Updated on May 16, 12:15 p.m. (GMT+8): Improved relevancy.
I still can’t stop playing Genshin Impact.
That’s it. That’s my Genshin Impact review.
I’ve continued to put countless hours into Genshin Impact since it released in 2020, and I can still say that the game is an absolute masterpiece.
For those of you who are out of the loop, Genshin Impact is an online multiplayer RPG by video game developer HoYoverse that brings you into the fantastic world of Teyvat.
From blowing monsters away with whirlwinds to cooking some hearty meals for your party, the immersion of the Teyvat realm still stands out from any online game I’ve played before.
Genshin Impact review: Why it’s still my go-to game after so many years
The world of Teyvat is filled with wonder
The game starts off on the trope of a hero’s journey. After the inciting incident of losing your brother/sister in a fight against a god, you find yourself on the outskirts of Mondstadt with Paimon, your guide and Genshin’s trademark icon.
You meet some side characters like Amber and Venti who join your party and essentially pave the way to the simple yet interesting plot of Mondstadt’s dragon problem.
The game’s lore is nothing short of breathtaking. The world-building is a canonical sensation that still leaves so much open to play with.
You first have Mondstadt, a medieval-influenced city-state that worships the Anemo Archon, Barbatos, and later on, you discover Liyue Harbor, a Chinese-inspired nation that worships the Geo Archon, Rex Lapis.
Since its release, HoYoverse has continued to add more nations such as Inazuma and Sumeru, showing just how beautiful and diverse Teyvat really is.
I must also praise the developers for fleshing out their roster with elaborate character designs and expressive voice acting. While the main character rarely says anything, you are immediately struck by Paimon’s inquisitive nature and your party member’s little quips when on the road.
On top of that, adding voices to minor characters like Adventurer’s Guild receptionist Katheryne just adds another layer of life to everything that goes on.
In terms of its environmental qualities, Genshin Impact is a sight to behold. From Mondstadt’s green pastures to Liyue’s rocky ranges, the game is only at its early stages and never ceases to amaze me graphically.
While you start off with two major cities, Liyue and Mondstadt, you get to discover quainter abodes in areas like Springvale and Qingce Village, giving you the aesthetic foil between urban and countryside locations.
With oculi to capture and treasure puzzles like the Three Divine Birds to decode, you’ll always be getting a fantastic, nature-filled view of Teyvat.
On a very important side note as a musician, the music and soundtrack to this game are one-of-a-kind. While I had my suspicions of Genshin being another boring MMO with pay-to-play mechanics and a bland world, I was easily proven wrong once I got into the thick of it.
To smack a harmonious swelling of instruments into a well-executed world experience, Genshin Impact showcases nothing but love and care in its immersive universe.
Even when crossing borders, you can hear the usual Mondstadt piano fade into a soft and eloquent Erhu at Liyue Harbor.
With such beautiful attention to emitting a feeling of cultural assimilation to its fictional backdrop, I feel welcomed to a world where I can lose countless hours.
The gameplay puts you through a grind for better weapons and artifacts
While the game starts out with some simple tutorials, it perfectly encapsulates the gameplay experience that you will get sucked into. It doesn’t lock you into these railroad missions, but rather it lets you do what all players want to do: roam around.
For the first hour, I just found myself clearing hilichurl camps for fun and the story did not once impede the action. While you are level-locked to Mondstadt until adventure rank 16, the usual level grind becomes very satisfying, to say the least.
The game is built around a solid pathway of ascension. You must level your adventure rank, your characters, their weapons and artifacts, and also go around collecting oculi that help improve stamina and grant you EXP.
On top of that, your world level increases throughout your ranks, giving you stronger and harder enemies in the wilderness. Although it might be a lot to handle in the first few sittings, it gradually becomes more tameable in the later stages. Genshin does its best to be the perfect blend of difficulty and critical thinking that entices players to say, “that quest wasn’t so hard, let’s move on to the next one.”
The combat system is very promising and rewards those who pay close attention to it. Aside from your usual hack-and-slash gameplay, enemies have elemental qualities that you can counter so combat becomes an ebb-and-flow between you and your party members.
When facing a Cryo Abyss Mage, you must equip a Pyro member like Amber to burn them down. You can also switch to an Anemo character like Sucrose to add some Swirl damage to the flames.
To add another layer of depth to your battle, you can equip artifact sets that significantly increase your Pyro damage against icy enemies. There’s also a chance of your artifacts increasing your health and defense so you don’t feel so helpless against Ruin Hunters.
Though complicated at first, it easily becomes second nature when you have a handful of elements in your party. It becomes a worthwhile achievement to be able to pair elements like Hydro and Cryo for a deadly combo.
The multiplayer mode lets you have your own traveling party
An important thing to note is that Genshin only becomes multiplayer once you reach Adventure Rank 16.
You can only play up to a party of four in one world so you won’t even encounter the massive crowds you usually see in MMOs. While some may be turned off from delayed and limited multiplayer, it teaches a sense of discipline to the ordinary player.
Though I was critical about the game’s necessity to play alone at first, I came to a realization in this Genshin Impact review that the individual level-grind became a primary task of the game. Once you’ve powered through the main storyline and side quests to level up and collect your party members, not much is left to do except to raid the exceptionally difficult ruins and fight the level 30 elemental hypostases.
Now that the game allows you to party up with strangers and friends, the game continues its large-scale action with actual companions.
At AR 58, I had a blast just escorting my friends through the entire map, collecting oculi and showing them how to finish specific puzzles. Now that your friends control the other elements on the fly, party attacks become seamless in battle and provide players with that barrage of damage that you lack when you play by yourself.
One improvement I would ask for in this Genshin Impact review is just a better integration of co-op into the game. As much as the single-player gameplay shines on its own, the game rarely reminds you that co-op is available.
If the game could notify you when a friend is online or raiding ruins, it would help me grind the levels with someone rather than just using my time and resources for world quests that hold minimal rewards.
You’ll live with or without Genshin’s gacha system
Last, but not least, we have to talk about Genshin’s gacha system. As HoYoverse is also known for the Honkai Impact game series, many might wonder if the gacha system overstays its welcome in Genshin.
The gacha system barely makes a dent in the entire experience of the game. If you’re a newbie to games and you just want to have fun and fight enemy camps with friends, you can essentially do that and still have no reason to dive into the gacha system.
Of course, many of you reading this are probably hardcore gamers who like the idea of rolling better S-tier characters for a subtle flex to your friends, and believe me, I understand (Raiden Shogun level 90 with Engulfing Lightning). This is when you can truly dive into the nitty-gritty of the gacha system.
With the gacha system using Fates that can be bought with primogems, you can easily earn enough primogems to pay for a 10-roll. You can also purchase primogems with cash and pay your way to significantly boost your characters with constellations, but the game itself is still enjoyable without it.
As much as it gives you the opportunity and the accessibility to use your hard-earned primogems and your actual money for the gacha system, it never really forces you to do it.
The main storyline provides you with most of the elements at your disposal (Lisa/Electro, Kaeya/Cryo, Amber/Pyro, Traveller/Anemo, and Geo) so you can easily grind your way to a solid party of four.
If you’re scared that it is a pay-to-play/win kind of game, I can honestly say in this Genshin Impact review that it barely scratches the surface compared to the misdemeanors other game companies have done with their microtransactions.
While some still see the game as a Breath of The Wild clone, it’s clearly more than just that. Sure, you see the similarities of the stamina bar and the cooking activities, but at least your weapons don’t break (checkmate, Nintendo).
On a more serious note, Genshin Impact provides players with a novel, online experience that feels so close to home. While the MMORPG genre has essentially disappeared with the advent of MOBAs like Dota 2 and FPS games like Valorant, Genshin Impact reinstates such RPG values into an online gaming community saturated with competitive gameplay.
If you happen to be a fan of Skyrim or even Breath of the Wild, give Genshin Impact just a week of your time and you’ll see what makes this game an unexpected masterpiece that everyone can enjoy.
Like this Genshin Impact review? You can download the game through its official website.
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