Wuthering Waves Wiki
Guides, mechanics and systems explained for Wuthering Waves.
Basics · 2 articles
Gacha · 4 articles
Core mechanics · 9 articles
Elemental archetypes · 5 articles
Progression · 3 articles
Endgame · 2 articles
What the Wuthering Waves Wiki Covers (25 Articles, 6 Groups)
Every article on this wiki belongs to one of six groups, sized to match how much a topic actually matters to a Rover's day-to-day.
- Basics (2 articles) — the beginner guide covering what to prioritize first, plus a reroll guide for deciding whether to restart an account.
- Gacha (4 articles) — Convene pity explained, banner pull history/tracking, the Standard Selector pick, and an Astrite budget guide.
- Core mechanics (9 articles) — the largest group: Echo system and cost, Echo Tuning, Sonata Sets, Concerto Energy, Forte Circuit, Resonance Chains, Team Rotation, Tune Break, and Negative Status.
- Elemental archetypes (5 articles) — team guides built around each Negative Status: Aero Erosion, Fusion Burst, Glacio Chafe, Havoc Bane, and Spectro Frazzle.
- Progression (3 articles) — Rover build guide, Echo farming order, and standard 5-star weapon choice.
- Endgame (2 articles) — Tower of Adversity and Whimpering Wastes tier lists and teams.
Reading Path: New Rover to Endgame
The 25 articles are meant to be read in order, not all at once.
- Just started: beginner guide, then the reroll guide if you have not committed to an account yet, then the Rover build guide since Rover is the one free character everyone keeps.
- First few weeks: Convene pity and Astrite budget before pulling on a banner, then the Echo system and Echo cost articles so materials are not wasted on the wrong build.
- Mid-progression: Sonata Sets and Echo farming to lock in a set, Team Rotation and Concerto Energy to understand swap-cancels, then whichever elemental archetype guide matches your main DPS's Negative Status.
- Endgame push: Resonance Chains to weigh dupe value, Tune Break and Negative Status for damage optimization, then Tower of Adversity and Whimpering Wastes for the actual clear teams.
How This Wiki Differs From Machine-Translated Guides
Every article here is written natively in English, Vietnamese, Japanese, Korean, and Traditional Chinese — the same article is not run through a translator five times, so idiom and terminology (Astrite, Convene, Sonata, Forte Circuit) read the way each community actually talks about the game. Numbers such as Convene rates, pity counts, and Echo substat ranges are cross-checked against Kuro Games' own patch notes before being written, and the wiki gets revised whenever a patch (currently 3.4, moving to 3.5) changes a mechanic instead of sitting untouched for months.
How the Wiki Connects to Character, Weapon and Tier List Pages
The wiki explains the why behind a mechanic; character, weapon, and Echo detail pages hold the exact numbers for a specific unit. For example, the Sonata Sets article explains why a 2-piece bonus differs from a 5-piece one in general, while a specific character's build page tells you which set to run on them. Same for the elemental archetype guides: they cover the shared team logic behind a Negative Status, and the tier list pages rank exactly where each character sits within that archetype for the current patch.