Character Build Priority: Who to Level First With Limited Resources
Neverness to Everness (NTE) character build priority guide — how F2P and low-spender players should allocate progression resources: level your Main DPS first, fill out team roles, and avoid spreading resources thin.
Published: 2026/05/20
Quick answer: Progression order for F2P and low-spender players — (1) max your Main DPS first (level, skills, and Arc all maxed); (2) fill in supports and healing/survival; (3) only consider a second team once your first four-person team is complete. Depth first, breadth second: the combat power of one fully-built team is far higher than two half-baked ones.
Progression resources in NTE are limited, and spreading them evenly across every character usually leaves your whole roster half-baked. This article covers the order in which you should invest in characters — first a rule of thumb you can follow, then a priority table for Stamina and materials, and finally separate advice for two account states: “fresh F2P” and “already have a Main DPS.”
Core Principle: Depth First, Breadth Second
The most common beginner mistake is “I want to level every character I see.” The right approach is to get one four-person team battle-ready first, then think about a second team. The reason is simple — most content in NTE only needs one team, and the combat power of one fully-built team is far higher than two half-baked ones.
Break this principle into an actionable four-step loop and you won’t go wrong:
- Pick one Main DPS (use your existing one, or the free Chiz if you don’t have one).
- Feed that Main DPS until they can reliably clear the current main story — max ascension, get skills to a usable level, and max Arc level and ascension.
- Fill in supports and healing/survival on the same team, so your Main DPS’s damage actually lands and the team stays alive.
- Once your first four-person team has taken shape, then start building a Sub-DPS / second team.
Move to the next step once each one is “battle-ready,” rather than pushing any single step to a perfect 120 points before acting. Resources should always pour into whichever slot is currently bottlenecking you the most.
Decision Framework: With Limited Resources, Who Do You Actually Level First?
When you get several characters at once but can only afford to build one or two, use the criteria below from top to bottom — whichever condition is met first gets built first:
| Priority | Ask yourself | If the answer is “yes” |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Team gap | Which slot does my team lack — Main DPS / healer / support? | Fill the slot you lack most, not the “rarest character” |
| 2. Is it the on-field core | Is this character the team’s primary damage dealer (on-field Main DPS)? | Yes → make them top priority and give them all your resources |
| 3. Obtain & build cost | Is this character free / already at max Eidolon, or do you still need to pull for them? | Free or already-obtained characters take priority over “still up to luck” pulls |
| 4. Element vs. resistance | Is my current Main DPS’s element resisted by the current Boss? | Yes → only then do you need to build a second damage element to break resistance |
| 5. Play feel & sustain | Is this character easy to play, and can they survive combat? | For hard-to-play or squishy characters, confirm you can actually pilot them before investing |
In one line: look at the gap first, then whether they’re the Main DPS, then cost and element. Rarity (S/A) is just a reference, not the deciding factor — an A-rank that fills a team gap is worth far more than an S-rank that overlaps with your current Main DPS.
Three of the Most Common Build Misconceptions (Bust Them Before Investing)
- Misconception 1: “S-ranks must be leveled first, A-ranks can wait.” Wrong. The T1-rated healer Haniel is A-rank, yet she’s a permanent fixture on many teams long-term. What decides whether to build someone is their role, not their rarity.
- Misconception 2: “More characters means a stronger account, so spread it around.” Wrong. Spreading resources evenly = a whole roster that’s half-baked. Focus 100% on your current carry, build one fully before moving to the next, and you’ll actually have the power to clear hard content.
- Misconception 3: “I should farm all five skill-material runs every day.” Wrong. Skill materials are actually the category you’re least short on (the game hands out a lot). Grinding them early just crowds out the ascension materials and EXP that will actually wall you. See Build Materials for a full breakdown of which material maps to which system.
First Priority: Your Main DPS
The Main DPS is the core of your team’s damage, so give them resources first — level, skills, and Arc should all be fully maxed. The strength of your Main DPS almost single-handedly determines your clear speed and efficiency.
If you don’t have a Main DPS you’re particularly attached to yet, the free Chiz (obtained at level 18 through the “Urban Tycoon” system) is a long-term carry worth prioritizing.
Second Priority: The Supports and Healers That Hold the Team Together
Once your Main DPS is locked in, invest next in the characters that keep the team “running” — supports that provide buffs, plus a healer or survival slot for sustain. These characters don’t need damage gear and usually cost less to build than the Main DPS, so they’re great value.
Third Priority: Sub-DPS and Bench
Only at the end do you strengthen a Sub-DPS, or build a second roster for specific elemental needs. This step usually waits until your first team has taken shape and you start challenging harder content. For when to open a second team and why you’d field a low-cost A-rank first, see the Mid-Game Progression Route.
How to Allocate Stamina and Materials Across These Characters
“Who to level first” decides the order, but what actually gets spent is your daily Stamina (character pixels) and materials. Mapped onto Stamina allocation, the same build order looks like this:
| Character priority | What to feed Stamina/materials into | When to stop and pause |
|---|---|---|
| Main DPS (1st priority) | EXP (push levels) → ascension materials → skills → Arc level & ascension | Can reliably clear current main story, skills usable |
| Support / healer (2nd priority) | EXP to keep up with the team + necessary ascension materials | Buff/healing output is enough — no need to max skills |
| Sub-DPS / second team (3rd priority) | Whatever Stamina is left after the first team is fed | Don’t invest until the first team has taken shape |
Mapped onto the farming priority for Stamina dungeons, this site’s existing mnemonic is:
EXP → Ascension → Skills → Arc → Gear
Key reminders:
- Beginner phase (Hunter below level 25): pour almost all Stamina into EXP materials, push your Main DPS’s level up first, and don’t get distracted.
- Concentrate Beetle Coins on your carry, don’t spread them evenly — building a single character from scratch eats a large chunk of Beetle Coins, and spreading it around is the fastest way to go broke.
- Gear (set affixes) comes last: before Hunter level 30 opens the Rabbit Hole “Rift” difficulty, both drop rate and quality are poor, so grinding Gear early is pure wasted Stamina.
- Anomaly Pilgrimage (weekly dungeon) is a fixed cost of 3 runs per week, so reserve Stamina for it before allocating to daily dungeons.
For which system to farm each “category” of material from and the most efficient routes, see Build Materials; for mid-game Stamina planning after the early grind, see the Mid-Game Progression Route.
Advice for Different Account States
The general direction of the build order is the same, but where you’re currently stuck changes what your first step should be. Find your match:
State A: F2P, No S-Rank Main DPS Yet
This is where most beginners start. Recommendation:
- Just build the free Chiz as your Main DPS — you get her for free at level 18 through the “Urban Tycoon” system, she’s a main carry worth long-term investment, and you don’t have to wait around for a lucky pull.
- Pair her with key A-ranks to fill roles, like the T1 healer Haniel. One free Main DPS + a few useful A-ranks is enough to clear all of 1.0 content.
- Save all your Crystals for the limited Main DPS you actually want later — don’t burn pity on a transitional character.
State B: You Already Have an S-Rank Main DPS You Like
- Pour 100% of your resources into maxing this Main DPS (level ascension, skills, Arc), and push your single-core combat power to the top first.
- Then use Stamina to fill in supports/healers on the same team, so their damage actually lands.
- Before your first four-person team has taken shape, don’t build an overlapping second S-rank Main DPS just to “look good in the gallery” — that leaves both of them half-baked.
State C: First Team Is Built, Now Hitting Element Resistances
- This is when it’s time to open a second damage source — and you don’t need to obsess over pulling another limited S. First use a low-cost A-rank to build “an elemental-reaction team of a different element.”
- At the same time, push your first team’s Main DPS’s Arc and Gear toward endgame (the right 4-piece set + correct main affixes).
- For a complete second team taking shape, Arc/Gear endgame, and the weekly/abyss cadence, continue with the Mid-Game Progression Route.
Stats and unlock levels change with each version, so treat the level thresholds and ratings in this article as subject to in-game values.
Example: How to Order a Typical Beginner Roster
Abstract rules hard to apply? Let’s run through a common opening for an F2P player. Suppose you have: one free Chiz, one T1 healer Haniel, one limited S Main DPS you pulled, plus two or three miscellaneous A-ranks. Ordered by the decision framework:
- Limited S Main DPS → first priority. The team’s biggest gap is the “on-field core,” and this is your highest-ceiling damage dealer → pour 100% of resources into them first, leveling ascension, skills, and Arc all the way until they can reliably clear the main story.
- Haniel → build right after. She fills the “healing/sustain” gap, keeping your Main DPS alive long enough to finish the job; A-ranks are cheap to build and high value.
- Chiz → shelve her as backup for now. She and the limited S Main DPS are both “damage” slots and overlap, so don’t rush to dual-build them before your first four-person team takes shape. But if you didn’t pull a limited S, flip this: Chiz gets promoted straight to first-priority Main DPS.
- Remaining misc A-ranks → only build the one or two that “fill a support/buff gap.” Freeze the rest for now and don’t scatter your Beetle Coins.
The core idea: stuffing two S-ranks into the same slot (damage) doesn’t make you stronger; filling the slot you’re missing (healing/support) does.
How “Far” Counts as Enough? Stopping Points for Each Priority
Another common beginner anxiety is “not knowing when to stop and move to the next character.” Here’s a set of stop checkpoints you can compare against (once reached, pause and shift resources to the next priority):
| Priority | Stop once you’ve hit these |
|---|---|
| Main DPS | Level keeps up with Hunter level, every 10-level bottleneck broken through, main skills usable, Arc level & ascension maxed |
| Support / healer | Level can keep up with the team, core buff/healing skills leveled enough to be useful (no need to max) |
| Sub-DPS / second team | Only start investing “after” your first team can reliably clear current content |
You don’t need to push every character to a perfect 100 before acting — move to the next character once each one is “battle-ready,” as a balanced team progresses faster than grinding a single character to death. For the standards beyond that (Arc endgame, Gear 4-piece sets, second team taking shape), continue with the Mid-Game Progression Route.
Tools to Use Alongside This Guide
- To understand a character’s overall strength, see the Character Tier List.
- If you’re unsure whether your team roles are complete, check with the Team Builder.
- For the basics of team composition, see Team Building Basics.
FAQ
NTE beginner with limited resources — should I level the Main DPS or supports first? +
Max your Main DPS before touching supports. The Main DPS is the core of your team's damage; level, skills, and Arc should all be prioritized first. Once your Main DPS is locked in, then invest in supports and healers. The reason: most content in NTE only needs one team, so go depth first, breadth second — one fully-built team is far stronger than two half-baked ones.
How should an F2P NTE player order their progression? +
Follow three tiers: (1) max the Main DPS → (2) fill in supports and healing/survival → (3) only build a Sub-DPS and second team once your first four-person team is complete. F2P players can clear all of 1.0 content with a few key A-rank characters paired with one S-rank Main DPS.
Who should I level first in NTE if I don't have an S-rank Main DPS? +
Prioritize the free Chiz. You get her for free at level 18 through the "Urban Tycoon" system, and she's a main carry well worth long-term investment.
Is it worth spending resources to build A-rank characters in NTE? +
Yes. A-rank characters are easy to obtain and cheap to build, and many fill very practical roles — for example the T1-rated healer Haniel. Whether a character is worth building comes down to whether their role fills a gap in your team, not how rare they are.
Build advice is compiled from player experience — adjust flexibly based on your own roster and the content you play.
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