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Genshin Impact 2022 review: Impossible to keep up with, but fun anyway

Logging on to Genshin Impact, I immediately go to my fallback activity: picking flowers. To do that, I choose my anime-esque character with his black-and-teal-colored hair, and we fast-travel to the sheer, jutting peaks of the mystical region of Jueyun Karst. I jump from one slope to another, gliding along while the notes of a stringed instrument accompany my platforming. I pick a white flower called a Qingxin off the top of a neighboring cliff.

On screen, the moment is quiet and serene. But as I pick the flowers, my mind races. I know my total collection of Qingxin will hit 45 flowers that day, so I can level up my character. At that point, I should shift gears toward collecting an entirely different set of materials that can be used to level up specific attacks. At that point, I should check in and see if I’ll have enough money to actually use the materials. But then I notice a friend is online, so I should see if they can run the weekly boss that I’m not quite strong enough to beat yet. An otherwise beautiful moment becomes riddled with the anxiety of Genshin Impact’s never-ending to-do list.

Genshin Impact is not a flower picking simulator. It’s an open-world free-to-play game created by the Shanghai-based studio Hoyoverse (previously known as Mihoyo). Hoyoverse first released Genshin Impact two years ago, and while the core of the game remains the same — you explore, pursue quests, and collect materials to improve characters — it has received several additions of varying sizes. As of the 3.1 patch, the game has just about any sort of gameplay you can imagine: four giant regions to explore, an entire realm dedicated to decorating, a consistent churn of minigames, dozens of lengthy story quests, and an extensive character-building system. It is, both in scope and in the literal amount of storage it takes up on platforms, a huge game.

There are so many stunning nooks and crannies in Genshin Impact.Image: Hoyoverse via Polygon

Hoyoverse’s dedication to the game has transformed it into a global success, and a touchstone in a new generation of players. As of May 2022, the game surpassed $3 billion in revenue on mobile devices, making it the top-grossing mobile gacha game in the world. It also became the most talked-about game on Twitter in the first half of 2022. In September, developers announced that Genshin would even be getting an anime spinoff with Demon Slayer studio Ufotable. Considering all of this, I decided to rereview the game for its second anniversary.

Genshin Impact takes place in the sprawling fantasy world of Teyvat. Although you encounter dragons, magical knights, and elemental gods and goddesses, each region is loosely based on a real-world counterpart. The Traveler (the protagonist) and Paimon (the floating fairy mascot) are in search of the Traveler’s lost twin. As they journey far and wide, the two end up helping the people of each region navigate their own internal struggles. The stories follow political strife, dangerous ancient monsters, and diabolical plots from foreign enemies.

These stories have failed to grab me throughout the past two years. However, Genshin leans hard on its myriad characters, and it’s here where the narrative has reeled me in. Its cast of playable explorers exceeds 50 at this point, and you can find reasons to like every single one of them. Whether it’s the elegant sashes and pink hair of Yae Miko, or Arataki Itto’s rambunctious personality, the game features gorgeous aesthetic designs and lovable antics across the entire cast.

Image: Hoyoverse

Which is all to say that, while Genshin does have a mainline quest, it’s on the periphery of the central narrative that it shines. You can focus on exploring. You can dedicate your sessions to making stronger characters. Or you can just spend all your time decorating and designing a region of your own. No matter what you do, it’s all set in one of the most scenically stunning games I’ve ever played. From the warm golden pools of Liyue to the towering trees of Sumeru to the crackling, electric lands of Inazuma, each region sparkles in its own way. What’s more, it all unfolds to one of the best video game scores that I have ever heard.

Genshin Impact as a hobby

With so much space to explore, so many recurring tasks to complete, and so many characters to collect and improve, Genshin Impact can be less of a game and more of a full-fledged hobby. Its combat and platforming are relatively simplistic on a mechanical level, but its systems and chores are as numerous as they are varied. Everything from leveling up characters to saving up enough currency to merely unlock said characters is rooted in a daily rhythm that requires ongoing investment.

Over time, there is a sort of snowball effect: The more you do, the easier the day-to-day tasks become. A boss fight that once took 15 minutes can now be completed at a much higher level in under a minute — and it will grant more rewards. But early on, it can often feel like a litany of completed tasks that each lead to five new ones. For example, once I finished leveling up the Pyro character Xiangling as well as her attacks and weapons, I still needed to to think about building three more characters to form a well-rounded team.

As I play Genshin, I can swap between four characters at will. I can swing my sword and poke at enemies, yes — but for the most part, the bulk of damage is going to come from special attacks called Elemental Skills and Elemental Bursts. Once I got to a point where I had a well-oiled team and I alchemized their individual elemental traits, fighting fell into a more enjoyable flow. Bursts charge up quickly, allowing me to unleash a nonstop chain of Elemental Skills and Bursts as I switch between characters.

Image: Hoyoverse via Polygon

Characters like Xiangling have Elemental Bursts that encircle them with searing flames. Others, like Xingqiu, unleash pinpoint water-like needles that tack on damage after a regular attack. My characters quickly become ornamented with animations that indicate their stat boosts, healing effects, or shield buffs. Visually it can be a bit crowded, but it’s relatively easy to stick to the right rotation of attacks, and it’s entrancing to see the damage numbers skyrocket.

Genshin’s character-building system is among my favorites in an RPG. But still, understanding where to go, and when, can take a significant amount of planning and admin work. It is deep, complicated, and scratches an itch that I haven’t really felt relieved since I was a young child who trained to get a level 100 Pokémon for the first time. Building one character that’s strong enough to defeat a boss is satisfying. Building an entire team of beefed-up fighters is downright exhilarating.

Related

As it adds new regions, Genshin Impact’s politics only get messier
Genshin Impact’s sheer size is leaving mobile players behind

Of course, the ever-looming caveat of live-service games, and of Genshin Impact especially, is the fact that there’s always more content on the way. Try as I might to check every box on my to-do list, there is, more often than not, a new update or expansion around the corner. Keeping up with Genshin Impact can be fun, but it can also be mentally exhausting.

Although patches will vary in size and amount of content, they tend to bring new events that contain time-restricted minigames and miscellaneous quests. At points, I do wish I could spend more time running around, exploring certain regions and meeting new NPCs — but I so frequently feel beholden to interact with new content, whether it’s because people are talking about it online or I want a certain item as a reward. Sometimes, I’ll focus more on the podcast playing in my ear than on the actual plot unfolding in Genshin. It’s a shame, because there are some genuinely good character quests in here — they’re just so closely associated with draining busywork that they end up feeling like a burden.

Dealing with the content churn

With so many tasks and regular, polished updates, the question is not whether Genshin is a good game. (It is.) Rather, the question has become “Can I even keep up with it?” With so much game, it’s no wonder that the fandom constantly brings up the language of burnout when it comes to Genshin. It feels like I’m plugged into a never-ending cycle of content goals.

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♬ Renai Circulation (English Cover) [2012 TV Size] — Lizz Robinett

I think Genshin is most enjoyable when I give myself wiggle room to play at my own pace. In other words, I get the most out of it when I meet it on my own terms. If there is a new Archon quest, well, I might allow myself to skip dailies for a few days, or I will just choose to ignore the battle pass more or less for an entire patch. Maybe I’ll let myself watch TikToks during cutscenes. The moment I feel coerced into doing something is the moment the game stops feeling fun.

On the surface it sounds easy: Just only play the game when it’s fun and rewarding. But so much of Genshin feels like it’s designed to exploit my human tendencies. You know that itch that won’t go away when you see a red circle on the corner of a phone app? Genshin feels just like that — day after day after day.

Fully engaging with Genshin’s gacha mechanics means pursuing a currency called Primogems, a star-shaped crystal that buys another item called an Acquaint Fate, which can then be used to make “Wishes.” When you “Wish,” you gamble for a shot at getting a specific character or weapon, most of which are more powerful than free characters. Specific characters, like the once-much-desired bard Venti, will get boosted drop rates for scheduled periods of time. But then they’re wrenched away. The wishing system works just like a loot box; I’ve seen people develop what they have described as serious gambling addictions while playing Genshin.

If you want to gamble and you don’t have the money to, well, then you feel like you have to log on, every day, and do all the tasks and beat all the events. And while the better characters aren’t necessary to play the game, they are very, very nice — I can’t imagine a game in which I don’t get to play as Xiao. Some of them offer great utility to my roster, sure — but I’ve grown attached to others just through the sheer amount of time I’ve spent with them.

Image: Hoyoverse via Polygon

It’s an open-world game, but it’s also a gacha game. The daily and weekly requirements, the currencies, and the luck of the draw all influence how and when I play. I can’t cram all my bosses or domains into one day of playing because of arbitrary caps the developers put in place. I can’t go pick all the flowers I want because some will only respawn every two days; like the inner machinations of its ever-looming systems, that serenity I found on the mountaintop is also dictated by the grind.

And so, while there are a lot of ways to play, the game isn’t truly open — I can’t always do what I want, when I want. I love the world, but I always feel like there’s a tension between loving the world and exploring it, but always feeling like there’s an invisible hand, which is not completely free of insidious intentions, guiding my habits.

And so I chip away and bristle against it where I can. I will allow myself to grind, but I will listen to a podcast during the most unbearable moments. I will not feel bad about getting every last Primogem. I will accept that my brain might feel an itch for a while, because I simply will not get to that “one world quest” for a week, and my log might be more clogged than I’d like it to be. Instead of worrying, I will simply close the game and try to forget about it for a few days. Then, on a fresh Saturday morning, I will return to its beautiful world, and find that my flowers have regrown.

Genshin Impact (for PC) — Review 2022

If imitation is the sincerest form of flattery, then Hoyoverse’s Genshin Impact is about as flattering as games come. In 2019, Genshin Impact made a splash in the video game world with the unveiling of an open-world action-RPG that was heavily inspired by Nintendo’s The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. That’s not to say it’s a mere knockoff, however. Genshin Impact features numerous unique gameplay systems and charming story beats that set it apart from Zelda and other genre titles. It also features a mountainous amount of content, to say nothing of the special events that are introduced every month. That said, the free-to-play PC game requires serious grinding (or spending serious dough) to unlock high-powered warriors, and artifact farming awaits end-game players looking for ideal gear. Flaws aside, Genshin Impact offers a genuinely massive, highly polished, and ever-expanding game for you to enjoy without spending a dime, earning it our Editors’ Choice award.


Adventure Calls

Genshin Impact follows twins cast into an unknown world after a conflict with a super-powered goddess. You select a hero to begin the adventure, and after some story shenanigans, you become separated from your sibling. You spend the rest of the game in the unfamiliar world of Teyvat, as you search for your sibling and meet other heroes throughout the journey.  

There’s no denying the visual similarities between Genshin Impact and The Legend of Zelda: Breath of the Wild. Both games feature open-world environments to explore that are jam-packed with treasures to find, walls to scale, and whimsical monsters to battle. Genshin Impact’s archery and swordplay look extremely similar to Nintendo’s offering at first glance, and the colorful cel-shaded anime-inspired visual style is reminiscent of Zelda’s look. 

That said, Genshin Impact’s party system immediately sets it apart from Zelda and other open-world RPGs. You actively recruit new playable characters into your group as you progress through the story, and each member possesses unique attack styles and abilities. There is some overlap; for example, sword-wielding heroes have unique attack animations, but they all feature the same combat inputs and are functionally similar.

You can have up to four characters in the active party. Only one can be out on the field at any given time, but you can swap between party members on the fly, leading to an eye-catching explosion of combo attacks and particle effects.


More Than Meets the Eye

Genshin Impact features an expansive and nuanced elemental system that is tied to the game’s party system. Each character has a designated elemental affinity, be it air, earth, fire, water, lightning, or ice. In addition to their standard melee combo and heavy attack, each character has a special, element-specific attack bound to a short cool-down gauge. These specials include auto-deflecting energy shields, potent counter-stances, spiraling sword formations, simple magical blasts, and area of effect attacks. It’s important to effectively use these elemental attacks, as most enemies have their own affinity attacks and weaknesses that make them tough to deal with if you solely use melee attacks.

Not only does Genshin Impact incorporate elemental magic into its combat, but the game marries status effects to those systems. The result is a surprising well of depth that adds to the challenge. Every elemental attack afflicts its target with a status effect, as well as the base damage from the attack itself. Fire attacks, for example, leave victims burning for several seconds after the initial attack. Ice attacks slow opponents’ movements. 

Once a status has been placed on the target, the foe becomes susceptible to additional elemental attacks that cause a chain reaction. This is what makes Genshin Impact’s combat genuinely interesting. A target that has been drenched freezes solid when hit with an ice attack. An enemy chilled by an ice attack becomes superconductive when struck by lightning, crippling its defense to further physical attacks. There are many combinations to discover as you play, and the large character list means you can experiment to your heart’s content as you explore the world. 

The introduction of the Dendro element alongside the release of the Sumeru region adds even more complexity and richness to the gameplay. Dendro represents flora/plants, which reacts with fire, water and electric elements to produce a whole new range of reactions and effects. There is a lot to learn and master, so check out our Genshin Impact tips guide if you need a few pointers.


Explore the World

Naturally, an adventure is only as good as the world you explore. Genshin Impact features a sprawling world that’s packed with enemies to fight, treasures to find, dungeons to raid, and heights to climb. Like Breath of the Wild, Genshin Impact’s climbing is surprisingly open-ended, so you can scale most surfaces if you have the stamina to complete the ascent. As in Breath of the Wild, Genshin Impact gives you a glider to slow your descent speed, only in the form of wings, in this case. You use the wings to ride air currents, reach distant platforms, complete mini-games, and solve puzzles. The gliding wings consume stamina during use, so there is a limit to how far or long you can glide before you tumble out of the air. But thanks to both the free climbing and accessible gliding, Genshin Impact affords a fantastic sense of verticality; I found myself climbing any building, monument, and tree the game would let me for no reason other than because I could.

Genshin Impact incentivizes you to explore as much as you can. The world map is full of secrets and treasures to find. For example, you can extend the limits of your stamina by finding and donating magical teardrops to divine statues. These relics are hidden across the map, often in elevated spots that require you to ride air currents or solve a puzzle. Ghostly sprites hover over landmarks and encourage you to chase them across the field they inhabit for treasure chest rewards. Of course, dungeons are strewn throughout the world, and they’re filled with monsters to slay, puzzles to solve, and gear to amass. Genshin Impact’s cooking system lets you combine food items based on recipes you acquire to create meals that heal or temporarily boost attack and defense stats.

Genshin Impact has packed its world with interesting enemies, too. Spinning lizards, flower monsters, spectral wolves, ghostly knights, mushroom raptors, and so much more haunt Teyvat, which makes exploring interesting and engaging. Each expansion also introduces new world bosses, such as golems, plant fiends, giant samurai, dragons, and mechanized serpents. This is on top of the major, story-related bosses you can fight on a weekly basis.

Once you reach Adventure Rank 16, you can explore and dungeon raid in co-op, multiplayer action with up to four players. The host reaps most of the benefits from co-op sessions in the open world, but raiding dungeons and tackling bosses is lucrative for everyone. Genshin Impact also has cross-platform play with console and mobile, making it cinch to find other players.

The game is much more story-heavy than the Zelda-esque aesthetic would lead you to believe. While you are free to explore the world between narrative beats, there are limits to where you can go right at the start. At first, you are restricted to the regions surrounding Mondstadt, the game’s first major region. However, the world opens as you clear story quests, discover landmarks, and solve puzzles. I appreciate Genshin Impact’s open-world design; you can explore and quest without a looming sense of being railroaded by the story, and without feeling too overwhelmed by the size of the full map.


Make a Wish

Hoyoverse has introduced more than 50 characters, a number that swells with each new region and story expansion. You get a handful of free characters to use once the story starts rolling, and they each possess a specific attack niche and elemental affinity. Amber, for example, is an archer who is almost always in my party, because her fire-arrows are a valuable puzzle-solving utility. Other characters, like the water-based healer, Barbara, or the fiery lancer, Xiangling, are unlocked by performing particular feats. Barbara is free to everyone who reaches Adventure Rank 20, and Xiangling is unlocked by getting halfway through the grueling Spiral Abyss gauntlet. Collei, a new Dendro archer, can also be unlocked for free via the Spiral Abyss if you missed her during the recent Sumeru launch event. 

Beyond the freebies, the only other way to acquire new party members in this free PC game is through Primogems, a premium currency. These are sparingly awarded whenever you open chests, complete quests, participate in seasonal events, and undertake daily missions. You also earn Primogems upon completing game log achievements. As a premium currency, you can purchase Primogems via Genshin Impact’s cash shop. You can convert Genesis crystals, which can be bought in bundles of 300 for about five bucks, into Primogems at a 1:1 rate.

Unlocking new characters is not as simple as selecting the one you like and making a purchase, unfortunately. Characters are doled out randomly through the game’s Wish system. For 160 Primogems, you can try your luck and make a Wish, which summons a random weapon or character from an expansive pool. The rates for pulling characters is pitifully low on average, for several reasons. Heroes are ranked as either four or five stars (depending on the character), while weapons range from three to five stars. As Wishes pull from both weapon and character pools, you’re far more likely to get a rubbish three-star weapon than a new character.

There are a few caveats, however, that make the Wish system more palatable (we’ve even highlighted a few Genshin Impact tips for frugal adventurers in a separate guide). Essentially, every 10 Wishes you make guarantees that you get at least one four-star character or weapon. Low-rank weapons still muddy your roll, but at least three-star weapons are eliminated once every ten attempts. Five-star characters and weapons are decidedly rarer, and are only guaranteed every 90 attempts. It’s daunting stuff, especially if you’re rolling for characters using real cash.

Even though the system is costly, diligent players can earn roughly one free roll per day by completing daily tasks and in-game events. Earning Primogems through gameplay is wholly more satisfying, and is more in line with how Genshin Impact pushes gameplay to the forefront. Of course, nothing is stopping you from whaling right from jump if you have the cash to do so.


A Musical Triumph

Your adventures across Teyvat are accented by a truly outstanding video game soundtrack. Produced by Hoyoverse’s in-house studio, Hoyo-Mix, Genshin Impact features one of the most engrossing and eclectic video game soundtracks I have ever had the pleasure to experience. Better still, the soundtrack only gets more impressive with each new region.

Enkanomiya’s abyssal, floating islands feature somber, deeply atmospheric piano, string, and vocal tunes that match the zone’s evanescent tragedy. The newly introduced Sumeru nation adds a host of new Indian and Middle Eastern-themed tracks, highlighting the region’s unique sounds and instruments, such as the sitar, bansuri, and percussive tabla.


Flaws in the Canvas

Genshin Impact’s earliest dungeons, called domains, are short, combat-heavy affairs. They aren’t particularly cerebral, so when you’re not fighting, you’re platforming, activating switches, or avoiding hazards. Unfortunately, this is one aspect of the game that hasn’t changed much since launch. The recent summer event, Summertime Odyssey, introduced excellent and comprehensive Zelda-like domains, but this was a seasonal event that is no longer available. The bulk of Genshin Impact’s domains are nowhere near as complex, which is a real shame, as dungeon crawling, especially puzzle-heavy ones, would be a great compliment to the game’s elemental system.

Domains are serviceable, but are the least impressive part of the game, by far. They are mechanically sound, but players with a modicum of wanderlust can easily break out of the developer’s intended boundaries and fall out of the map or through floors. In one side dungeon, for example, I rode a wind current to the upper levels of the labyrinth and noticed a gap in the stonework in the previous chamber that led to a seemingly optional room. I cleverly rode the wind back down into said opening, only to find that the detail was cosmetic only, and fell through the floor and back to the entrance. Domains tend to look much larger and more impressive than they are.


Domain Grinding Tedium

One of Genshin Impact’s biggest negatives is the incredibly arbitrary, artifact-collecting system. Artifacts are essentially your armor, and there are five pieces to collect: flower, plume, timepiece, goblet, and circlet. Each comes with randomized values for specific stats, such as defense, attack, critical rate, health, and elemental damage. Each Artifact set also has bonus parameters when you equip two, and four, pieces within said set. For example, the Gladiator’s Finale set grants you an 18% attack bonus when two pieces are equipped on a character. With four pieces equipped, you get an additional 35% melee attack buff.

The issue is that every facet of artifact-collecting is randomized. To get artifacts you want, you need to clear the domains that award them. Generally, domains award two entirely different sets, so there is no guarantee that you even get a piece from the set you want. Assuming you do, you then have a one-in-five chance to get the specific piece you want (flower, plume, timepiece, goblet, and circlet). If you’ve gotten lucky so far, then consider that the stats on said artifact are randomized. If you’re building an attack-focused character, for example, you want attack and critical-focused stats on your artifact. However, there is no guarantee that you get one with the stats you want.

Even if, after all this randomness, you get a viable piece to use, you still need to level it up. Through the leveling process, stats increase in value randomly, and only at specific breakpoints (levels 4, 8, 12, 16, and 20). There is no guarantee that a viable artifact you farmed for increases the value of the stats you want. Attack and critical-oriented stats are notoriously unlikely to increase compared to less optimal stats, such as defense or HP. So it’s common, even likely, that after all that farming, leveling, and luck, you still end up with a trash artifact.

There is no way to influence the system to give you what you want. Grinding and luck are the only way to get good artifacts, and this farming process is the crux of Genshin Impact’s endgame. Admittedly, there are many hours of gameplay and story to get through before farming for gear becomes relevant for new players. But the grind is an utter chore for long-time players who have been enjoying the game since launch.


Can Your PC Run Genshin Impact?

To run Genshin Impact, your gaming PC needs at least an Intel Core i5 or equivalent CPU, a Nvidia GeForce GT 1030 or higher graphics card, 8GB of RAM, and at least 30GB of storage space. In addition, the computer must run the 64-bit Windows 7 (or later) operating system. On a gaming desktop, with an AMD Ryzen 5 3600 processor, Nvidia GeForce RTX 2080, and 16GB of RAM, Genshin Impact runs at a smooth 60 frames per second at 1440p.

My only genuine gripe is the lack of key bind customization. Genshin Impact plays intuitively on keyboard and mouse, but I dislike being forced to use my mouse wheel. In Genshin Impact, the mouse wheel is used for its detection system, which functions similarly to the Witcher vision in The Witcher 3: Wild Hunt. The detection system isn’t used very often outside of a few key quests, but it was annoying to switch to a gamepad to get it to work correctly. I would have loved to bind that function to another key instead.


A Winning Recipe

It’s easy to ding Genshin Impact for its gacha pricing model. The artifact-grind is also a tremendous, tedious chore for everyone. But it’s worth noting that the game is entirely free. Sure, you need to gamble for cool new characters and weapons, but neither of these are at all necessary to enjoy the delightful world, story, and sounds that Genshin Impact offers. You get a base character roster that covers all elemental alignments for free, you can clear the story and optional content with gear you find in-game, and Hoyoverse frequently introduces events with new, free gear. To date, Genshin Impact lacks money-gated elements, which is more than many other gacha games, and even some full-priced titles, can claim. If you want an open world with hours of relaxing exploration and content to enjoy, be it alone or with friends, Genshin Impact has that in spades, and at a price that you literally cannot beat, earning our Editors’ Choice award.

For more recommendations, take a look at our selection of The Best PC Games. If battling across Teyvat has put you in a fighting mood, check out our picks for Best PC Action Games. And for rich video game talk, swing by PCMag’s Pop-Off YouTube Channel.

Genshin Impact Promo Codes for January 2023. Working promo codes for Genshin Impact — Escorenews

Gaming and eSports articles

Genshin Impact is the most famous anime game from the developer miHoYo. In it, you travel through the fascinating world of Genshin Impact, fight monsters and try to solve puzzles.

Genshin Impact Incredible
popular unique colorful style and
addictive gameplay. The game is free to play, but it has a built-in store where you can buy boosters and goods for real money. nine0007

Genshin promo codes update 3.4

On January 6, the authors of Genshin Impact presented the trailer for Update 3. 4. In it, they announced the Lantern Festival, and also pleased the fans with new promotional codes for primogems. They will be valid only a day after the release of the trailer for patch 3.4. Hurry up to activate them before 15:00 Moscow time on January 7th. nine0007

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Working promo codes for Genshin Impact for January 2023

In Genshin Impact, gamers can activate special promo codes to get in-game currency and other useful items.

nine0002 Important : some promo codes might be outdated, we will update the text as soon as new promo codes for Genshin Impact appear.

Genshin Impact promo code list:

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  • GENSHINGIFT — 50 source stones and 3 hero experience
  • 6A6VJTWGCPYV — 60 source stones and 5 hero experience
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  • ETNU2DN5NZRR — x60 source stones, x4 book of experience
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  • nine0019 ZSPDKSC3V8V5 — 60 source stones and 3 hero experience

    Where to enter promo codes for Genshin Impact

    You need to activate the promotional code on the official website of the game. To do this, you must upgrade your account to rank 10. Make sure you have linked your account and selected the right character. The reward will be sent to the in-game mail. One code can only be used once per account. nine0007

    Promo codes
    valid for certain regions. For European
    server Genshin Impact, North American server and server in
    Southeast Asia issued different promo codes.

    nine0002 Promo codes for Standoff 2 for January 2023. New working promo codes for Standoff 2

    We get free boxes and skins.

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    nine0002 2023-01-06 13:09:00 Genshin promo codes update 3. 4

    2023-01-06 12:26:00 Fontaine Genshin: new characters, leaks and when

    will be released

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    Promo codes Genshin Impact for browser

    • You must have at least 10 adventure rank.
    • Go to the official website to enter codes https://genshin. hoyoverse.com/en/gift
    • Go to your profile, select your server, and then enter the nickname and the code itself (screenshot below).

    Genshin Impact promo codes for PC, PlayStation and mobile devices

    • Press Escape (PC) while controlling a character. In the console and mobile versions, go directly to the «Settings» menu. nine0020
    • Select «Settings» (gear), go to «Account» and select the «Promo code» option.

    Promo codes Genshin Impact

    • 👉 ns8tuvjyr4uh-100 Smojems, 10 mystical improvements (from 10th rank; 2023-01-06)
    • 👉 nsqtvckyrmdm-100 rallys, 5 Ostrome Geroi (dated 10th rank ; 2023-01-06)
    • 👉 LB8SDUJYQ4V9 — 100 Primogems, 50,000 Mora (From rank 10; 2023-01-06)
    • ➡️ XBRSDNF6BP4R December; new)
    • ➡️ 2T9AUV3YPV49 — gives 10 adventurer experience books, 10,000 pestilence, excellent buff ore x5, chicken in honey sauce x5 and pancakes for tea x5 (December)
    • ➡️ gives GEN0SHINGIFT — periodically gives GEN0SHINGIFT — Source and Experience of Hero X3 (European, North American and Southeast Servers)
    • ➡️ NS8BD6OPS77Z
    • ➡️ 8ARAU6FNBNPV
    • ➡️ ET9SUPENB765

      WARBDRR9MCQ9 — 10 experiences of adventure seekers, superior ) and pasta with tomato sauce (x5)

    • NT8SU92DKFRZ — 60 source stones and 5 adventurer experience
    • MA6RPW8GGJAM — 60 source stones and 5 adventurer experience

    How to get new Genshin Impact codes?

    Genshin Impact Gift Codes mostly appear during developer streams for game updates. They can also be published on various social networks — for example, Facebook, VKontakte, Twitter, Reddit, Discord, etc.

    Genshin Impact 9 Expired Codes0015

    • 6SP942Z3XVWH (Code from Stream October 23, 2022) — 100 stones of the source and 10 magic reinforcement ore
    • KS6QL3YJFCWM (Code from Stream October 23, 2022) — 100 stones of the source
    • GS6RLKGKWUER (Code from Strema on October 23 2022) — 100 stones of the source and 50,000 Mora
    • 6A6VJTWGCPYV — 60 stones of the source and 5 experience of the adventure seeker (added on August 24, 2022)
    • 3b6ryy7ahx9D — 100 stones of the source and 10 magic reinforcement ore JT78YH7SGWRHWRZ — 100 stones of the source and 5 stones of the source and 5 stones of the source and 5. hero
    • 2022WANVJAFAXTER (expires on July 3, 2022) — 100 stones of the source and 5 experience of the hero
    • 2022HA6C2AFBXSZV (expires on July 3, 2022) — 100 stones of the source and 50,000 moras
    • MS7CV8DMZH — 60 experiences of the source of the source and 5 experiences of the source of the source 100 Source Stones and 10 Magic Enhance Ore
    • DTNUKTWCC6D9 — 100 Source Stones and 5 Hero XP
    • HSNUKTXCCPWV — 100 Source Stones and 50,000 Pestilence

    Genshin Impact Gameplay Video — PS4 — Android — Gameplay Trailer