This guide gives a complete, practical, and actionable plan to farm 2.7 million Amrita and ~800K gold in the midgame of Nioh 3. It explains the six best repeatable spots, the exact setup you should use, how to squeeze every bonus from gear and titles, and how to run shrine loops and Battle Scrolls for maximum efficiency. Read this once, then copy the routes into your play sessions and watch your levels and bank balance explode.


Start by understanding the core principle that makes midgame farming efficient. The fastest Amrita per hour comes from short, repeatable loops that kill one or two high-value enemies near a shrine or a Battle Scroll checkpoint. Short loops minimize downtime between kills and maximize the number of Amrita or gold pickups per hour. Equip every possible multiplier, use consumables and talismans that boost Amrita, and pick a clan and title allocation that favors Amrita Earned. When you combine a tight shrine loop with the right gear and the Battle Scroll replay mechanic, you can routinely clear hundreds of thousands of Amrita in an hour.

To hit the headline numbers you want, you will alternate between two farming modes. The first is the fast shrine loop where you kill a single elite or high-value yokai, return to the shrine, rest, and repeat. The second is the crucible/Battle Scroll replay where you clear a short dungeon path with multiple high-value enemies and then replay it immediately. Both methods are valid and you will use them depending on the map and your current level. The shrine loop is the backbone of consistent Amrita gains while the Battle Scroll runs are the heavy hitters for both Amrita and sellable loot.

Below are the six best midgame spots, the exact route and tactics for each, and the gear and title setup that will multiply your gains. After the routes you will find advanced stacking tricks, a short gold-only routine to reach ~800K, and a FAQ that answers common midgame farming questions.

Futamata Castle Storehouse shrine loop

This is the single most reliable early-to-midgame loop. From the Storehouse shrine, step through the door and immediately turn right. A lone patrolling Yoki walks a corridor with its back to the entrance on reset. Approach from stealth or high stance and land a heavy backstab or grapple for massive Ki damage and a big Amrita payout. The Yoki drops a large chunk of Amrita for a single enemy, and because the patrol path always moves away on reset, the entire cycle is extremely short. Repeat the kill, rest at the shrine, and rinse. With Amrita Earned gear and a small extraction talisman, you can net thousands of Amrita every minute.

Why it’s efficient: One high-value kill per 30 seconds means you can stack many cycles in an hour with minimal movement and looting time. Enable Item Auto Pick-up to remove the need to manually collect drops and shave seconds off each loop. Equip a weapon with high backstab damage or a grapple skill to finish the Yoki quickly.

Tactics: Use stealth approach, open with a heavy high-stance attack, then finish with a grapple. If you have a ranged option, break the Yoki’s horn from a distance to trigger extra bleed Amrita before closing in. If you die, recover your Grave immediately to avoid losing accumulated Amrita.

Hamamatsu Castle Crucible Ippon-Datara grind

This route uses the Battle Scroll replay mechanic to turn a short crucible into a repeatable Amrita and loot machine. Enter the Hamamatsu Crucible, activate the Battle Scroll at the entrance, and clear the path to the Ippon-Datara. This yokai is slow but hits hard and yields a high Amrita payout. Because the Battle Scroll allows instant replays without shrine rest, you can run the same path repeatedly with minimal downtime. Clear the Ippon-Datara, pick up drops, and replay. Over time this yields massive Amrita and a steady stream of sellable gear.

Why it’s efficient: Battle Scrolls remove the need to travel back to a shrine and reset the world. The Ippon-Datara’s predictable moveset makes it easy to bait and backstab for huge damage. If you can clear the path in under two minutes, your Amrita per hour skyrockets.

Tactics: Use a build with strong single-target burst and high Ki recovery. Bring elixirs for emergency heals but avoid wasting time looting every minor drop. Prioritize the boss and the yellow-glow elites along the path for maximum Amrita.


Hitokoto Slope horn-break ridge

This midgame spot is slower than the Futamata loop but offers a reliable bonus if you break the Yoki’s horn. On the narrow ridge near the boss shrine, a Yoki patrols a tight path. Use a ranged weapon or a high-stance overhead to shatter the horn. The horn break triggers a bleed and bonus Amrita that stacks with the kill reward. The ridge’s narrow geometry prevents the Yoki from turning quickly, making backstabs and overheads easier to land. This is a great fallback if you haven’t unlocked Futamata yet or if you want a slightly safer loop.

Why it’s efficient: Horn break mechanics add a chunk of bonus Amrita to each kill. The narrow terrain reduces enemy mobility and increases your chance to land critical hits.

Tactics: Use a bow or spear for precise overheads. If you have a weapon with a horn-break bonus or a skill that increases head damage, equip it. Keep movement minimal and reset at the shrine after each kill.

Shogun’s Outskirts market gold route

If your goal is 800K gold, this market route is the fastest midgame gold farm. The market area contains multiple enemies that drop high-value sellables and a few elite enemies that drop rare items. Run the market loop, pick up sellable goods, and return to the shrine to sell everything in bulk. Use the Wealthbringer Talisman and gear with Gold Earned effects to multiply coin drops. This route is slower for Amrita but excellent for building a gold reserve to buy gear, upgrade weapons, and purchase consumables for longer Amrita runs.

Why it’s efficient: High-value drops combined with a talisman that boosts gold make each loop profitable. Selling in bulk reduces time spent at merchants.

Tactics: Equip the Wealthbringer Talisman and any accessories with Gold Earned. Use a fast weapon to clear crowds and avoid long fights. If you find a rare sellable, stash it and repeat the loop until you have a full inventory to sell.

Toyotomi Shrine runs and clan stacking

Choosing the Toyotomi clan gives a passive bonus to Amrita gains and pairs perfectly with extraction talismans and Amrita Earned gear. Pledge to Toyotomi and reallocate Subjugation Title Prestige points into Amrita Earned to maximize passive gains. Combine this with the Extraction Talisman and skills like Vital Spirit or Invigorating Arts to multiply every kill’s Amrita. This setup is not a location but a multiplier you apply to any of the above routes to increase yield.

Why it’s efficient: Passive clan bonuses stack with gear and talismans, giving you a multiplicative boost rather than a flat increase.

Tactics: Reassign title prestige to Amrita Earned before long farming sessions. Keep Toyotomi active while running shrine loops and Battle Scrolls. If you switch clans for other bonuses, remember to switch back before a farming session.

Castle Keep catwalks elite loop

This route focuses on a compact area with multiple elites and a shrine within easy reach. The catwalks funnel enemies into chokepoints where you can chain AoE or single-target burst to clear multiple elites quickly. The combination of multiple elite kills per loop and a short reset time makes this a balanced farm for both Amrita and gold. Use this when you want a mix of loot and experience without the monotony of single-target loops.

Why it’s efficient: Multiple elites per loop increase both Amrita and sellable loot. Tight geometry reduces travel time.

Tactics: Use AoE skills or a weapon with strong crowd control. Prioritize elites with yellow glow for higher Amrita. Keep elixirs and talismans ready for emergency heals.


Gear, talismans, and title setup to maximize Amrita and gold

Your equipment choices matter as much as the route. The following setup is the baseline for any serious midgame farmer.

Core equipment and effects to stack

  • Amrita Earned on armor and accessories. This is the single most important passive to stack.

  • Extraction Talisman or Gaki Chief Soul Core to increase Amrita on absorption.

  • Wealthbringer Talisman for gold runs.

  • Skills that grant bonus Amrita such as Vital Spirit and Invigorating Arts.

  • Accessories with Gold Earned for market loops.

  • Weapons with high backstab or grapple damage for shrine loops.

  • Armor rolls that include Amrita Earned and Ki recovery.

Title and clan choices

  • Reallocate Subjugation Title Prestige into Amrita Earned before farming sessions.

  • Pledge to Toyotomi clan for the passive Amrita boost.

  • If you need survivability for longer runs, consider temporary clan swaps but return to Toyotomi for pure farming.

Consumables and settings

  • Enable Item Auto Pick-up to reduce downtime.

  • Use Amrita-boosting consumables if available.

  • Keep a stack of elixirs and a Rejuvenation talisman for quick health recovery to avoid deaths that cost Amrita.

Stacking these effects is multiplicative. A shrine loop that normally yields 3,000 Amrita can easily become 4,500 or more with the right talismans, clan, and title allocation. Over many cycles this difference compounds into hundreds of thousands of Amrita.

How to run perfect shrine loops and Battle Scroll replays

Shrine loop checklist

  1. Equip Amrita Earned gear and Toyotomi clan.

  2. Enable Item Auto Pick-up.

  3. Approach the elite from stealth or bait a predictable attack.

  4. Execute a high-damage opener and finish quickly.

  5. Rest at the shrine immediately and repeat.

Battle Scroll replay checklist

  1. Activate the Battle Scroll at the crucible entrance.

  2. Clear the path focusing on yellow-glow elites and the boss.

  3. Pick up only high-value drops to save time.

  4. Replay the scroll immediately and repeat until you hit your Amrita or loot goal.

The key to both methods is minimizing non-value time. Every second spent walking, looting low-value items, or waiting for enemy patrols is time not spent earning Amrita. Keep runs tight, use auto-pickup, and only pick up items that matter for sell value or upgrades.


Advanced stacking tricks and micro-optimizations

1. Offerings and junk conversion Convert unwanted gear into Amrita via the Offering system. Selling or offering junk gear can be a surprisingly large source of Amrita over long sessions. Don’t hoard low-value items when you can turn them into levels.

2. Grave recovery discipline If you die, recover your Grave immediately. Losing a large Amrita pool is the fastest way to erase hours of farming. Spend Amrita as soon as you can to lock in levels and reduce risk.

3. Use of Guardian Spirits and Soul Cores Equip Guardian Spirits and Soul Cores that grant attack or defense buffs on Amrita absorption. These increase survivability and damage output during loops, letting you clear faster.

4. Rotate routes to avoid boredom and RNG If a route starts to feel slow due to RNG drops, switch to another loop. Rotating between shrine loops and Battle Scrolls keeps the grind efficient and reduces the chance of diminishing returns.

5. Time-of-day and session planning Plan sessions in 30–90 minute blocks. Short, focused sessions with a clear Amrita or gold target are more productive than marathon runs where fatigue leads to mistakes and deaths.

Gold farming to reach 800K quickly

To reach ~800K gold, combine the Shogun’s Outskirts market loop with Wealthbringer talismans and sellable loot conversion. Run the market loop until your inventory is full of sellable items, then fast travel to a merchant and sell everything in one go. Repeat until you hit your gold target. If you pair this with occasional Battle Scroll runs you can convert rare drops into even more profit.

Tips to accelerate gold gains

  • Prioritize enemies that drop sellable goods and rare materials.

  • Use talismans and accessories that increase gold drops.

  • Convert low-value gear into sellable materials if the merchant pays more.

  • Avoid spending gold on unnecessary upgrades during a gold run; save until you reach your target.

Sample session plan to hit 2.7M Amrita and 800K gold

Session 1: Warm-up and setup (15 minutes)

  • Reassign titles to Amrita Earned and pledge Toyotomi.

  • Equip Extraction and Wealthbringer talismans.

  • Run 10 Futamata loops to warm up and test timings.

Session 2: Heavy Amrita push (90 minutes)

  • Run Futamata loop for 45 minutes, switching to Hamamatsu Battle Scrolls for 45 minutes.

  • Spend Amrita to lock in levels every 200k to avoid loss on death.

Session 3: Gold focus (60 minutes)

  • Run Shogun’s Outskirts market loop with Wealthbringer talisman.

  • Sell in bulk every 10–15 minutes.

Session 4: Cleanup and offerings (30 minutes)

  • Offer junk gear for Amrita and sell remaining materials.

  • Re-equip for next play session.

Following this plan across several sessions will get you to the headline numbers. The exact time depends on your efficiency, level, and luck with drops.

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

  • Not stacking Amrita Earned: Many players forget to reassign titles or equip Amrita gear. Always double-check before a farming session.

  • Looting everything: Picking up every minor drop wastes time. Use auto-pickup and only pick up what matters.

  • Dying with a large Amrita pool: Spend Amrita regularly to avoid losing it on death.

  • Ignoring Battle Scrolls: Battle Scroll replay is a major multiplier for midgame farming and is often underused.


FAQ

How long will it take to farm 2.7 million Amrita? Time varies with efficiency, but with optimized loops and the right gear you can expect to earn hundreds of thousands of Amrita per hour. A focused multi-hour session using shrine loops and Battle Scrolls can reach the 2.7 million mark across several hours of play.

Do I need Toyotomi clan to farm effectively? Toyotomi is not strictly required but it provides a meaningful passive boost to Amrita gains that stacks with talismans and title allocations. For pure farming sessions Toyotomi is the best choice.

What settings should I change before farming? Enable Item Auto Pick-up and make sure your controller or keybinds are optimized for quick rest and fast travel. Turn off unnecessary HUD clutter if it distracts you.

Which talismans are mandatory? Extraction Talisman for Amrita runs and Wealthbringer Talisman for gold runs are the most impactful. Combine them with Amrita Earned gear and clan bonuses.

Should I farm Amrita or gold first? If you need upgrades and consumables, farm gold first. If you need levels to beat a boss, prioritize Amrita. A balanced approach alternating between both is often best.

Can I solo these routes or should I co-op? Solo runs are faster for tight shrine loops because you control the reset and pacing. Co-op can be useful for tougher Battle Scrolls but may reduce Amrita per player due to shared rewards.

What do I do if I keep dying during runs? Slow down, improve survivability with talismans and armor rolls, and consider swapping to a defensive clan temporarily. Recover your Grave immediately and spend Amrita frequently.

This guide gives you the exact routes, the gear and title setup, and the session plans to farm 2.7 million Amrita and ~800K gold in the midgame of Nioh 3. Use the shrine loops for steady gains, the Battle Scrolls for heavy payouts, and the Wealthbringer talisman for gold. Stack Amrita Earned, pledge Toyotomi, and keep runs tight with auto-pickup and minimal looting. Follow the sample session plan and the advanced tricks to turn hours of grinding into efficient, repeatable profit and levels.


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No Mans Sky Remnant Fast Track Completion Guide

 


Remnant Expedition Quick Complete Guide for No Mans Sky

The goal is simple and ruthless: finish the Remnant Expedition in two hours. To hit that target you must treat the run like a looped sprint: identify the core repeating tasks, eliminate distractions, and optimize the Colossus for the exact actions the expedition demands. The Remnant Expedition forces you to operate primarily from a Colossus and to complete a repeating cycle of objectives—collect industrial waste, process it at Waste Processing Plants, interact with beacons, and meet Colossus design or excavation quotas—so the fastest runs reduce everything to the shortest possible collect‑process‑interact loop. Before you spawn, set a real‑world timer and commit to the plan: no detours for optional base building, no long combat engagements, and no fiddling with cosmetics. This guide gives you a complete, step‑by‑step approach, preset recommendations, route planning tips, resource lists, and advanced tricks so you can reliably hit the two‑hour mark.


Early Spawn Priorities and Essential Materials

When you first load into the expedition, your first minute should be spent on three things: locating the nearest Waste Processing Plant, checking the expedition terminal for immediate milestones, and gathering the essential materials that unlock the Colossus modules you’ll need. The expedition typically requires Gravitino Coil crafting and several Colossus parts early on, so prioritize Gravitino Balls, Ferrite Dust, Carbon, Emeril, Pyrite, and Oxygen. A practical early inventory target is roughly: 50 Oxygen, 100 Emeril, 50 Pyrite, 450 Ferrite Dust, 430 Carbon, and at least one Gravitino Ball. These numbers are not arbitrary; they let you craft the Geobay, Flatbed, and basic excavation modules without long detours. While gathering, use the Colossus to drive past fauna and mineral deposits to register scans on the move—this saves time compared to separate scanning runs.

Colossus Presets and Configuration Strategy

The Colossus is the expedition’s engine. You must save and use presets. Create and name at least three presets immediately: Flatbed Hauler, Excavation Rig, and Speed Chassis. The Flatbed Hauler is your default: Flatbed chassis, Geobay, basic cargo modules, and hazard protection. The Excavation Rig swaps the Flatbed for an Excavation Blade or Big Dig Rig and adds reinforced plating and power modules for obstacle clearing. The Speed Chassis is a lightweight setup with boosted mobility for long transits between clusters. Save each preset as soon as it’s built. Switching presets is faster than rebuilding modules and prevents costly mistakes. The expedition asks for multiple Colossus designs and tasks that require switching roles; pre‑saved presets let you toggle instantly and keep momentum.

The Core Loop Explained

Everything in the Remnant Expedition reduces to a repeating loop: find waste → load waste onto Flatbed → drive to Waste Processing Plant → unload and process → interact with beacons or claim milestone → repeat. Each phase will add side objectives—excavation quotas, roadkill counts, or Colossus design tasks—but the waste processing loop is the backbone. Practice the load‑drive‑unload sequence until it’s muscle memory: approach a waste heap, stop briefly to load five pieces, set the nearest plant as your waypoint, drive directly, park precisely in the red unloading zone, interact, and immediately set the next waypoint. While the processing animation runs, open the map and mark the next waste cluster or beacon so you depart without hesitation.

Route Planning and Beacon Management

Beacons are mandatory interactions and skipping one costs time. Use the planet map and expedition markers to plan a circuit that hits beacons while you’re already traveling between waste clusters and processing plants. Don’t make dedicated beacon trips. When you spot a beacon, interact immediately and then continue your loop. If a beacon is out of the way, fold it into your next hauling run so you don’t backtrack. Mark beacons on your HUD and mentally prioritize them: if you have to choose between an optional scan and a beacon, always choose the beacon.


Waste Types and Special Waste Strategy

The expedition requires processing five wastes per checkpoint and sometimes special waste types for milestone tasks. Identify special waste clusters early and sweep them thoroughly before moving on. Special wastes tend to cluster near landmarks or in specific biome pockets; once you find a cluster, clear it completely. For the “Road Trip” style milestones that require transporting special industrial waste, plan a single circuit that collects all required special wastes and processes them in sequence. This avoids multiple long trips and saves minutes.

Excavation and Obstacle Quotas

When excavation quotas appear, switch to your Excavation Rig preset and target dense debris fields. Don’t spread excavation time across multiple locations; staying in one high‑density area yields faster counts. Use area‑effect excavation tools and the Colossus blade to clear many obstacles quickly. If the mission requires colliding with fauna for “Roadkill,” find a region with abundant small creatures and perform short, controlled collisions to register counts without destroying the ecosystem you might need for other scans.

Scanning and Safari Milestones

Combine scanning with your waste runs. Scan minerals and fauna while driving past them to register discoveries without stopping. Use the Colossus camera and quick scan actions; if a Safari milestone requires species discovery while moving, ensure the Colossus is in motion when you scan. Keep scanning opportunistically—every scan you can do while moving is time saved.

Combat, Sentinels, and Avoidance

Combat is a time sink. Avoid fights when possible. If you pick up a Gravitino Ball and trigger Sentinel aggression, run until they lose interest rather than engaging in drawn‑out battles. Use the Colossus as cover and only fight when necessary for milestone completion. When combat is unavoidable, use high‑damage multitool modules and keep Colossus shields up; quick decisive strikes are faster than prolonged firefights. If you must fight, prioritize disabling threats quickly and then resume the loop.

Inventory and Crafting Efficiency

Keep your inventory lean. Carry only materials required for immediate milestones and the modules needed for your presets. Store or sell extraneous items at the earliest opportunity; cluttered inventories force long pauses to reorganize. Claim milestone rewards as soon as they unlock because they often contain Nanites, blueprints, and materials that reduce future crafting time. Use rewards immediately to avoid later detours.

Time Management and Micro Goals

Break the two‑hour target into micro‑goals. A practical pacing plan is: first 20 minutes to secure the Waste Processing Plant, craft the Gravitino Coil, and gather initial resources; next 40 minutes to complete the first two checkpoints and register at least three beacons; following 40 minutes to finish remaining checkpoints, excavation and roadkill quotas, and process final waste heaps; last 20 minutes to claim milestone rewards, tidy missed scans, and ensure all beacons are interacted with. Use a real‑world timer and check the expedition tracker frequently to measure progress and adjust if you fall behind.


Parking, Processing, and Micro‑planning

When you arrive at a Waste Processing Plant, park precisely in the red unloading zone and interact immediately. The processing animation is short but unavoidable; use that time to open the map, set the next waypoint, and mark beacons so you depart without hesitation. This micro‑planning reduces idle time between loops and keeps momentum.

Hazard Navigation and Environmental Modules

If you encounter hazardous flora or environmental hazards, use the Colossus’ hazard protection modules and environmental shielding to pass quickly. Don’t clear every hazard unless required. For tasks that require eliminating hazardous flora, target dense patches and use area‑effect tools or the Colossus blade to clear many at once rather than single‑target methods.

Advanced Movement Tricks and Physics Exploits

Advanced players can shave minutes by memorizing terrain shortcuts, using the Colossus boost to jump small ravines, and exploiting collision physics to nudge small obstacles out of the way rather than excavating them. These techniques require practice but can cut significant time. Learn where the planet’s natural bridges and shallow ravines are and use them to bypass long detours.

Solo Versus Co‑op Strategies

If you run with friends, assign roles: one player focuses on hauling and processing, another on excavation and obstacle clearing, and a third on scanning and beacon hunting. If solo, simulate this division by alternating focused bursts: one loop for hauling, one for excavation, one for scanning. This keeps actions goal‑oriented and prevents scattershot play.

Preset Naming and Quick Swap Tips

Name your presets clearly—Flatbed Hauler, Excavation Rig, Speed Chassis—and save them immediately. If your platform supports quick‑swap controls or macros, bind configuration switching to a convenient key or button to shave seconds off each swap. Quick swapping is one of the highest ROI optimizations in the run.

Fallback Plan When Behind Schedule

If you fall behind, triage ruthlessly: skip optional scans, focus only on the five processed wastes for each checkpoint, and postpone cosmetic or nonessential upgrades. The two‑hour target is tight; every optional activity you skip is time you can spend on the core loop. If you’re ahead, use extra time to claim milestone rewards and tidy missed scans.

Final Phase Sprint and Claiming Rewards

In the final phase, consolidate your route: hit remaining beacons, process the last five wastes, and complete outstanding excavation or fauna tasks in a single circuit. Claim milestone rewards as they unlock and double‑check your inventory for missing scans or processed items. If you’ve used saved presets and followed the pacing plan, the final phase should be a short, decisive sprint.


Post‑Run Review and Iteration

After finishing, claim expedition rewards and copy desirable gear back to your main save if you started from an existing profile. Review your run and identify the three biggest time sinks—these are the areas to optimize next. Practice the route repeatedly; each run teaches you shortcuts and cluster locations that shave minutes off subsequent attempts.

Minimal Bullet Checklist for Quick Reference

  • Save three Colossus presets: Flatbed Hauler; Excavation Rig; Speed Chassis.

  • Essential early materials: Gravitino Ball; Ferrite Dust; Carbon; Emeril; Pyrite; Oxygen.

  • Core loop: find waste → load → process → beacon → repeat.

  • Park precisely in the red unloading zone; claim rewards immediately.

  • Avoid combat unless required; use Colossus for cover.

Troubleshooting Common Time Sinks

If you repeatedly lose time, check for these common issues: too many inventory items causing pauses; not saving presets; inefficient beacon routing; engaging Sentinels unnecessarily; and failing to claim milestone rewards promptly. Fixing any one of these will yield immediate time savings.

Practice Drills to Improve Speed

Run short drills: 10‑minute hauling loops to practice load and unload; 15‑minute excavation sprints in a dense debris field; 5‑minute beacon hunts to learn beacon placement patterns. These focused drills build muscle memory and reduce hesitation during full runs.

Final Encouragement and Mindset

The first run will feel messy; the second will be better; by the fifth you’ll be shaving minutes consistently. Treat each run as a data collection exercise: note where you lost time, then practice that segment until it’s smooth. With discipline, saved presets, and a ruthless focus on the core loop, finishing the Remnant Expedition in two hours is an achievable, repeatable goal.


FAQ

Q How do I start the Remnant Expedition fastest Start from an existing save if you want to keep Multitool and Starship benefits, but remember most expedition materials must be gathered on site. Immediately locate the nearest Waste Processing Plant and craft the Gravitino Coil if required.

Q What Colossus preset should I use most The Flatbed Hauler is your workhorse. Use it for nearly every loop and switch to Excavation Rig only for excavation quotas.

Q What materials are nonnegotiable early Gravitino Ball, Ferrite Dust, Carbon, Emeril, Pyrite, and Oxygen. These let you craft essential Colossus modules and the Gravitino Coil.

Q How do I avoid Sentinel time sinks Avoid picking fights. If Sentinels spawn, run until they lose interest or use the Colossus as cover and finish fights quickly with high‑damage multitool modules.

Q Any advanced tricks to save time Memorize terrain shortcuts, use Colossus boost to jump small ravines, exploit collision physics to nudge obstacles, and bind preset switching to a quick key or button.

Q Should I play co‑op or solo Both work. Co‑op lets you split roles and shave time; solo runs require strict role alternation and discipline but are still fast with saved presets.

This guide uses bold and italic emphasis on the most important keywords and tactics—Remnant Expedition, No Mans Sky Remnant, Remnant speedrun, Flatbed Colossus, and Gravitino Coil—so you can scan quickly during a run. Follow the loop, save presets, claim rewards immediately, and practice the route until the two‑hour target becomes routine. Good luck and may your Colossus always find the shortest path between waste heap and processing plant.


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Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Uber Klaus Kill Guide Mars Survival Best Weapons And Tactics

 


Uber Klaus Kill Guide Mars Survival Best Weapons And Tactics

This guide gives a complete, practical, and repeatable plan to destroy Uber Klaus on Mars Survival in Call of Duty: Black Ops 7 Zombies. It explains the exact weapons, ammo mods, attachments, perks, movement patterns, and phase-by-phase tactics that let you melt the boss quickly while conserving salvage and staying alive into high rounds. The fight is straightforward when you understand the sequence: remove the shoulder pylons, break the helmet, then finish the ejected pilot before self-destruct. The most reliable approach combines a high-damage primary that supports elemental attachments with a control-oriented ammo mod so you can both control the horde and focus critical damage. Community testing and early guides confirm that Cryo Freeze and Napalm Burst are the two ammo mods that consistently outperform others against Uber Klaus, with Cryo Freeze favored for its utility and Napalm Burst for raw damage.


Why Uber Klaus is different and what to prioritize

Uber Klaus is an elite mech that spawns after Round 16 on Mars Survival. He arrives with two shoulder pylons that power a protective shield and a heavy helmet that prevents critical hits until it’s broken. The pylons must be destroyed first; otherwise your shots will be absorbed and you’ll waste salvage and ammo. After the pylons and helmet are gone, the pilot ejects and becomes a fast, suicidal threat that attempts to close distance and detonate. The fight rewards preparation: the right ammo mod and weapon attachments let you break pylons and helmet quickly, then finish the exposed pilot before he detonates. Multiple community breakdowns and video demonstrations show the same three-step pattern—pylons, helmet, pilot—and emphasize that Cryo Freeze is the most versatile mod because it slows both the boss and the surrounding horde, giving you breathing room to land headshots.

The single most important decision: ammo mod

Ammo mods change how your weapon interacts with Uber Klaus and the surrounding zombies. Two mods stand out:

Cryo Freeze — slows targets and deals burst damage. This mod is the top pick for most players because it provides crowd control while still dealing significant damage to pylons and the helmet. The slow effect is invaluable when the pilot ejects and the horde closes in, letting you reposition and finish the pilot safely. Community guides repeatedly recommend Cryo Freeze as the default choice for consistent, repeatable kills.

Napalm Burst — deals damage over time and applies burn. Napalm Burst is excellent when you want raw sustained damage, especially if you pair it with flame-based attachments like Dragon Breath. It’s more situational than Cryo Freeze because it doesn’t slow the pilot or the horde, but it can shave seconds off the kill if you can maintain line of sight and avoid being flanked.

If you can only buy one mod, buy Cryo Freeze. If you have a weapon that supports Dragon Breath, pairing Dragon Breath with Cryo Freeze stacks burn and slow, producing a lethal combination that both controls and melts the mech. Multiple players and write-ups confirm that Dragon Breath plus Cryo Freeze is a top-tier combo for the pylon-to-helmet window.

Best weapons and why they work

Choose weapons that combine high per-shot damage, headshot multipliers, and compatibility with elemental attachments. The following weapon archetypes are the most reliable:

High-damage shotguns — close-range power makes them ideal for destroying pylons and cracking helmets quickly. Shotguns that accept Dragon Breath are especially potent because the flame rounds add persistent burn that continues to damage the mech while you reposition.

Marksman rifles and high-damage assault rifles — these are excellent for players who prefer range. A single well-placed headshot after the helmet breaks will deal massive critical damage. Use heavy barrels and precision optics to increase headshot consistency.

Fast-firing SMGs as secondaries — once the pilot ejects, you need a weapon that can track and finish a fast-moving target. A high-RoF SMG with quick reloads and a decent magazine is perfect for pilot cleanup.

A commonly recommended primary is the ECHO 12 shotgun with Dragon Breath and Cryo Freeze. This setup melts pylons and helmet at close range and applies burn while slowing the pilot and the horde, giving you the best of both worlds. Community videos and articles highlight the ECHO 12 as a go-to for speedkills on Mars Survival.


Attachments and tuning

Equip attachments that increase raw damage, improve headshot consistency, and reduce downtime. Prioritize:

  • Heavy barrels or chokes for concentrated damage.

  • Precision optics for better headshot tracking.

  • Extended magazines to avoid reload windows during the critical phase.

  • Quick reload or reload speed perks to minimize vulnerability.

For shotguns, choose chokes or slug options that concentrate pellets into a tighter spread so each shot hits pylons and helmet reliably. For rifles, heavy barrels and stability attachments help you land the critical shots that finish the mech. If your weapon supports Dragon Breath, make it a priority because the persistent burn stacks with ammo mods for faster component destruction.

Perks and equipment

Perks should maximize survivability, mobility, and sustained damage output. The recommended perk set is:

  • Juggernaut or equivalent health boost to survive heavy hits.

  • Stamina to maintain strafing and kiting during the pilot phase.

  • Quick Reload to reduce downtime between bursts.

  • Double Tap or Overclock for increased fire rate or damage.

  • Scavenger or Ammo Reserve if you expect multiple elite encounters.

Tacticals and lethals matter too. Carry a stun or flashbang to interrupt the pilot’s charge and a frag or explosive to soften pylons if they cluster. Use your specialist ability or scorestreaks to coincide with the helmet break for a guaranteed damage spike. Community guides and speedrun videos emphasize timing abilities with the helmet break to shave seconds off the kill.

Positioning and map control

Positioning wins fights. When Uber Klaus spawns, move to a location with clear sightlines to his shoulders and helmet but with escape routes. Avoid tight corridors where the pilot can corner you after ejecting. Use elevated platforms or pillars to kite the pilot; verticality helps because the pilot’s pathing is less efficient when you force him to navigate obstacles. Clear a small ring of space around your chosen firing lane before the boss spawns so you don’t get overwhelmed while focusing on pylons. Videos demonstrating fast kills often show players pre-clearing a lane and using a single, repeatable firing position to maximize consistency.


Phase-by-phase tactics

Phase 1 — Spawn and pylon destruction: Immediately target the two shoulder pylons. These devices power his defensive shield; destroying them is the only way to expose the helmet and head. Use your high-damage weapon with Cryo Freeze or Napalm Burst to strip pylons quickly. Keep moving laterally to avoid frontal cone attacks and maintain line of sight.

Phase 2 — Helmet break and exposure: After the pylons are gone, focus the helmet. Once it breaks, the head becomes vulnerable to critical damage. This is the window to unload everything. If you used Cryo Freeze, the slow effect will help you maintain distance while you land headshots. If you used Napalm Burst, the burn will continue to chip away at health while you aim for the head.

Phase 3 — Pilot ejects and self-destruct threat: The pilot ejects and becomes a fast-moving target that attempts to close distance and detonate. Switch to your secondary if needed and prioritize mobility. Use flashbangs or stuns to interrupt the pilot’s charge, and finish him before he reaches self-destruct range. If he gets close, backpedal while firing headshots; Cryo Freeze’s slow can be the difference between life and death. In co-op, one player should focus the pilot while others handle the horde.

These phases and the recommended priorities are consistent across multiple community write-ups and video guides, which all stress the same sequence and the importance of the Cryo Freeze mod for control.

Solo versus co-op roles

In co-op, assign roles to maximize efficiency. One player should be the pylon breaker with the heavy weapon and Cryo Freeze; another should be the pilot finisher with high mobility and a fast secondary; a third should be crowd control with area-of-effect tools and revives. Communication is key: call out when pylons are down and who will finish the pilot.

In solo, be conservative: clear space, use Cryo Freeze for control, and avoid overcommitting to headshots if the horde is closing in. Solo players should favor weapons with self-sustain and perks that boost survivability. Many solo speedruns use a single firing lane and a shotgun with Dragon Breath to ensure the pylons and helmet go down quickly while Cryo Freeze keeps the pilot manageable.

Salvage economy and timing

Ammo mods cost salvage, so don’t waste them. Buy Cryo Freeze when you can afford it without crippling your ability to buy perks or attachments later in the match. If you’re farming XP or camos and expect multiple boss encounters, rotate Cryo Freeze between rounds to keep crowd control. Napalm Burst is more situational but excellent if you want raw damage. Efficient salvage management is a silent DPS multiplier—having the right mod at the right time matters more than having every mod.


Advanced tricks and environmental usage

If the map offers environmental hazards—explosive barrels, traps, or choke points—use them to soften Uber Klaus before you engage. Time your specialist abilities or scorestreaks to coincide with the helmet break; a well-timed ability can shave seconds off the kill and prevent the pilot from ejecting. If your weapon supports stacking elemental effects, combine Dragon Breath with Cryo Freeze to apply burn and slow simultaneously; this stacks damage and control for a faster kill. Practice the pylon-to-helmet transition in lower rounds to perfect your aim and reload rhythm; muscle memory matters when the boss spawns unexpectedly. Community videos show players repeatedly practicing the sequence to achieve sub-10-second kills.

Common mistakes and how to avoid them

Ignoring pylons and shooting the body wastes ammo and time. Buying the wrong mod for the situation—Napalm Burst when you need crowd control—can cost you the fight. Standing still during the eject phase invites a self-destruct wipe; keep moving and use stuns. Poor positioning in tight spaces makes the pilot’s chase lethal; pick open lanes with escape routes. These mistakes are the most common reasons players fail the encounter, and they’re easily fixed by following the phase priorities and choosing Cryo Freeze for control.

Example loadouts

Solo optimized Primary: ECHO 12 with Dragon Breath, Cryo Freeze, heavy barrel, extended mag. Secondary: High-RoF SMG with Quick Reload and Ammo Reserve. Perks: Juggernaut, Stamina, Quick Reload, Double Tap, Scavenger. Tacticals: Flashbang or Stun; Frag for pylon clusters.

Co-op optimized Player 1 (Pylon breaker): High-damage shotgun with Cryo Freeze and Dragon Breath. Player 2 (Pilot finisher): Fast SMG or marksman rifle with Quick Reload and mobility perks. Player 3 (Crowd control): Area-of-effect weapon, stun grenades, and revive priority.

These loadouts reflect what top players and community guides recommend for consistent, repeatable kills.

What to do when things go wrong

If the pilot ejects and you’re low on health or surrounded, prioritize survival. Use your tactical to create distance, call for a revive if co-op, and kite the pilot around obstacles until you can safely finish him. If you lose the pylon window and the helmet remains intact, fall back, regroup, and reapply pressure—don’t tunnel vision on a single approach. Adaptation beats repetition; change lanes, swap weapons, or buy a different ammo mod if the first attempt fails.

Why this strategy is reliable

The combination of a high-damage primary that supports Dragon Breath and Cryo Freeze gives you both control and burst. Cryo Freeze slows the boss and the horde, letting you land critical hits without being overwhelmed. Dragon Breath or Napalm Burst adds persistent damage that continues to chip away at Uber Klaus even when you need to reposition. Perks and attachments round out the build by increasing survivability and reducing downtime. The result is a balanced, repeatable strategy that works in solo and co-op and scales into high rounds. Multiple independent guides and video demonstrations corroborate these mechanics and the recommended approach.


FAQ

How much salvage should I save before buying Cryo Freeze? Save enough to buy Cryo Freeze while still keeping funds for at least one perk and a key attachment. If you can’t afford both a mod and a perk, delay the fight until you can.

Is Napalm Burst ever better than Cryo Freeze? Yes—if you need raw damage and expect fewer crowd-control problems. Napalm Burst deals strong damage over time but lacks the slow that helps with kiting.

Can I beat Uber Klaus without Dragon Breath? Absolutely. Dragon Breath is a force multiplier but not mandatory. High single-shot damage weapons with Cryo Freeze still perform well.

What if the pilot self-destructs near teammates? Spread out during the eject phase. If a teammate is downed by the explosion, prioritize revives and use cover to avoid a chain wipe.

Does this strategy work on higher difficulty settings? Yes, but you’ll need tighter coordination and possibly stronger attachments or additional perks. The core steps—destroy pylons, break helmet, finish pilot—remain the same.

This guide synthesizes practical in-match tactics, weapon and mod recommendations, and positioning strategies so you can consistently destroy Uber Klaus on Mars Survival. Follow the phase-by-phase plan, use Cryo Freeze for control or Napalm Burst for raw damage, and coordinate with teammates to assign roles. With the right loadout and timing you’ll shave minutes off the fight, conserve salvage, and survive higher rounds more reliably. Good luck—melt that mech and keep the salvage coming.


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Genshin Impact F2P Weapons That Make Flins Varesa Destroy Spiral Abyss 12

 


Flins & Varesa Best Team Ascendant Gleam Clear Spiral Abyss 12

This guide is a complete, practical walkthrough for clearing Spiral Abyss Floor 12 using a Flins & Varesa core or either as the main carry, with a strong focus on free-to-play weapon choices and realistic team construction. If you want a reliable plan that balances accessibility and peak performance—how to build Flins Varesa teams, which F2P weapons to craft or level, exact rotations, chamber-specific tactics, artifact priorities, and troubleshooting for common failure points—this is the one guide that lays it out step by step. The Nod‑Krai Moonsign system and the Ascendant Gleam state change how Lunar reactions scale and who you should bring; understanding those mechanics is essential to making Flins and Varesa shine in Floor 12.


Why Flins and Varesa work on Floor 12

Floor 12’s second half heavily buffs Lunar Reaction damage and often includes enemies whose mechanics are bypassed or trivialized by Lunar‑type interactions. Flins is a premier Lunar‑Charged on‑field Electro DPS whose kit converts certain Electro‑Charged interactions into Lunar‑Charged and scales with ATK and Elemental Mastery in specific ways; Varesa is a high‑ceiling Electro plunge/plunge‑centric DPS who benefits from strong Electro amplification and can function in teams that lean into Lunar or Electro synergy. When Ascendant Gleam is active (two Nod‑Krai characters in the party), non‑Moonsign characters can temporarily boost Lunar Reaction damage after using a Skill or Burst, which multiplies the effectiveness of both Flins and Varesa in the second half of Floor 12. These mechanics make a Flins‑Varesa pairing or a Flins carry with Varesa as a secondary option especially potent.

Key concepts to master before you build

Understand three pillars before you invest: Moonsign levels (Nascent vs Ascendant Gleam), Lunar Reaction types (Lunar‑Charged and Lunar‑Crystallize), and how the Floor 12 Ley Line Disorder and Blessing of the Abyssal Moon affect damage windows. Ascendant Gleam grants teamwide boosts that change how off‑field enablers and on‑field DPS interact; the Abyss blessing often triggers shockwaves on Lunar reactions that deal true damage, which stacks with your main damage and can swing star checks. If you don’t internalize these, rotations will feel clumsy and you’ll miss time windows where Lunar damage is multiplied.

Recommended team archetypes

There are two practical archetypes for Floor 12 with Flins and Varesa in mind:

  1. Lunar‑Charged On‑Field Flins (primary archetype) — Flins on‑field, Ineffa or Columbina as Moonsign enabler(s), a Hydro applicator (Aino is free and ideal), and an Anemo or EM buffer (Sucrose or other EM buffer) to shred resistances and buff EM. This composition maximizes Lunar‑Charged uptime and benefits from Ascendant Gleam.

  2. Varesa Plunge DPS with Lunar support (secondary archetype) — Varesa as main carry with supports that provide Hydro application and Moonsign benefits (Columbina or Ineffa), plus a buffer/healer (Iansan, Furina, or Bennett depending on availability). Varesa’s plunge damage is frontloaded and benefits from consistent Electro amplification; pairing her with Lunar enablers lets you exploit the second‑half Lunar‑Crystallize or Lunar‑Charged windows.

Both archetypes can be built with F2P weapons that are craftable, event‑obtainable, or widely available 4★s; the rest of this guide focuses on which free options to prioritize and why.


F2P weapon shortlist that matter for Abyss 12

Below are free or easily obtainable weapons that are excellent for Flins and Varesa and are realistic for F2P players to own and level. I bold the best picks and explain the tradeoffs.

  • Deathmatch (Polearm, craftable/standard 4★) — strong CRIT main stat and ATK boost when enemies are nearby; excellent stat stick for Flins when signature is unavailable.

  • The Catch / Luxurious Sea‑Lord equivalents (event/fishing polearms) — if you have them from past events, they provide burst/Energy synergy that helps Flins’ ER needs.

  • Primordial Jade Winged‑Spear (standard 5★ but sometimes accessible via pity; not F2P guaranteed) — included for completeness but not required.

  • Skyward Spine (4★/event or craftable alternatives) — CRIT Rate and attack speed help both plunge and on‑field DPS.

  • Craftable polearm options from Nod‑Krai or other regions (Moonpiercer style craftables) — some craftable polearms give ATK or EM conversions that synergize with Flins’ EM/ATK scaling.

  • The Widsith / Flowing Purity / other 4★ catalyst alternatives for Varesa — Varesa benefits from catalyst stat sticks with CRIT or ATK; Widsith is a strong generalist if you have it.

Prioritize Deathmatch or similar high‑CRIT 4★ polearms for Flins if you lack his signature; for Varesa, prioritize craftable catalysts with CRIT or ATK main stats. If you have event fishing weapons like The Catch, they can be excellent stopgaps because they boost Burst damage and energy. Game8 and community tier lists consistently recommend these accessible 4★s as the best F2P options for Abyss and Stygian content.

Artifact targets and stat priorities

Artifacts are the backbone of consistent Abyss performance. For both Flins and Varesa, the right set and substat distribution matters more than a single perfect piece.

  • Flins (Lunar‑Charged on‑field DPS): Aim for Night of the Sky’s Unveiling or Wandering Evenstar style sets that boost Lunar Reaction or EM/ATK synergy. Main stats: Sands ATK%, Goblet ATK% or Electro DMG if you still want elemental scaling, Circlet CRIT Rate/CRIT DMG. Substats: CRIT Rate/CRIT DMG, ATK%, Energy Recharge (target ~130–140% ER depending on team), Elemental Mastery as a tertiary stat because Flins converts some ATK to EM. Flins benefits from hitting a high ATK threshold (community targets often cite ~2000 ATK) and a balanced CRIT ratio.

  • Varesa (Plunge DPS): Artifact sets like Long Night’s Oath or Obsidian Codex are ideal. Main stats: Sands ATK%, Goblet Electro DMG Bonus, Circlet CRIT Rate/CRIT DMG. Substats: CRIT Rate/CRIT DMG, ATK%, Energy Recharge (aim ~120–130% ER), Elemental Mastery only if you plan hybrid reaction play. Varesa’s plunge damage scales heavily with ATK and CRIT, so prioritize CRIT and ATK over niche stats.

Rotation templates and micro‑timing

Rotations are where stars are won or lost. Below are two rotation templates—one for a Flins‑centric Lunar‑Charged team and one for a Varesa carry—designed to maximize Ascendant Gleam windows and the Abyss blessing.

Flins rotation (Ascendant Gleam active, with Ineffa + Columbina + Sucrose/Aino): start with off‑field enablers to build Moonsign and apply Hydro. Use Ineffa’s Skill (shield/sustain) then Columbina’s Skill/Burst to apply Hydro and generate the Moonsign level. Use Sucrose to swirl and buff EM or to gather enemies. Swap to Flins, enter his Skill state (short Burst window), weave Normal/Charged attacks to proc Lunar‑Charged consistently, then use his Special Burst when available. Re‑swap to Sucrose to refresh buffs and to the Hydro applicator to reapply Hydro if needed. The ideal on‑field sequence is: Ineffa Skill → Columbina Skill/Burst → Sucrose Skill/Burst → Flins Skill (x2) → Normal/Charged weave → Flins Burst → off‑field reapply. Timing matters: Ascendant Gleam grants a 20s window after a non‑Moonsign character uses Skill/Burst where Lunar Reaction DMG is increased; plan your Flins field time to fall inside that window.

Varesa rotation (with Columbina/Ineffa + Hydro applicator + buffer): set up Hydro and Moonsign with Columbina or Ineffa, then use your buffer (Iansan/Furina) to increase ATK or sustain. Bring Varesa on‑field, use her Charged Attack into Plunge sequence to generate Nightsoul and execute high‑damage plunges; weave Burst when Nightsoul is full to maximize frontloaded damage. If Ascendant Gleam is active, trigger a non‑Moonsign Skill/Burst just before your plunge window to get the Lunar boost. Varesa’s playstyle is more aggressive and timing‑sensitive because her plunge damage is frontloaded; plan to have Hydro applied and Moonsign active before your plunge sequence.


Chamber‑by‑chamber tactics for Floor 12

Floor 12 is unforgiving; each chamber has unique threats and time checks. Below are concise, actionable tactics for each chamber that apply to Flins/Varesa teams.

  • Chamber 1 (First Half): Expect groups that can be handled by Charged Attack or freeze strategies in the first half. Use the Ley Line Disorder (Charged Attack DMG +75%) to your advantage if you have a charge‑based carry. For Flins teams, this chamber is usually manageable by using off‑field setup and then letting Flins clear grouped enemies quickly. For Varesa, use plunge windows to clear waves fast.

  • Chamber 1 (Second Half): Bosses like Frostnight Herra have absorption phases; Lunar‑Crystallize or Lunar‑Charged can bypass or trivialize those phases. Keep Hydro application consistent and use Lunar reactions to ignore immunity windows.

  • Chamber 2 (First Half): Enemies like Emperor of Fire and Iron or Sternshield Crabs require shield breaking and Hydro application. Use your Hydro applicator early and focus single targets to avoid time loss. Flins’ AoE from Burst helps clear adds after shields are down.

  • Chamber 2 (Second Half): Wilderness Hunters and similar enemies spawn in waves; Lunar teams can bypass grief‑stalled states. Keep rotation tight and use Anemo swirl or Sucrose to group enemies for Flins’ Burst.

  • Chamber 3 (First Half): Bosses like Lord of the Hidden Depths spawn adds; use freeze or crowd control to manage adds and then burst the boss. Flins can handle add waves quickly if Hydro is present.

  • Chamber 3 (Second Half): The Whisperer of Nightmares and similar bosses are vulnerable to Lunar‑Charged setups; ensure Ascendant Gleam is active and time your Flins/Varesa windows to coincide with the Abyss blessing for shockwave true damage procs. This chamber is where precise timing and energy management win stars.

Energy management and particle economy

Flins’ kit can be energy‑hungry; aim for 130–140% ER on Flins if you lack particle generation from weapons. Use F2P weapons that grant ER or particle generation where possible (event fishing weapons or craftables with ER substats). Ineffa and Columbina often provide team energy or particle support; if you lack them, consider swapping in a battery like Bennett or Noelle in niche cases. For Varesa, ER targets are lower (~120–130%) because her damage is frontloaded and benefits less from constant Burst uptime. Prioritize particle generation and ER on supports if your carry lacks it.


Troubleshooting common failure points

  • Missed Ascendant Gleam window: If you fail to trigger Ascendant Gleam before your main field time, swap out and reapply Moonsign with a quick Skill/Burst from a Nod‑Krai character; don’t force Flins/Varesa on‑field without the buff.

  • Energy starvation: If Flins can’t Burst when needed, either raise ER on him or add a battery support; consider using a weapon that restores energy on reaction procs if available.

  • Poor CRIT ratio: If your Flins or Varesa lacks CRIT, prioritize circlet and substats; a 1:2 CRIT Rate:CRIT DMG ratio is a good target.

  • Enemy mechanics stalling: Use Anemo to group and Viridescent Venerer to shred resistances; if a boss has an immunity phase, switch to Lunar reactions to bypass it.

F2P progression plan and resource allocation

If you’re F2P, prioritize the following resource order: artifacts (target sets) → weapon ascension for your main polearm/catalyst → talent levels for Burst and Skill → ER/CRIT substat farming. Craft and level Deathmatch or other accessible 4★ polearms first for Flins; for Varesa, craft or keep a strong 4★ catalyst like The Widsith or Flowing Purity. Save fragile resources for artifact domains that drop your target sets and use resin efficiently—run domains when you can guarantee at least one good piece per run via resin optimization. Community guides and tier lists emphasize that the right 4★ weapon plus good artifacts beats a mismatched 5★ in many Abyss scenarios.

Minimal bullet checklist before each run

  • Ascendant Gleam active (two Nod‑Krai or Moon’s Embrace active).

  • Hydro applicator ready (Aino/Columbina).

  • Energy for Flins/Varesa Burst (ER target met).

  • Artifacts with CRIT/ATK priorities.

  • F2P weapon leveled and refined where possible.


FAQ

Q: Can I clear Floor 12 with only F2P characters and weapons? A: Yes. A fully F2P route commonly uses Flins with Aino (free Hydro applicator), Sucrose or another Anemo/EM buffer, and a craftable 4★ polearm like Deathmatch; Varesa can also be run with F2P supports if you have the right artifacts and Hydro/Moonsign enablers. Proper rotations, Ascendant Gleam timing, and artifact investment are the keys.

Q: Which single F2P weapon should I level first for Flins? A: Deathmatch or a similar high‑CRIT 4★ polearm is the best universal F2P choice for Flins if you lack his signature. It provides CRIT and ATK boosts that translate directly into Lunar‑Charged damage.

Q: Do I need Ineffa to make Flins work? A: Ineffa is the premium enabler for Flins, but she’s not strictly required. Columbina plus a Hydro applicator like Aino can enable Lunar‑Charged at Nascent or Ascendant Gleam levels; Flins’ C1 also compensates for missing Ineffa. F2P teams can still be competitive with careful play.

Q: How do I handle energy issues on Flins? A: Raise ER on Flins to ~130–140% or use weapons and supports that generate particles. Ineffa and Columbina can help with particle economy; event weapons that restore energy on Burst or reaction procs are also helpful if you own them.

Q: Should I swap between Flins and Varesa in the same run? A: It’s possible but not necessary. Running one carry per half or per chamber is cleaner. If you swap, ensure both have proper ER and that Ascendant Gleam windows are respected. Swapping mid‑rotation can waste Ascendant Gleam uptime if mis‑timed.

This guide condenses the practical, repeatable steps you need to take to make Flins Varesa teams dominate Spiral Abyss 12 using F2P weapons and realistic artifact goals. The core takeaways: prioritize Ascendant Gleam activation, use Hydro application consistently, level a reliable F2P polearm or catalyst for your carry, and practice the rotations until your timing for the 20s Lunar boost and Abyss blessing becomes second nature.


Stay Connected with Haplo Gaming Chef

Haplo Gaming Chef blends gaming guides with casual cooking streams for a truly unique viewer experience. Whether you’re here for clean, no-nonsense walkthroughs or just want to chill with some cozy cooking content between game sessions, this is the place for you. From full game unlock guides to live recipe prep and casual chats, Haplo Gaming Chef delivers content that’s both informative and enjoyable.

You Can Follow Along On Every Major Platform:

YouTubeTwitchTikTokInstagramTwitter/XThreadsBlueskyPinterestFlipboardFacebookLinkedInTumblrMediumBlogger, and even on Google Business.

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