Wo Long Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
5-Minute Primer
Wo Long: Fallen Dynasty is a historically infused dark fantasy action-RPG developed by Team Ninja. If you are coming from games like Elden Ring or Sekiro, you need to immediately unlearn some habits. Wo Long is not a game about hiding behind a giant shield and waiting for an opening. It is an aggressive, high-octane dance centered around a mechanic called the Morale System and a parry-style deflection known as the Deflect.
InWo Long, every enemy has two health bars: a standard HP bar (Fortitude) and a glowing yellow/orange bar (Spirit). You can hack away at an enemy's HP all day, but the fastest way to defeat them—and the only way to execute a devastating Fatal Strike—is to deplete their Spirit bar. You deplete Spirit by attacking, but more importantly, by perfectly timing your Deflect just as enemy strikes land. When an enemy's Spirit breaks, they stumble, leaving them wide open for a massive critical hit. Furthermore, your character has five "Phases" (stances) tied to the Chinese elemental system, but as a beginner, you should focus entirely on mastering the basic flow of attack, deflect, and punish before worrying about elemental combos.

First Hour Checklist
The opening hours of Wo Long can be brutally unforgiving if you don't set yourself up correctly. Before you push too deep into the first main battlefield, Chapter 1: Village of Calamity, make sure you have checked off these essential tasks.
- Complete the Tutorial Fight Properly: Do not button-mash through the opening encounter with the hanging corpse. Pay attention to the prompts for Deflect (Square/X) and Spirit Attacks (Triangle/Y). This combat loop is the entire game.
- Find the Blacksmith: In the village, you will unlock the ability to forge and upgrade weapons. Before facing the first Sub-Battlefield or the main boss (Zhang Liang), upgrade your starting weapon to +1 or +2 using the Spoils of Battle dropped by enemies.
- Equip Your First Wizardry Spell: Shortly into the level, you will find a Wizardry Spell (usually a basic Wood or Fire spell). Equip it immediately. Even if you don't plan on being a magic user, having a ranged option to pull enemies or interrupt their animations is invaluable.
- Use the Dragon's Cure Pot: You start with a limited number of healing potions (Dragon's Cure Pots). Do not hoard them. Use them freely during the first level to learn enemy attack patterns without the pressure of dying in one hit. You can easily rest at a Battle Flag to refill them.
- Raise Your Battle Flag: Whenever you see a Battle Flag (the game's bonfires), raise it. This sets your respawn point, refills your healing potions, and most importantly, boosts your "Fortitude" level for that specific stage.

Key Systems Explained
Combat: The Spirit Gauge
At the bottom of your screen is the Spirit Gauge, split into a white side (positive) and a red side (negative). This gauge dictates your offensive and defensive capabilities. Attacking enemies fills the white side. When you have positive Spirit, you can unleash powerful "Spirit Attacks" which deal massive damage and chip away at enemy Spirit. Deflecting enemy attacks also generates positive Spirit.
Conversely, taking damage, blocking regular attacks, or using certain heavy attacks drains your Spirit into the red (negative) zone. If your Spirit gauge completely fills up with red, your character will suffer a "Spirit Disruption"—a violent stagger that leaves you stunned for several seconds. In a game where a two-second stun means death, avoiding Spirit Disruption is your top priority. If your gauge goes negative, stop attacking, step back, and let it slowly regenerate to neutral before re-engaging.
The Deflect Mechanic
Blocking in Wo Long is a death sentence against stronger enemies because it drains your Spirit rapidly and still chips away at your health. Deflecting is your primary defensive tool. By pressing the deflect button right as an enemy's weapon is about to make contact, you will perform a spark-filled parry. A successful Deflect costs no Spirit, negates all damage, and instantly grants you positive Spirit.
Crucially, you can chain Deflects. If an enemy performs a three-hit combo, you can Deflect all three strikes in rapid succession. Do not panic and roll away. Stand your ground, watch the weapon, and tap Deflect. Red-critical attacks (unblockable grabs or sweeping strikes indicated by a red glow) cannot be Deflected; you must dodge these by pressing the dodge button while locked on.
The Morale System
Wo Long features a dynamic difficulty slider tied to your "Morale Rank." As you kill enemies, raise flags, and defeat leaders, your Morale Rank goes up (capped at 25 per stage). As your Morale rises, your attack damage and health increase, but the enemies in that level also scale up slightly. If you die, your Morale drops, making you weaker.
However, if you die, you leave behind a "Mark of the Conquered" (a grave). If you reach your grave and interact with it, you regain your lost Morale. This creates a brilliant risk-reward loop: do you push forward into dangerous territory to reclaim your Morale, or do you play it safe and fight weaker enemies to slowly build it back up?
Economy: Genuine Qi and Spoils
Genuine Qi is Wo Long's version of Souls/Echoes. You lose half of it upon death, but you can reclaim it from your grave. You use Genuine Qi to level up your stats at a Battle Flag. Spoils of Battle are the random pieces of armor and weapons dropped by enemies. You should constantly dismantle armor you don't want at the Blacksmith to obtain Essence, the material required to upgrade the weapons and armor you actually use.

Build / Character Choices
The Five Virtues
Unlike traditional RPGs, you don't put points into Strength or Dexterity. Wo Long uses the Five Chinese Virtues: Wood, Fire, Earth, Metal, and Water. Each virtue governs your health, damage with specific weapon types, and the potency of your Wizardry Spells.
- Wood: Increases HP, Spirit gain on deflection, and boosts Wood/Water spells. Excellent for beginners who want survivability and extra Spirit for more attacks.
- Fire: Increases raw attack damage and boosts Fire/Earth spells. The "glass cannon" stat. If you want things to die faster, pump Fire.
- Earth: Increases equipment load (heavier armor) and boosts Earth/Wood spells. Good for players who want to tank a bit more, though heavy armor's damage reduction is less impactful than learning to Deflect.
- Metal: Increases damage dealt to enemies with negative Spirit and boosts Metal/Fire spells. A fantastic stat for advanced players who master the Deflect-and-punish loop.
- Water: Reduces the Spirit cost of attacks and Wizardry Spells, and boosts Water/Metal spells. Great for magic-heavy builds.
Best Starting Options for Beginners
During character creation, you choose a background that dictates your starting weapon and initial Virtue distribution. Pick the "Resolute" (Sword and Shield) or "Valiant" (Dual Swords) background. While shields in Wo Long are generally discouraged for advanced play, the starting sword is an incredibly versatile weapon. Once you find a Battle Flag, simply unequip the shield if you chose Resolute. The sword's moveset is fast, has excellent reach, and its martial arts skill (the spinning sweep) is fantastic for crowd control.
For your first ten levels, adopt a 50/30/20 split. Put 50% of your points into Wood to drastically increase your health pool—giving you room to make mistakes. Put 30% into Fire to increase your base damage so enemies don't take forever to kill. Put the remaining 20% into whatever stat governs your favorite Wizardry Spell (usually Water for early defensive spells like Ice Shield).
Do not spread your points evenly across all five stats. A jack-of-all-trades is a master of none in Wo Long. Focus on two stats early on, and respec later using the valiant items found later in the game if you want to change your build.

Pitfalls to Dodge
Mistake 1: Relying on the Block Button
This is the number one reason new players quit out of frustration. Holding the block button against standard enemies works fine. Against bosses, it will drain your Spirit in three hits, leading to a Spirit Disruption and a guaranteed death. You must learn to Deflect. Treat the block button as an emergency backup for when you completely mess up a deflection timing, not as your primary defense.
Mistake 2: Greedy Attacking
In Dark Souls, you can often get away with mashing R1 until an enemy dies. In Wo Long, if you blindly attack, you will likely get interrupted, lose your Spirit, and die. Combat should follow a rhythm: Attack 1-3 times, watch the enemy, Deflect their counter-attack, then punish. Patience is infinitely more lethal than aggression.
Mistake 3: Ignoring Divine Beasts
Early in Chapter 2, you will unlock your first Divine Beast. This is a summonable ultimate ability that deals massive damage, breaks enemy Spirit instantly, or provides a massive buff. Many beginners forget they have it. Do not save it for a "rainy day." Use your Divine Beast ability during tough boss fights. It recharges relatively quickly, and keeping it holstered is a waste of a game-changing tool.
Mistake 4: Hoarding Elixirs and Consumables
You will find dozens of consumable items like Tiger Blood Elixirs (temporarily boosts attack) or Steel Dust (temporarily boosts defense). Beginners often hoard these, afraid to "waste" them. Use them. They drop frequently. Popping a Tiger Blood Elixir before a tough boss fight will cut the fight time in half, reducing the number of opportunities you have to make a fatal mistake.
Mistake 5: Fighting With Low Morale
If you die to a boss and respawn at the Battle Flag with a Morale Rank of 0, do not immediately run back to the boss. You are now at your absolute weakest, dealing pitiful damage while the boss remains at full strength. Spend five minutes clearing out the basic enemies between the flag and the boss. Kill the tigers, the axe-wielding bandits, and the archers. Your Morale will climb back up to 5 or 6, giving you a massive statistical advantage before you step into the boss arena.
Mistake 6: Overcomplicating Wizardry Spells
The Wizardry system (magic) seems overwhelming at first glance with its elemental weaknesses and complex combos. As a beginner, ignore elemental matchups entirely. Equip one ranged spell to pull enemies, and one close-range spell that deals high Spirit damage (like the Earth spell "Sweeping Kick" or the Wood spell "Verdant Vortex"). Use these simply to break an enemy's guard when your own Spirit is low, rather than trying to weave intricate elemental debuffs.
Mistake 7: Skipping Sub-Battlefields
Scattered throughout the linear main levels are hidden paths marked by glowing red flags. These are Sub-Battlefields—short, challenging dungeons that reward you with powerful items, new Wizardry Spells, and extra Marking Flags. Skipping them makes the main game harder. Even if you have to summon a co-op partner to help you clear them, do not skip Sub-Battlefields. They are the primary way you acquire the tools needed to build a powerful character.
Next Steps
Once you have internalized the Deflect mechanic, established a solid Wood/Fire foundation for your character, and conquered the first few chapters, the true depth of Wo Long begins to open up. Your immediate next goal should be pushing through Chapter 3 to unlock the Absolute Resolve mechanic—a second chance survival state that triggers when your health hits zero, preventing what would have been a cheap death and giving you a brief window to heal or counterattack.
From there, begin experimenting with the martial arts movesets of different weapons. Every weapon in the game has a unique Martial Art assigned to it, bound to a single button press. Find a weapon with a Martial Art that suits your playstyle—perhaps the wide sweeping halberd strikes for crowd control, or the rapid thrusts of the dual spears for single-target boss melting.
Finally, consider dipping your toes into the online multiplayer. Wo Long features an excellent cooperative system. If you hit a brick wall against a boss like Zhang Liang or Lu Bu, interact with a Battle Flag and use the "Recruit" option to bring in two other players. There is no shame in summoning help; observing how experienced players position themselves and time their Deflects against bosses is one of the most effective ways to improve your own skills. Keep your chin up, respect the flow of Spirit, and remember: in the fallen dynasty, perseverance is the ultimate virtue.





