Limbus Company Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
Getting Started
Limbus Company is a turn-based RPG with gacha elements, but it does a few things very differently from typical mobile/PC gachas. Your “party members” are the fixed cast of 12 Sinners, and progression comes from equipping them with different Identities (IDs) and E.G.O rather than rolling for entirely new characters.
There is no character creation. Your role is the Manager leading the Sinners through story chapters (Cantos), dungeon-like content, and resource stages. For a beginner, this is great: you can focus on learning combat and team-building, not rerolling perfect starter units for days.
First-hour setup checklist
- Play the tutorial fully: It teaches clash targeting, skill chains, and sanity (SP), all of which matter immediately.
- Claim beginner rewards/mail: Free resources often include pull currency, EXP tickets, and upgrade materials.
- Progress story first: Early story unlocks key systems and gives steady account progression.
- Do not spend all currency instantly: Learn the banner system and shard crafting first so you avoid regret pulls.
- Find your “core 5-7 IDs”: Build a small, reliable roster before trying to upgrade everyone.
Understand your early objective
In the first few sessions, your real goal is not “beat everything” but stabilize your account economy. That means unlocking repeatable farming content, learning how clashes work, and upgrading a few strong IDs enough to clear story and daily resource stages consistently. If you do this, your long-term progress becomes much smoother.
A useful mindset: in Limbus, good decisions in battle save resources outside battle. Winning clashes prevents incoming damage, reducing failed runs and retry costs. New players who grasp this early progress much faster than those who treat combat as pure stat-checking.

Core Mechanics
Limbus Company’s combat looks flashy, but it is highly readable once you break it down into a few systems: speed, skill selection, clashes, coin flips, sanity (SP), damage types/resistances, and resource generation for E.G.O.
1) Speed and action order
Each unit rolls Speed each turn. Higher Speed generally acts earlier and determines who can intercept whom in clashes. Fast units are valuable because they can shut down dangerous enemy attacks before they land.
- Actionable tip: If one enemy attack is clearly lethal, use your highest-Speed unit to intercept it even if the matchup is not ideal.
- Actionable tip: Watch turn order before locking skills; target priority often matters more than raw damage.
2) Skill slots and skill choice
Your units cycle through skills, and each choice affects both immediate damage and future setup (Sin resources, SP swings, clash odds). Beginners often click highest damage, but stronger play means choosing skills that win important clashes and generate needed Sin types.
- Actionable tip: Pick skills for purpose: one to secure a key clash, one to build the Sin you need for next turn’s E.G.O, one to finish staggered targets.
- Actionable tip: If your team needs survivability, defensive choices can be correct even when damage looks tempting.
3) Clashes are your primary defense
When two actions meet, they clash. The winner continues; the loser gets stopped. This is why Limbus feels strategic: if you win clashes, you prevent enemy actions instead of just tanking them.
- Actionable tip: Prioritize clash wins over damage races, especially in early and mid-game story.
- Actionable tip: Strong one-sided attacks are good, but not if they leave a dangerous enemy unopposed.
4) Coin power and probability
Skills in Limbus use coins. Coin outcomes (Heads/Tails) modify final power, and SP heavily influences coin odds. High SP makes favorable outcomes more likely; low SP increases risk and can collapse your turn plan.
- Actionable tip: Keep key clashers at healthy SP whenever possible.
- Actionable tip: If SP is low across the team, play safer for 1-2 turns instead of forcing greedy clashes.
- Actionable tip: Learn which of your IDs are “stable” at lower SP and which need high SP to function.
5) Stagger and burst windows
Enemies (and your units) can be staggered when thresholds are broken. A staggered unit is heavily vulnerable and usually cannot respond effectively. This is your biggest burst window.
- Actionable tip: Plan turns to cross a stagger threshold before enemy big attacks.
- Actionable tip: Save your hardest hits and E.G.O for stagger turns whenever practical.
- Actionable tip: Avoid exposing your fragile unit if they are near stagger threshold and likely to lose a clash.
6) Damage types and resistances
Limbus uses physical attack types (like Slash/Pierce/Blunt) and Sin affinities. Enemy resistances can make “big number” skills underperform if you ignore type matching.
- Actionable tip: Before difficult fights, inspect enemy resistances and passives.
- Actionable tip: Build at least one flexible team that covers multiple damage types instead of stacking only one.
7) Sin resources and E.G.O economy
Using skills generates specific Sin resources. E.G.O activations consume those resources for powerful effects: high clash power, utility, burst, or control. New players often treat E.G.O as panic buttons only, but smart players treat them as a planned economy.
- Actionable tip: Track your next-turn E.G.O plan while selecting current-turn skills.
- Actionable tip: Don’t spend all Sin resources on low-impact E.G.O if a boss phase is coming.
- Actionable tip: Upgrade E.G.O you use frequently instead of spreading materials too thin.
8) Team synergies and passives
IDs are stronger when their effects and Sin generation align. Passive conditions also matter; some IDs need specific Sin patterns to activate key bonuses.
- Actionable tip: Read passive triggers and build around them intentionally.
- Actionable tip: If a team feels weak, check whether passive conditions are actually being met in battle.

Early Game Tips
The first few hours decide whether your account feels smooth or starved. Prioritize consistency and resource efficiency over flashy but expensive experiments.
What to prioritize first
- Push story until progress slows: Story unlocks systems and gives broad rewards.
- Unlock and clear daily/regular resource stages: You need EXP items and Thread to keep IDs relevant.
- Raise a compact roster: 5-7 strong IDs beat 15 underleveled ones.
- Do weekly repeatable content: Even partial clears provide excellent long-term value.
- Use support/friend units when available: They help you clear walls before your own roster catches up.
Early roster-building strategy
A beginner-friendly structure is:
- 2 reliable clashers: Units that win important duels consistently.
- 2 damage dealers: Good burst for stagger punish turns.
- 1 utility/flex slot: Applies useful debuffs, fuels Sin requirements, or stabilizes difficult turns.
As you get more IDs, upgrade only those that fit your current teams and content needs. A “cool but unsupported” ID often performs worse than a simpler unit with strong synergy and correct investment.
Currency discipline for beginners
It is very easy to waste premium currency early because everything looks useful. Try this rule:
- Wait before heavy pulling: Spend only when a banner meaningfully improves your core teams.
- Use crafting/shard systems for targets: This reduces RNG dependence and buyer’s remorse.
- Keep an emergency reserve: New content and must-have banners arrive regularly.
If you play free-to-play or low-spend, discipline matters more than luck. Good pull timing can outperform dozens of impulsive pulls.

Common Mistakes to Avoid
These are the most common early errors that slow progression.
1) Upgrading too many IDs at once
Splitting EXP and Thread across your entire box leaves everyone mediocre. Build one strong team first, then expand.
- Fix: Choose a “main squad,” cap their key upgrades, then invest in specialists.
2) Ignoring clash math and forcing damage
New players often tunnel on damage and lose critical clashes, taking avoidable hits and stagger.
- Fix: Ask “Which enemy action must be stopped this turn?” before choosing damage lines.
3) Blind auto-battle in unfamiliar content
Auto can work in easy farming, but hard encounters require manual targeting and timing.
- Fix: Manual play for first clears and bosses; use auto only when your team comfortably outgears content.
4) Spending premium currency impulsively
Pulling on every banner or refreshing frequently can cripple long-term account growth.
- Fix: Set a pull plan and reserve; prioritize banners that improve your current weakest role.
5) Not reading enemy passives/resistances
Many “impossible” fights become manageable once you adjust target order and damage type.
- Fix: Spend one minute reading enemy traits before retries.
6) Neglecting weekly and daily routine value
Skipping repeatable reward content creates silent resource deficits that show up later as progression walls.
- Fix: Build a short weekly checklist and clear it consistently, even if only partially.
7) Treating E.G.O as random panic buttons
Firing E.G.O without resource planning can leave you empty when a real danger turn starts.
- Fix: Plan Sin generation one turn ahead and save key E.G.O for decisive clashes/stagger windows.

Essential Controls & Settings
Limbus Company is mainly mouse/touch-driven, but clean settings dramatically improve readability and decision speed.
Core controls to master
- Skill selection per unit: Learn to quickly cycle and lock the correct skill each turn.
- Target assignment: Confirm who is clashing whom before ending turn.
- Enemy/unit inspection: Open details for resistances, passives, and status effects regularly.
- E.G.O activation: Know where to check resource costs so you do not misplan turns.
Recommended settings for beginners
- Increase battle speed once comfortable: Faster farming, but keep speed lower when learning new mechanics.
- Keep clear combat UI visibility: Avoid settings that hide useful clash info.
- Enable/keep effect text readable: Understanding status changes is more important than flashy visuals.
- Adjust graphics for stable performance: Smooth frame rate helps with turn-by-turn readability, especially on mobile.
- Review keybind menu on PC: Bind frequently used actions (confirm/end turn/UI toggles) to comfortable keys.
Practical control habits
- Before ending turn: Quick scan for unmatched enemy attacks and low-SP units.
- Before boss phases: Check E.G.O resources and stagger thresholds.
- After losses: Rewatch the key turn and identify one decision to change (target, clash, or E.G.O timing).
Progression System
Progression in Limbus happens on multiple layers: account growth, ID growth, E.G.O upgrades, and roster breadth. Efficient players understand which layer is bottlenecking them and invest there first.
Account progression
Your account level and story progression unlock more content and improve your farming options. This is why story-first progression is usually best early on: every unlock improves future efficiency.
- Priority: Push story until clear difficulty spikes, then farm upgrades, then push again.
ID progression
IDs are raised through levels and upgrade tiers (such as Uptie), consuming materials like EXP tickets and Thread. Higher tiers often unlock better skill values and passive power.
- Priority: Upgrade IDs that are both strong and currently used in your main teams.
- Priority: Finish “good breakpoints” (important level/uptie thresholds) before spreading investment.
E.G.O progression
E.G.O can also be upgraded (for example via Threadspin-type systems), improving reliability and impact. Beginners sometimes ignore this, but one well-upgraded E.G.O can solve repeated clash problems in hard content.
- Priority: Focus on E.G.O you cast often, not niche picks used once in a while.
Roster expansion and long-term planning
As your resources improve, expand into additional archetypes for specific encounters. The best long-term accounts usually have:
- A stable general team for story and routine farming.
- A few specialists for content with strict resistance/passive checks.
- Resource flexibility to invest when a new high-value ID arrives.
Think of progression as a cycle: clear content → earn resources → strengthen core team → unlock harder content → repeat. If you feel stuck, identify the weakest link in that cycle and fix it directly.
Resources & Where to Find Help
Limbus has a passionate community, and using community tools saves huge amounts of trial-and-error.
Best places to learn and stay updated
- In-game notices: Always check event rules, patch details, and balance changes first-hand.
- Official channels: Project Moon announcements (Steam/news/social channels) for reliable updates.
- Community hubs: Reddit and Discord communities are strong for team advice and encounter help.
- Wiki/databases: Great for checking ID kits, E.G.O costs, passives, and farming references.
- Video guides: Useful for boss mechanics and turn-by-turn examples if text explanations feel abstract.
How to ask for useful help
If you want high-quality advice, share:
- Your current core IDs/E.G.O
- The exact stage or boss giving trouble
- What turn or phase fails
- Your current upgrade levels
This turns vague “help me” posts into actionable coaching quickly.
Final beginner roadmap
- Week 1: Learn clash fundamentals, clear story unlocks, build one core team.
- Week 2: Stabilize daily/weekly farming routine, improve key uptie/level breakpoints.
- Week 3+: Expand roster selectively, refine E.G.O planning, and start optimizing for harder modes.
If you remember just one thing: Limbus rewards planning more than panic. Read the fight, win the important clashes, invest in a focused roster, and your account will grow steadily even without perfect gacha luck.







