The global launch of HeavenHells: Anime Squad RPG brought a fresh hero-collection experience for anime fans. If you’ve played gacha RPGs before, some systems will feel familiar, but this game also mixes in a few mechanics that make the combat and progression more interactive than usual.
When you first jump into the game, it can feel a little overwhelming. There are banners, stamina systems, operations, simulations, and several currencies. The good news is that once you understand how these pieces connect, the early game becomes much smoother.
Let’s walk through the important parts so you can start strong.
Working Redeem Codes
Before doing anything else, redeem the available launch codes. These give you free resources that help early progression.
Open the Menu, go to Settings, then Account, and you’ll see the Redeem Code option.
Current working codes:
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HEAVENHELLS26
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HXHDA0204
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HXHPDGIFT
After redeeming them, the rewards are sent directly to your mailbox.
Always check the mailbox whenever new events start because that’s where most free rewards show up.
HeavenHells Beginner Guide Wiki – Combat Tips
At its heart, HeavenHells is a hero-collecting squad RPG where you recruit characters, upgrade them, and push through campaign missions.
Combat blends auto battle and manual ability usage, which keeps things engaging instead of just watching the screen.
Here’s how it works during a fight.
Your squad attacks automatically, but each character has special abilities that require points to activate. Those points build up over time during battle.
When the ability meter fills, you can trigger the skill manually to deal heavy damage or apply effects.
Timing matters here. Activating a skill during a boss phase or enemy wave can completely change the outcome.
Buff System During Battles
Another interesting mechanic appears at the bottom left corner of the screen.
At the start of each battle you receive 100 tactical points, which can be used for three temporary buffs.
These buffs are not automatic. Even if the battle is set to auto mode, you still decide when to use them.
The available buffs include:
Attack boost – increases your squad’s damage output
Enemy attack speed reduction – slows enemy attacks
Defense buff – increases survivability
Using these buffs at the right moment can turn a difficult fight into an easy win. Early in the game, most players simply activate the attack boost whenever it’s available, but slowing enemies during dangerous waves can be surprisingly effective.
Camera Modes and Combat Perspective
One small feature that many players overlook is the camera perspective option.
The game allows you to switch between:
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A wide battlefield view
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A closer cinematic angle
The wide view makes it easier to track enemy waves and skill timing, while the closer view looks more immersive. It’s mostly preference, but many players stick with the wider camera during harder fights.
Campaign Battle Types
The campaign does not stick to one single combat format.
Some missions are progression stages, where your team pushes through enemies while moving toward the end of the map.
Other stages work more like defense missions, where your squad must protect an objective while waves of enemies attack.
This variation actually helps the gameplay stay interesting. Each map feels a bit different instead of repeating the exact same formula.
Special Operations (Daily Resource Farming)
Once you unlock Special Operations, this becomes one of your main resource sources.
These missions reward important materials needed for upgrades.
A good example is the Defend the Bank mission.
In this mode, a boss monster is stealing gold from the bank, and your squad must defeat it to reclaim the credits.
Credits are extremely important because they act as the main in-game currency for upgrades. Almost every progression system requires them.
However, operations are limited.
For example:
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Bank defense missions can only be completed three times per day
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Dungeon stages may allow five attempts daily
This daily limit prevents players from grinding endlessly and keeps progression somewhat balanced.
Simulation Mode and Skill Materials
Simulation missions focus on farming skill manuals and upgrade materials.
These missions rotate based on the day of the week.
For example:
Monday through Friday unlock different training missions, while advanced simulations usually open during weekends.
Entry requires simulation discs, which you receive daily. Since these are limited, it’s best to spend them carefully instead of wasting them on weaker stages.
Stamina and Progress Limits
Like most mobile RPGs, HeavenHells uses a stamina system.
Almost every activity consumes stamina, including campaign missions and operations.
This means you can’t grind forever in one session. However, stamina regenerates over time and usually builds up if you’re not playing constantly.
The trick is to log in regularly and spend stamina efficiently instead of letting it stay full.
Using Quartz (Premium Currency)
The main premium currency in the game is Quartz.
You’ll naturally collect some quartz from missions, achievements, and events. The best way to use it is through the Gacha Recruitment system.
Spending quartz on summoning new characters is generally the most efficient investment early in the game.
Avoid wasting quartz on small purchases or stamina refills unless you really know what you’re doing.
Character Recruitment and Banners
The Gacha Center usually features multiple recruitment banners.
During launch, several exclusive banners are available, including limited characters.
One interesting detail is that players received a free character from the pre-registration event. However, many players miss the final step.
After claiming the reward from the mailbox, you must open your inventory and activate the character token.
Once activated, the character becomes available in your roster.
Duplicate Characters and Awakening
At first glance, high rarity units look like the obvious strongest characters.
But HeavenHells introduces an interesting twist.
Characters become stronger through awakening, which requires duplicate copies.
This means a lower-rarity character that has been awakened several times might actually outperform a higher rarity unit with no upgrades.
It’s not uncommon to see a fully awakened low-tier character dealing more damage than a partially upgraded SR unit.
So don’t automatically ignore duplicates. In many cases they are extremely valuable.
Early Game Team Building Tips
When building your first team, focus on characters that you have multiple copies of.
Awakened characters gain major power boosts, and those upgrades matter far more than rarity in the early stages.
A balanced team usually includes:
One durable frontline character
Two strong damage dealers
One support or utility character
As you progress further into the campaign, you’ll gradually replace early units with stronger SSR characters.
The game manages to combine familiar gacha mechanics with more interactive combat than most auto-RPGs.
Between the manual buffs, ability timing, and different mission types, the gameplay actually keeps you involved instead of just letting the game run on auto.
If you’re starting fresh, focus on three things:
Redeem all available codes
Spend quartz mainly on recruitment banners
Use daily operations to farm upgrade resources
Once your team begins awakening and you unlock more modes, the game really starts opening up.
And honestly, watching your squad slowly evolve from a bunch of starter characters into a powerful anime team is half the fun.