Destiny 2 Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks

Olivia Hart April 11, 2026 guides
Beginner GuideDestiny 2

5-Minute Primer

Destiny 2 is a shared-world shooter that blends the satisfying gunplay of Halo with the endless grind and loot mechanics of an MMO. You play as a Guardian, a resurrected warrior wielding magical space magic called the Light, defending humanity's last safe city from alien threats. If you are jumping in for the first time, the sheer volume of menus, currencies, and acronyms can be overwhelming. Here is exactly what you need to know to survive your first few steps.

The Golden Rule: Light level (Power level) is everything. Higher number equals more damage dealt and less damage taken. If a mission recommends 1500 Power and you are 1450, you will deal reduced damage and die incredibly fast. Always chase higher Power.

The Core Loop: Load into a location, shoot aliens, collect loot (armor and weapons), equip the loot if it makes your numbers go up, repeat. You will constantly be managing your inventory, dismantling weak gear to clear space, and praying for rare "god rolls" (weapons with perfect stat combinations).

The Progression Timeline: The game is split into three distinct phases. The Early Game is a sprint to the max Power level using powerful rewards from vendors. The Mid Game begins once you hit the cap, shifting your focus to acquiring "High-Stat" armor and specific weapon perks to build a cohesive playstyle. The End Game is the perpetual grind for the absolute best versions of gear, perfecting your build, and tackling the hardest PvE and PvP activities.

PvE vs. PvP: PvE (Player vs. Environment) is where you will spend 90% of your time. It is heavily cooperative, and you should never feel ashamed to matchmake into activities—you are meant to play with others. PvP (Player vs. Player), known as the Crucible, uses normalized Power levels, meaning a max-level veteran has the same health and damage as a brand-new player. It is purely about gunskill, map knowledge, and ability usage.

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First Hour Checklist

When you first boot up the game, you are going to be bombarded with pop-ups, cutscenes, and NPCs trying to talk to you. Ignore the fluff and focus on this strict priority list to get your bearings.

  • Create your character: Choose a class (more on this below) and customize your appearance. Your species and gender have zero impact on gameplay. Pick what looks coolest.
  • Play the New Light Tutorial: Follow the initial questline. It teaches you the absolute basics of movement, shooting, and getting your first Grenade, Melee, and Super ability.
  • Unlock your subclass: Early in the tutorial, you will unlock your first elemental subclass (Stasis for Titan and Warlock, Arc for Hunter). Pay attention to the Aspects and Fragments menus—this is how you customize your space magic.
  • Visit the Tower: This is your social hub. Walk around, talk to the main vendors (Zavala, Shaxx, Drifter, Ikora), and clear out their initial intro quests. This unlocks the fundamental playlists: Vanguard Strikes, Crucible, and Gambit.
  • Claim your Vendor Engrams: In the Tower, visit Banshee-44 (the Gunsmith) and Rahool (the Cryptarch). Look for a glowing icon near their names and claim their free weekly engrams. Do not decrypt Rahool's engrams yet—save them for later when your Power level is higher.
  • Equip your highest Power gear: Open your inventory. Look at the number in the top right corner of every piece of armor and weapon. Equip the highest numbers, regardless of what the gear looks like or what stats it has. Vanity comes later.
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Key Systems Explained

Combat and Abilities

Destiny 2 features a two-weapon system. You have a Kinetic weapon (standard bullets) and an Energy weapon (elemental bullets like Solar, Arc, or Void). You also have a Heavy weapon that uses rare purple ammo and deals massive damage.

Your abilities are tied to your subclass. You have a Grenade, a Melee attack, and a Class Ability (like a Barricade, Dodge, or Rift). Most importantly, you have a Super—a devastatingly powerful ability with a long cooldown. In the early game, do not hoard your Super. Use it liberally to clear rooms and learn how it interacts with different enemy types.

The Economy

You will quickly notice a dizzying array of currencies. Do not panic; you only need to care about a few right now:

  • Glimmer: The base currency. You need this for almost everything. You earn it by killing enemies, completing bounties, and dismantling items. You will constantly be low on it.
  • Legendary Shards: You get these by dismantling Legendary (purple) items. You use them to buy upgrade materials, focus engrams at the Tower, and purchase exotics from Xur. Hoard these early on.
  • Enhancement Cores: The most frustrating currency in the game. Used to masterwork (upgrade) armor and weapons. Extremely scarce for new players. Do not spend them on low-level gear.
  • Ascendant Shards / Ascendant Alloys: Endgame materials used for finalizing masterworks. You will not see these for dozens of hours. Ignore them completely for now.

Progression and Power Level Caps

Understanding the soft cap, hard cap, and pinnacle cap is the most important concept in Destiny 2.

  • The Soft Cap (1750): Anything you do—opening chests, doing patrols, playing strikes—will drop gear up to this level. Just play the game normally.
  • The Hard Cap (1800): Once you hit 1750, normal activities stop giving upgrades. You must now complete "Powerful Gear" challenges. These are weekly bounties given by vendors like Zavala and Shaxx. Doing a specific number of Vanguard Strikes or Crucible matches will reward you with gear that pushes you past 1750.
  • The Pinnacle Cap (1810): Once you hit 1800, Powerful gear is no longer enough. You must complete "Pinnacle" activities. These are the hardest things in the game: Raids, Grandmaster Nightfalls, and high-level Dungeons. They drop gear that pushes you to the absolute maximum.
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Build / Character Choices

Picking Your Class

Your class dictates your abilities, jumps, and stat distribution. All three classes are perfectly viable in all content, but they play very differently.

Titan: The tanky, punchy class. Titans have access to the best defensive abilities in the game, including floating shields (Barricades) and shoulder charges. They excel at closing the distance, surviving massive damage, and creating safe zones for their team. If you want to feel like an unstoppable freight train, play Titan. Best for: Beginners who want forgiving gameplay and aggressive playstyles.

Warlock: The space-magic glass cannon. Warlocks float instead of jump, and their class ability is a healing/damage buff circle called a Rift. They have the highest damage output in the game through abilities like Well of Radiance, but they are the most fragile. If you want to feel like a powerful wizard managing complex cooldowns, play Warlock. Best for: Players who like support roles, min-maxing damage, and floating around the battlefield.

Hunter: The agile rogue. Hunters have a dodge ability that reloads their weapon or gives them melee energy, making them incredibly fluid in gunfights. They are the hardest class to master because they rely heavily on positioning and evasion rather than raw durability. If you want the highest skill ceiling and the slickest movement in the game, play Hunter. Best for: PvP enthusiasts and players who value mobility over everything else.

Choosing Your Subclass

Each class has access to five elemental subclasses: Arc, Solar, Void, Stasis, and Strand. As a new player, you will likely start with Stasis (or Arc for Hunters) and quickly unlock Strand through a questline on Neptune.

  • Strand: Highly recommended for beginners. It involves green, thread-like tendrils that suspend enemies in mid-air. It provides incredible crowd control, immense survivability, and a grappling hook for movement. It feels amazing to use and is incredibly forgiving in PvE.
  • Solar: The fire element. It revolves around healing, radiant damage buffs, and explosive scorch effects. Very strong, straightforward, and easy to understand.
  • Arc: The lightning element. It is all about speed, chaining damage between enemies, and blinding foes. It makes you feel incredibly fast and aggressive.
  • Void: The purple element. Focuses on debuffing enemies (Weaken, Volatile, Suppress) and becoming invisible. Excellent for high-level PvE, but requires a bit more game knowledge to use effectively.
  • Stasis: The ice element. Focuses on freezing enemies solid and creating crystals that explode. Good for crowd control, but the slow, methodical playstyle can feel clunky to beginners.
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Pitfalls to Dodge

Destiny 2 is an old game with years of accumulated systems, and it does a notoriously poor job of explaining itself. Avoid these common rookie traps to save yourself hours of frustration.

  • Deleting "Blue" (Rare) gear before checking it: While you should generally dismantle blues to save space, occasionally a blue weapon will drop with an incredible combination of perks (like a shotgun that both reloads itself and fires explosive rounds). Always quickly inspect a blue weapon's perks before dismantling it, especially in the early game when your arsenal is limited.
  • Equipping an Exotic just because it is Exotic: Exotic (gold) gear usually has a unique, game-changing perk, but often has terrible base stats. If a Legendary (purple) helmet gives you +20 Recovery and +20 Discipline, and your Exotic helmet gives you +5 Strength and +5 Intellect, wear the purple one. Exotics are not automatically better. Use the "Compare" button in your inventory.
  • Ignoring Armor Stats: There are six armor stats: Mobility, Resilience, Recovery, Discipline, Strength, and Intellect. In PvE, you want to prioritize Recovery (how fast your health regenerates) and Discipline (how fast your grenade charges) above all else. High Mobility is a trap—it just makes you walk faster, which is mostly useless in endgame PvE. Ignore stats like Strength and Intellect unless your specific build requires them.
  • Spending Upgrade Materials on trash gear: In the armor inspection menu, you can spend Glimmer and Enhancement Cores to "Masterwork" armor to tier 10. Do not do this early on. You will find better armor in two hours and those Cores will be gone forever. Only invest in gear that has stats in the 60+ range.
  • Playing solo: Destiny 2 is designed to be played with a fireteam (up to three players for most activities). Playing solo makes the game exponentially harder, slower, and less rewarding. Use the "Fireteam" tab in the director to matchmake, or download the LFG (Looking For Group) app on your phone to find groups instantly.
  • Getting overwhelmed by the story: The narrative of Destiny 2 is a massive, convoluted mess spread across multiple expansions that have been vaulted (removed from the game). Do not try to understand the lore right now. Just enjoy the immediate shooting gallery in front of you. The story will start making sense (mostly) around the time you finish the Witch Queen and Lightfall expansions.
  • Infusing low-stat gear: "Infusion" lets you take the Power level of one item and transfer it to another. It costs Legendary Shards and Enhancement Cores. Never infuse an item just because it looks cool if its stats are bad. You are wasting extremely rare materials. Transmogrification (changing the appearance of gear) costs a different, much cheaper currency called Bright Dust.

Next Steps

Once you have wrapped your head around the core loop, hit the soft Power cap, and settled into a subclass you enjoy, it is time to pivot toward the true Destiny 2 experience.

Play the Expansions

The free "New Light" experience is notoriously barebones. To actually experience the good parts of the game, you need to play the expansions. Forsaken (available for free in the legacy collection) offers fantastic campaigns and the Last Wish raid. Beyond Light gives you the Stasis subclass. However, the modern game truly begins with The Witch Queen and Lightfall. If you have to buy just one, buy The Witch Queen—it features one of the best campaigns in shooter history and introduces the incredible crafting system.

Unlock the Crafting System

Midway through the Witch Queen campaign, you will unlock the Enclave. This is where you craft weapons. Crafting allows you to level up specific weapons by using them, eventually unlocking the ability to choose their exact perks. This removes the brutal RNG (random number generation) of the loot system and is the primary way endgame players get their "god rolls." Focus on crafting a good Kinetic weapon first, like a Hand Cannon or Auto Rifle.

Transition to "High-Stat" Armor

Remember those armor stats? Normal Legendary armor drops with total stats ranging from 48 to 62. "High-stat" armor drops with totals from 65 to 72. You need high-stat armor to make your builds actually function. To get it, you need to complete Master/Legend difficulty Lost Sectors solo (when they reward helmet or arms armor), or play Grandmaster Nightfalls. This is the true beginning of the mid-game grind.

Find a Clan

The absolute best thing you can do as a new player is join an active Clan. Clans provide passive rewards (like extra XP and upgrade materials just for playing), but more importantly, they provide a roster of real people to play with. Look for clans advertising as "new player friendly" or "sherpa clans" (sherpa is a term for experienced players who guide newbies through hard content). Playing raids and dungeons with a patient clan completely transforms the game from a lonely grind into an unforgettable cooperative experience.

Set Long-Term Goals

Destiny 2 is a marathon, not a sprint. Once you are comfortable, start looking at external resources to find goals. Want a specific, incredibly powerful Exotic weapon like the Thousand Voices sniper rifle? That requires completing the Last Wish raid. Want the easiest damage-dealing weapon in the game, the Gjallarhorn rocket launcher? That requires completing the Grasp of Avarice dungeon. Having a "wishlist" of exotic quests and activities to complete will keep you engaged for hundreds of hours. Welcome to the grind, Guardian. May RNG be ever in your favor.

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