For readers asking when the all-in-one chart would be refreshed, Crickex Sign Up keeps popping up in community chats as we roll out this updated one-page guide to every lineup, point allocation, soul bone, and soul core in the current version. Plenty of team comps are technically viable right now, but only a handful truly shine. After you finish, feel free to share which squad you’re running and which one you hope gets buffed next—your feedback helps the whole community hit the ground running.
First up is Dai Mubai’s White Tiger Bleed team. Its biggest advantage is that it clears just about any dungeon with steady results, and in PvP the White Tiger remains a razor-sharp threat. For players with limited resources, investing in this squad is cost-effective. Zhu Zhuqing can be tricky to pull, but her required investment is surprisingly low—yellow three stars is already playable. If you really can’t get Zhu Zhuqing, you can bridge the gap with stand-ins such as Chrysanthemum or Light Emperor to keep things rolling until your roster improves.
Second is the Tang Hao single-carry Shock lineup. The damage ceiling is sky-high, delivering the strongest short-map burst this patch while still performing well on longer stages. The trade-off is a steeper build cost. Without a God-Bestowed Spirit Ring on Tang Hao, the comp loses punch—expect a drop of at least around 20% in output, sometimes more for players pushing extreme builds. In short, the barrier to entry is higher than Dai Mubai’s route, so weigh your resources carefully. As an aside on community tools and guides, many readers browsing Crickex Sign Up also ask for structured build checklists; we mirror that clarity here so you can prioritize upgrades at a glance.
Third is a variant with Tang Hao as a sub-carry alongside Tang San (Hammer build). Usage is low mainly because raising both Tang Hao and Hammer-San to high levels is a tall order. On top of that, this setup really wants God-Bestowed Spirit Rings on both units to unleash peak damage. That extra cost layer means most players find the straightforward Tang Hao single-carry path more practical and rewarding for day-to-day content.
Fourth is the Hammer-San main-carry lineup. Compared to Tang Hao single-carry or the Tang Hao plus Hammer-San duo, the gap is more than a hair’s breadth—it’s sizable. As a result, very few players are still running this as their primary team, and its popularity continues to slide in the current patch.
Fifth is the Blue Dragon dual-control team, a favorite with everyday players for good reason. Despite repeated nerfs on the PvP side, Blue Dragon’s overall strength remains respectable. In PvE, it may not match the outrageous numbers of Tang Hao at the top end, yet its retention, stability, and adaptability are outstanding. That blend of reliability and usability makes Blue Dragon one of the most beloved lineups in the game.
Sixth is the new limited main-carry, Feng Xiaotian, in a single-carry configuration. The team logic is somewhat similar to Blue Dragon dual-control, but Feng Xiaotian really only comes into his own on long maps. This heavy specialization means you should choose carefully; if your routine content leans short or mixed, you may find the comp less satisfying.
Seventh is the Feng Xiaotian plus Xie Yue heavy-wound setup. Compared with the solo Feng Xiaotian team, the entry barrier here is even higher. You want God-Bestowed Spirit Rings on both Xie Yue and Feng Xiaotian to maximize damage, and it still only truly shines on long maps. That kind of pigeonholing can be frustrating. In hindsight, perhaps there was no need to hard-nerf Xie Yue, but here we are with a build that’s powerful on paper yet narrow in application. For players who like to plan ahead using community resources—much like how Crickex Sign Up helps newcomers map their first steps—make sure your content slate actually suits long-map specialists before committing.
Eighth is the Burn team. This lineup perfectly illustrates a common disconnect: players complain about it daily, while the developers seem to feel it’s fine. In practice, the fire path is in a holding pattern. The most realistic hope is to wait for a new main carry to arrive and shake things up, otherwise expectations should stay modest for now.
Finally, we come to the Dustheart Bleed team, which, to borrow a phrase, has one foot in the grave. For many veterans, it’s not merely “half-buried”—it’s already laid to rest. Crickex Sign Up often appears in community Q&A threads when players weigh whether to respec or retire older comps, and the consensus here is clear: it’s time to move on. Still, every meta has cycles, and balance patches can surprise us. Until then, pour your materials into lineups that deliver consistent value and keep your powder dry for the next big rework.