Destiny 2 is no spring chicken. Since the shared-world shooter first landed in 2017, Bungie has released a steady stream of paid annual expansions and tweaked the core formula to various degrees. Keeping up with Destiny 2 is a commitmentâof time, of money, of patienceâso thereâs no shame if youâve jumped ship. But itâs never too late to get back on board.
Itâs impossible to say whether or not Destiny 2 is better than ever, because that is a perpetual debate that will wage from now until Bungieâs server farms have operated into dust. But itâs fair to say that the barrier for re-entry is lower than ever, at least for the millions of you who are members of Xbox Game Pass. Destiny 2 and all its expansionsâincluding last yearâs well-regarded Beyond Lightâare all on the service. Being able to pick up the latest expansion at no extra cost is a huge boon.
I played Destiny 2 a few years ago, clocked 60-odd hours, and hung up my hat, figuring I was done for good. Then, a few months ago, to help cope with a covid-19-induced quarantine, my roommate and I got extremely into Destiny 2 again, thinking itâd be a rote if entertaining shooter to bide the time. Iâm now unleashed from said quarantine, and have not stopped playing.
Kotaku has previously run down everything you need to know to step into Destiny 2 as a newcomer, as well as an exhaustive compendium of tips specific to the Beyond Light expansion. You can brush up on all the lore here (trust me, youâll want to). Kotakuâs tips for Destiny 2 remain (mostly) relevant. But the following advice is keyed more toward helping out prospective players who played Destiny in the past but bailed before the eras of Forsaken (2018), Shadowkeep (2019), or Beyond Light (2020) and would love to hop back in.
Set up cross-save (if applicable).
If you, say, played Destiny 2 on PS4 back in the day but now want to try out Beyond Light on your Xbox One, you can pick up your Guardian more or less where you left them. The process is extremely straightforward and self-explanatory. Just pop over to Bungieâs cross-save site, punch in your info, and activate the platforms youâd like to be able to play on with one profile. You can unify your account across PlayStation, Xbox, Steam, and Stadia.
Or start a new character.
If youâre returning after a long while away, maybe the idea of starting fresh is more enticing than dusting off an old character. Weâve got you covered:
Familiarize yourself with the way things work now.
Thereâs no real use in busying yourself on all the tiny changes that happened in Destiny 2 over the years. Combing through every developer blog and weekly update would be enough to drive any Guardian mad. Itâs more beneficial to brush up on the way things currently are.

Forget what the solar system looked like the last time you played. Last year, Bungie âvaultedâ a whole bunch of the gameâs locations, making them inaccessible to players. These days, Destiny 2 features Nessus, the Moon, the Tangled Shore, the Dreaming City, two locations on Earth (the Cosmodrome and the European Dead Zone), and the ice-ensconced Europa, the smallest of Jupiterâs four Galilean moons.
Next up: Power levels. Any Destiny player surely knows what a Power level is. Whatever Power level you were at before, forget it. With the addition of Beyond Light, youâll now find yourselfâand all of your gearâat the new floor of 1050. Thereâs currently a âsoft capâ of 1200. Youâll progress apace toward that point as you equip new weapons and armor. (Remember: Your Power level is decided by calculating the average of all the Power levels of each piece of gear you have equipped.)
How this change affects your old gear might catch you off guard. Some stuff has a maximum Power level of 1060, which is obviously not helpful for your purposes. Other gear can be leveled up as high as 1410, a number I promise you will not hit. (The current seasonal cap is 1260.) You can see the maximum Power level of a specific piece of gear by viewing its details and hovering your cursor over the Power level.
My suggestion? Donât sweat your old gear. If you havenât played in years, you probably donât care about a dusty Origin Story, no matter how many hours you had it on your person before. You had some good times. Now itâs time to move on. (Bungieâs Luke Smith agrees.) Youâll constantly find new equipment, anyway.

If you dipped out before 2019âs Shadowkeep expansion, you could probably use a refresher on stats, which received a slight overhaul. Each piece of armor now has six, rather than three, stats to pay attention to:
Mobility: Makes you move faster and jump higher. (Mobility also reduces a Hunterâs class ability cooldown.)
Resilience: Beefs up how much damage you can take before you die. (Resilience also reduces a Titanâs class ability cooldown, not that anyone plays as a Titan.)
Recovery: Speeds up how quickly your health recharges. (Recovery also reduces a Warlockâs class ability cooldown.)
Discipline: Decreases the cooldown for your grenades.
Intellect: Decreases the cooldown for your Super.
Strength: Decreases the cooldown for your melee ability.
These stats are tiered by multiples of ten. So if your Mobility stat is at 66, youâll reap the same benefits of a Mobility stat at 61, since youâre at âtier 6â Mobility either way. To see a stat boost, youâd have to hit tier 7 by pushing your Mobility to 70.
Oh, and you very well might have a bunch of mods that you can use to give yourself a small boost. Once you earn a mod, you can use it ad infinitum. You can apply these by viewing the details page for a piece of armor and hovering over those gray squares in the center of the page. (I tend to apply my Discipline mod on literally everything, because I spam my Hunterâs grenade.)
Donât toss your favorite gear.
If youâve outleveled a beloved gun, helmet, or any other piece of gear, donât toss it. By using an Upgrade Module, you can infuse higher level gear into anything of a lower Power level, provided theyâre both of the same category: kinetic weapons into kinetic weapons, leg armors into leg armors, and so on. This will destroy the high-leveled piece of gear but, in the process, boost the Power level of the lower-leveled one to whatever the Power level was of the thing you destroyed. Itâs a key way to keep your favorite gear in the mix. (Our Beyond Light tips suggest holding off infusing anything until you hit the soft Power cap of 1200.)
You can buy Upgrade Modules from Banshee-44âthe Towerâs gunsmith vendorâbut theyâre prohibitively expensive, particularly for those who play casually and thus wonât have as many Dusklight Shards on hand. Youâll have an easier time sourcing Modules by either cashing in on your seasonal rank or by knocking out Banshee-44âs weekly bounties. Speaking ofâŚ
Start each session with a trip to the Tower.
While youâre there, pick up as many bountiesâoptional objectives that you can knock out while youâre playingâas you can by chatting up the Towerâs principal vendors. Bounties are easy, usually of the âkill X of Yâ variety, and will reward you with experience points, in-game currency, rare materials (like Upgrade Modules), and, in some instances, Legendary (purple) gear. Each vendor corresponds with a mode or broad facet of the game:
Commander Zavala: Strikes
The Drifter: Gambit matches
Lord Shaxx: Crucible matches
Banshee-44: General shooty-shooty challenges (these are the easiest, as you can complete most of them in any mode)
Each vendor will have two weekly and four daily bounties up for grabs. Pick them all up regardless of whether or not youâre not planning to complete the challenges. You never know which objectives you may complete without even realizing it.

Bounties technically cost Glimmer, Destiny 2âs most basic currency, but you neednât concern yourself with the sticker price. Glimmer is so common these days as to not even be a currency anymore. (At the moment, the Glimmer cap is 250,000, a benchmark youâll hit in no time. You could buy literally everything you possibly want and still not see a noticeable dent in your coffers.)
Purple gear isnât automatically better than blue gear.
Loot games have trained us to follow a Crayola-themed system, where rarer gear must be better, right? But a purple helmet isnât necessarily better than a blue one. Maybe your playstyle is focused on being able to zip around the battlefield. If the blue helmet seriously outclasses the purple one in Mobility, it might be a better fit for your build. Look into the stats, rather than glancing at the rarity and equipping the rarer stuff with abandon.
You can only equip one Exotic (yellow) piece of armor and one Exotic gun at a time.
I know. Such bullshit.
Donât sleep on Gambit.
It is difficult to oversell how awesome Destiny 2âs Gambit mode is. Whereas much of Destiny 2 can be classified as competitive (Crucible) or cooperative (basically everything else), Gambit falls somewhere in the middle.
There are two teams per match. Your goal is to kill cannon fodder enemies, collect the resulting dropped currency (glowy triangles called Motes), and cash it into a central bank. Cashing in 100 Motes will spawn a high-level boss. First team to kill it wins. Meanwhile, each team can send one player to âinvadeâ the other teamâs zone, generally with the goal of wreaking havoc and hampering progress.
Gambit bounties tend to be the easiest to knock out, too. I have a weekly Gambit bounty right now called âDo It,â which demands I âearn 5 points.â Winning a match will give me three points; losing a match will give me two. For my effortsâif they can be called thatâIâll earn a piece of Legendary gear, plus some Glimmer, some Bright Dust, and some experience points.
Check the season pass.
As you play, youâll earn experience points, which doesnât affect your Power level but does increase your seasonal rank. Ranking up can earn you some good rewardsâeverything from Legendary gear to Bright Dust (currency for cosmetics) to valuable Upgrade Modules. Thing is, you have to actually remember to hop into your Seasons tab in the Director menu to actually cash in those rewards. Itâs all too easy to forget about the Seasons tab. Check in on it periodically.
Thereâs a second tier of rewards available to those who purchase the paid Season Pass, which costs 1,000 Silver ($10, or $9 for Game Pass members). Essentially, you can earn extra prizes for each rank, including experience boosts and some cosmetic options.
Play the legacy campaigns.
Though much of Destiny 2 was tossed into a vault (R.I.P. Titan and its endless sea), you can still play the previous campaigns, provided you have the Forsaken or Shadowkeep expansions. (Theyâre available at no extra cost to Game Pass subscribers.) Both campaigns are worth checking out sooner rather than later, as the recommended Power level is set at 1050.
Try to resist the grind.
Yes, Destiny is rooted in a feedback loop that any observer could reasonably call a âgrind.â Thereâs no wrong way to play any game, of course, and if you get a real kick out of marginally boosting your Power level, by all means, focus on that. Personally, Iâve found that Destinyâs fun factor wanes when I laser-focus on the grind.
For instance, I could nab a sweet piece of âPinnacleâ gear for playing three Crucible matches in the span of a week. But I donât enjoy playing Crucible, and the matches arenât exactly short. Earning that one piece of Pinnacle gear will mean Iâve spent up to 45 minutes of my life having no fun just for the off-chance that my little number might go up by an incremental amount.
Trust me: Whatever factors contributed to you putting down Destiny 2 years ago, playing like that is a surefire way to stoke burnout and throw you off it again. Find the modes you like to play and play those. The higher Power will come.
Above all, have fun!
To the longtime players reading this (I know youâre lurking), yes, yes, Iâm sure I missed something. Destiny 2 is a massive gameâa literal entire solar system and some. I am but one Guardian. So chime in with your best tips and tricks for the lapsed players out there!
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