Honkai Star Rail Beginner Guide: How To Pick Your First 5-Star

You just finished your 50 pulls on the beginner warp banner, the golden light flashes, and you’ve pulled Himeko. You’re excited—she’s the leader of the space station, and her character art is elegant and stunning. But as you get into fights, you notice her damage is underwhelming. Her ultimate animation is beautiful, but it can’t take down elite enemies. When you get stuck on the final boss of Jarilo-VI, watching your team get wiped in seconds, you’re left totally confused.

Meanwhile, another Trailblazer also did 50 pulls on the beginner banner, and they pulled Bronya. They immediately paired Bronya with their main damage dealer like Dan Heng, and noticed a night-and-day difference in their combat experience. Their main DPS can act twice in one turn, dealing massive, game-breaking damage. When they hit the 300-pull pity for the standard banner selector, they immediately picked Gepard to fill their team’s biggest gap in survivability.

This gap in outcome comes down to a gap in understanding the true value of your first 5-star character. Whether your first 5-star comes from the 50-pull beginner banner or the 300-pull standard banner selector, it will completely define your gameplay experience for hundreds of hours ahead. It’s not just a character—it’s the entire foundation of your account. This guide will break down every standard and beginner banner 5-star to help you answer this critical question: how do you pick your first 5-star?

The Challenge Of Picking Your First 5-Star: Why Looks Can’t Measure True Value

For new players, the most intuitive selection criteria is picking whoever looks best—who has nicer art, cooler animations, that’s who you pick. But this is an outdated way of thinking that completely ignores what Honkai: Star Rail is at its core: a strategy game that relies on character roles and team composition. Judging a character’s value solely by looks will leave you stuck struggling through the early game progression grind.

The Role Paradox: Picking A Main DPS Without Supporting Characters

New players almost always want a main DPS (primary damage dealer) first, like Yanqing or Himeko. However, Star Rail’s total damage output depends on three roles working together: main DPS, support, and sustain. A main DPS with no support buffs and no sustain protection will see its damage and survivability cut drastically.

Case Study: Player Mike pulled Yanqing on the beginner banner. Yanqing’s kit requires him to take no damage to maintain his high critical hit rate buff. But Mike only has March 7th for shielding, and her shield uptime isn’t enough to cover him constantly. Yanqing gets hit repeatedly in fights, which disables his passive talent, and his damage ends up far lower than expected—even worse than a fully eidolon 4-star Dan Heng. This left him extremely frustrated.

The Overlooked Value: The Long-Term Stability Of Support Characters

In contrast to main DPS characters are supports and sustain units. New players often underestimate their value, buying into the myth that “if it doesn’t deal damage, it’s useless.” This is a massive mistake. In Star Rail, main DPS characters get powercrept very quickly, with new limited 5-stars releasing all the time. But strong supports (like Harmony path) and sustain units (like Preservation or Abundance path) have irreplaceable unique kits, and hold their value far better than any main DPS.

Case Study: Player Lily pulled Bronya on the beginner banner. While she doesn’t deal much damage herself, she lets an ally act immediately and gives massive damage buffs. No matter how strong a new limited main DPS is in future updates, Bronya will always pair perfectly with them, making that new DPS even stronger. Her value only grows as your account progresses and gets stronger over time.

Kit Pitfalls: Picking The “Future Proof” Early Game Trap

Some standard banner characters have kits that are nearly impossible to use effectively during the early game. They require extremely high investment, specific light cones, or specific team members to reach their full potential, a situation players jokingly call “good later.”

Case Study: Himeko is the perfect example of this. Her core passive triggers extra attacks after an enemy’s weakness is broken. During the early game, your team is low level, and you can’t break weaknesses quickly or consistently, so you rarely trigger this passive. That makes her one of the least desirable 5-stars to pull early on, even if she performs well in niche late-game content like Pure Fiction. For new players, pulling her early is a bad outcome.

How The Beginner Banner Changes The Rules: Pity And The 7 Standard 5-Stars

Once you understand the blind spots of the old “pick what looks good” strategy, you can see the new rules for beginner and standard banners. The core of this strategy is using the pity system and a solid understanding of the 7 standard 5-stars to build the strongest possible foundation for your account.

Path Economics: Finding Your Team’s Core Missing Piece

Your team is made up of 4 slots, and the most basic core setup is 1 main DPS + 1 support + 1 Abundance/Preservation + 1 flex slot. The 7 standard 5-star characters (commonly called the “Standard Seven”) each fit a different path, and they’re the foundation of your entire account. Your first 5-star is the first core piece of your team puzzle.

Core Breakdown: Value Analysis For The Three Path Categories

We can split these seven characters into three categories based on their function, which directly determines their early game value and long-term stability:

  • S-Tier (Account Foundation): Sustain (Preservation/Abundance)
    • Gepard (Preservation): He provides the strongest full-party shield in the entire game. His ultimate is a game-breaking cheat code for tough content, letting you tank a boss’ full party-wiping ultimate and drastically lowers the difficulty of early progression.
    • Bailu (Abundance): The only 5-star Abundance (healer) on the standard banner, she provides massive healing and a unique resurrection mechanic. Resurrection is one-of-a-kind utility that drastically increases your team’s margin for error.
    • Value: Pulling either of these two means your sustain puzzle piece is already filled, and your early game progression will be extremely smooth.
  • S-Tier (Power Core): Support (Harmony/Nihility)
    • Bronya (Harmony): The T0 god of the standard banner. She packs extra turn, damage amplification, attack buffs, crit damage buffs, and debuff cleansing all into one kit. She’s an amplifier for your entire account, doubling your main DPS’ effective power.
    • Welt (Nihility): He has unique action delaying and stunting/slowing mechanics. He’s a fully functional sub-DPS with tons of utility that lets you disrupt enemy turn order and create safe windows for your damage dealers.
    • Value: Pulling Bronya is one of the best possible starts for a new account. Pulling Welt also gives your team incredible, useful crowd control.
  • A/B-Tier (Replaceable): Damage (Destruction/Erudition/Hunt)
    • Clara (Destruction): She has a unique counterattack mechanic controlled by her AI companion Svarog. She’s a tanky sub-DPS that can also take damage, but she requires specific team members like Tingyun and Luocha to work well, and she doesn’t fit every fight scenario.
    • Yanqing (Hunt): He has extremely high single-target burst damage, but he relies completely on shielding from characters like Gepard or March 7th to keep his passive active, so his kit has a clear, major flaw.
    • Himeko (Erudition): She’s specialized for AoE (area of effect) damage and excels at clearing waves of weak enemies, but she struggles heavily against single-target bosses in high-difficulty content, making her a trap for early game players.
    • Value: All three of these damage dealers perform worse early game than supports and sustain units, and their role is far more likely to be replaced by future limited 5-star main DPS characters that release regularly.

Beyond Looks: 3 New Metrics To Judge Your First 5-Star

Once you finish the main story, complete your quests, and hit 300 pulls on the standard banner, you’ll unlock a free selector that lets you pick any 5-star standard character. How should you choose at this point? You need a decision framework that goes beyond just picking your favorite looking character.

Core Metric: Your Team’s Puzzle Completion

This should always be your first consideration. Look back at your character roster: what role are you missing most? Do you keep getting one-shot, so you need a sustain? Is your damage feeling weak, so you need a strong support? Your 300-pull selector should always be used to fill your account’s biggest gap.

Secondary Metric: Long-Term Kit Stability

As we mentioned earlier, unique kits hold their value forever. Bronya’s extra turn mechanic and Gepard’s full-party shield are extremely unlikely to be made obsolete any time in the foreseeable future. Raw damage numbers, however, get beaten out easily by new characters. You should always prioritize picking a character that will hold their value long term.

Potential Metric: The Value Of Eidolon Upgrades

If you already pulled Bronya accidentally from the beginner or standard banner before hitting 300 pulls, picking a second Bronya in your selector to get her to Eidolon 1 (E1) is a game-changing upgrade. Bronya’s first Eidolon (which has a 50% chance to refund a skill point after using her skill) is one of the strongest Eidolons in the entire game. Because of this, grabbing an Eidolon upgrade for a core character is also a great strategic choice.

Common Q&A: How Do I Match My Choice To My Starter Pull?

This is one of the most common questions new players have. Your 50-pull beginner banner is random, but your 300-pull selector is guaranteed. Your selector should always be used to fill the gaps left by your random starter pull. Core Rule: Prioritize filling a sustain slot or picking up Bronya.

  • Example 1: You pulled Yanqing (main DPS) on the beginner banner. Your biggest missing slot is sustain, so you should pick either Gepard or Bailu from the selector. Gepard’s shielding is a perfect match for Yanqing’s kit, making him the ideal pick here.
  • Example 2: You pulled Bailu (sustain) on the beginner banner. You already have all the sustain you need, so the best choice for your 300-pull selector is Bronya, who will immediately make your entire team far stronger.
  • Example 3: You pulled Bronya on the beginner banner. Congratulations, you got one of the best possible starts. At this point, your 300-pull selector should pick either Gepard or Bailu to fill your sustain slot, and your account’s foundation is perfect.

Standard Banner 300-Pull Selector Priority Chart (V1.0)

  • Bronya
    • Path: Harmony
    • Core Value: S+ (God Tier): Extra turn, damage amplification, debuff cleansing. One of the strongest supports in the entire game.
    • Recommendation Priority: Highest (T0): Every team needs her. If you don’t have her, pick her. If you have her at E0, pick her for E1.
  • Gepard
    • Path: Preservation
    • Core Value: S (T1): Strongest full-party shield, frees up your healer slot, perfect counter to high-difficulty content.
    • Recommendation Priority: High: If you don’t have a limited sustain unit, he’s your best option.
  • Bailu
    • Path: Abundance
    • Core Value: S (T1): Massive healing, built-in resurrection, increases your team’s error margin drastically.
    • Recommendation Priority: High: Same reasoning as Gepard. Pick either her or Gepard to fill your sustain slot.
  • Welt
    • Path: Nihility
    • Core Value: A (T2): Unique stunting/action delaying and damage taken increasing effects, extremely high utility.
    • Recommendation Priority: Medium: Very useful, but lower priority than T0 supports and T1 sustain units.
  • Clara
    • Path: Destruction
    • Core Value: A (T2): Unique counterattack mechanic, fits perfectly into specific team compositions.
    • Recommendation Priority: Medium: Great sub-DPS/tank, but not a good choice for your account’s opening core.
  • Yanqing
    • Path: Hunt
    • Core Value: B (T3): High single-target burst, but relies completely on shielding and has a major flaw in his kit.
    • Recommendation Priority: Low: Easily replaced by limited main DPS, and has a poor early game experience.
  • Himeko
    • Path: Erudition
    • Core Value: B (T3): AoE specialized, great for clearing trash mobs, but weak against single targets, an early game trap.
    • Recommendation Priority: Low: Kit is hard to activate early, poor early game experience.

The Long-Term Impact Of Your First 5-Star: Building Your Account’s Foundation

Your first 5-star isn’t just a character—it’s the entire foundation of your account. The choice you make here will determine whether you get to enjoy the story and progression comfortably, or struggle constantly with stuck content and frustrating wipes.

This ultimately boils down to a core choice for your Trailblaze journey: do you want short-term damage, picking a cool-looking main DPS that will likely get replaced quickly? Or do you want to build long-term value, picking a foundational character with a stable, irreplaceable kit that will buff every character you get in the future (like Bronya or Gepard)?

There’s no absolutely right or wrong choice here, but a more solid foundation will absolutely let your train travel further and more smoothly across the galaxy. Good luck with your pull, and may you make the choice that’s right for you, Trailblazer.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *