Neverness to Everness Reroll Guide: Is It Worth It?
Is Rerolling Worth It in Neverness to Everness?
Short version: not required, but still worth a session if you want a strong unit locked in on day one. NTE is fairly generous to new accounts — you get a free pick from the standard 5-star pool, plus a free 5-star Chiz and an A-rank Aurelia to build a baseline team, so even skipping reroll entirely leaves you with a team that clears early story content fine.
- Worth rerolling if you want to optimize from the start, especially light spenders who want their resources locked onto one specific S-rank DPS or support.
- Skippable if you're playing casual F2P — the free team already covers most early content.
- The biggest reason reroll feels lower-stakes here than in most gacha games: on a limited board, pulling a 5-star is a guaranteed hit on the featured unit — there's no losing a 50/50 the way there is in most other gacha games.
Verdict: if you're the type who needs the exact unit before committing long-term, spend 30-60 minutes rerolling. Otherwise, just play your first account — the game isn't pushing you toward rerolling either way.
The 7-Step Reroll Process, in Order
A clean reroll run follows the same seven steps below, and shouldn't need more than one sitting if you go in order.
- 1 — Create a new account and pick your server.
- 2 — Clear the tutorial (roughly 15-20 minutes) to unlock the gacha screen.
- 3 — Open your mailbox and the current banner to claim your starting rewards.
- 4 — Grab any pre-registration rewards, login bonuses, and active redemption codes before pulling.
- 5 — Spend Fabricated Dice on the Standard board first — these are the free dice, no Annulith required.
- 6 — Reach Hunter Lv15 within the first couple of days to unlock 10 extra Fabricated Dice.
- 7 — The standard 5-star selector unlocks at your 40th pull (down from an earlier threshold of 50) — use it on whichever 5-star you're missing.
One tip: only spend Fabricated Dice while rerolling, and hold onto Annulith and Solid Dice for the limited board — burning Annulith on the Standard board during a reroll is a waste, since limited characters don't appear there.
Launch Resources: How Many Pulls Do You Actually Get?
A fresh account starts with roughly 31 Fabricated Dice for the Standard board, 2500 Annulith, and 1 Solid Dice for the limited board — that converts to about 46-47 Standard pulls. This figure currently comes from a single source, so treat it as an estimate rather than a confirmed cross-checked number.
- Soft pity kicks in around pull 70 (the board shifts into a 'Modified' state, pushing 5-star odds up to roughly 19.59%), and hard pity guarantees a 5-star at pull 90.
- With launch resources alone, a reroll account almost never reaches that 70-90 pity range — the realistic play is leaning on board luck plus the guaranteed selector at pull 40.
- Riftcrystal is the currency you convert into Dice when topping up; don't confuse it with Annulith, which is the higher-tier currency worth saving for limited boards later.
Verdict: don't reroll expecting to hit pity. Treat those 46-47 pulls as a short gamble plus one guaranteed pick at pull 40, not a full pity-chasing campaign.
Who's Actually Worth Rerolling For
Pick a target before you spend a single pull — rerolling blind for 'anything good' usually wastes more time than it saves. The table below covers the names worth chasing right now.
- Jiuyuan — Rank: S · Why chase them: Anima element, blends burst damage with healing through a mark-and-detonate kit — flexible for both aggressive and sustain-heavy team plans.
- Sakiri — Rank: S · Why chase them: Incantation element, buffs the whole team's ATK by roughly 30% for 20 seconds — a rare early-game team-wide damage buffer.
- Fadia — Rank: A · Why chase them: Psyche element, leans toward sustain — a safe pick if survivability matters more to you than raw burst.
- Daffodil — Rank: A · Why chase them: Chaos element, a break-focused DPS — used to rank higher before a nerf brought her priority down a notch.
Nanally sits on a limited board as one of the rarest units in the game, but her pull rate during a reroll run is quite low; the current tier list ranks her A, so she isn't the single best target if you only get one reroll shot. The two newest limited-board additions are currently sitting at S+ on the tier list — check that page directly to see who's actually topping the chart right now, since banners and rankings shift with every update.
Verdict: aim for Jiuyuan or Sakiri if you want a long-proven safe pick, or check the tier list first to line up with whichever limited banner is currently live.
Email Salting: Does It Actually Work Here?
Gacha communities regularly pass around an email 'salting' trick — adding a + or . before the @ symbol so one real inbox can generate a dozen different-looking addresses, letting you register multiple reroll accounts without owning that many real emails.
- The trick works reliably on plenty of other games thanks to how their mail systems handle extra characters.
- For NTE specifically, this comes from a couple of international community pages and hasn't been directly confirmed against NTE's own login system — test it on one throwaway address before relying on it for a whole batch of accounts.
- The safer fallback if you're unsure: use a few genuinely separate email addresses, or a guest login if the server allows it, so you're not stuck if salting doesn't take.
Verdict: worth trying, but don't build your entire reroll plan around it — always have a backup email ready.
PC, Mobile, or PS5 — Does the Platform Change Anything?
How easy rerolling feels depends a lot on which platform you're actually playing on.
- On PC and mobile, spinning up new accounts is usually quick — one email or phone number per account and you're done.
- On PS5, a console typically only has one PSN account signed in at a time — a general PlayStation platform limitation, not something unique to NTE, but it does make mass-rerolling on a single PS5 far more awkward than doing it on PC or mobile.
- If PS5 is your main platform, the more practical move is to reroll on PC or mobile first to land the unit you want, then log into that same account on PS5 if the game supports cross-platform account linking.
Verdict: PC and mobile stay the most convenient platforms for fast, repeated rerolling; PS5 players should think twice before committing to a marathon reroll session directly on console.
You Rerolled a Good Account — Now What?
The moment you land one of the targets above (or any 5-star you're happy with), stop and keep the account — don't burn your remaining Fabricated Dice chasing 'one more try' when you already have a solid enough foundation to push through the story.
- Use GameVika's pity calculator to track exactly how far you are from hard pity on future banners.
- Check the tier list regularly, since rankings shift with every patch, including the names covered here.
- Before pulling on later banners, check the banner page to see who's currently featured and how much time is left before it ends.
Verdict: a successful reroll is one where you know when to stop. Stop, build around whoever you got, and move into the rest of the game.
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Frequently asked questions
Is rerolling worth it in Neverness to Everness?
Not required, since new accounts already get a free 5-star selector plus a Chiz and Aurelia to build a baseline team. It's still worth doing if you want a strong S-rank locked in from day one, and it carries less risk than most gacha games because NTE's limited board has no 50/50.
How long does an NTE reroll take?
A clean run takes about 30-60 minutes: roughly 15-20 minutes for the tutorial, claiming your starting rewards, then spending all your Fabricated Dice on the Standard board and using the selector at pull 40.
Which characters should I reroll for?
Jiuyuan and Sakiri are the two most reliable S-rank targets right now. Fadia and Daffodil are solid A-rank backups, but check the tier list before pulling since limited banners rotate frequently.
Is rerolling harder on PS5 than PC or mobile?
Generally yes, since a PS5 console usually only supports one signed-in PSN account at a time — a general PlayStation platform limitation. PC and mobile remain the more convenient platforms for repeated reroll accounts.