Marvel Rivals Blood Hunt Wiki â rewards: what to farm and what matters
Rewards in Blood Hunt come from clearing content, hitting event objectives, and sometimes pushing higher difficulties for better tables. The best farm is the one you can repeat without burning out â pair it with a build you know and routes you can execute cleanly.
How Blood Hunt rewards usually work
Most live-service PvE events give you a mix of power rewards and cosmetic rewards, and Blood Hunt follows that pattern. Power rewards help you clear faster or push higher settings, while cosmetics help you show off what you achieved. The trap is chasing everything at once. If you spend your week trying to earn every banner, every title, and every drop, you may end the week feeling like you got nothing. A better approach is to pick a goal for the week: a stable build, a boss clear, or a difficulty unlock, and let cosmetics be a bonus. Event panels and official news are the source of truth for what is available in the current schedule, because rewards can change between patches. If you are reading this guide months later, treat the structure as advice, not a promise of a specific item name. The durable part is the strategy: repeatable clears, bonus objectives when they are efficient, and higher difficulty only when your comp and build are ready. If you are new, your first reward target should be knowledge, because knowledge makes every future hour more valuable than the last.
What is worth farming first
Farm what moves your account forward the fastest for the content you are actually doing. If you are still learning, that means stable gear, basic trait progress, and enough currency to fix your worst slot. If you are pushing Nightmare, your farm plan should include higher-tier drops and materials that complete your build, not random sidegrades. The community often searches for âlegendary farmâ or âxp farm,â but the real question is efficiency. A legendary that does not fit your build is a warehouse item, not a power spike. An hour of clean runs on a route you understand beats three hours of messy attempts on a route you think looks better on paper. Also think about group rewards versus solo rewards. If you play with friends, coordinate goals so everyone is not pulling in a different direction. If you play alone, pick a flexible hero and a route you can execute in matchmaking without requiring a full premade plan. The rewards page is not a list of exploits, it is a list of priorities: survive, stabilize, speed up, then optimize.
Difficulty, bonus objectives, and time investment
Higher difficulty often means better tables, but also higher failure rates. The best players are not the ones who always queue the hardest setting, they are the ones who choose the setting that matches tonightâs goal. If you need materials, you may want fast clears. If you need a specific drop tied to a harder route, you schedule a push session with a team and a plan. Bonus objectives are great when they do not add ten minutes of chaos for a tiny payout. If an objective forces a strategy that your pug cannot do, it is okay to skip it and finish the run. Learning is still progress. If you are trying to maximize rewards per hour, track your time honestly. If a route takes twice as long for a 15 percent better chance, it might still be worse in real life because failure risk exists. Think in expected value, not vibes. Also watch for fatigue: a tired group makes mistakes, mistakes extend pulls, and extended pulls reduce rewards per hour even if the drop table is technically better.
Cosmetics, titles, and why they still matter
Power is not the only motivator. Some players stay in PvE for the flex, the collection, or the feeling of finishing an event before it ends. That is valid. If cosmetics are your goal, build a checklist from the official event page and knock it out in planned sessions. If power is your goal, do not guilt yourself for ignoring a title. The game is allowed to be different things for different people. The only mistake is mixing goals without noticing, because then you feel busy but not satisfied. Pick the reward you want from this week, name it, and finish it. Then pick the next one. That is how you leave Blood Hunt feeling like you won, even if RNG was not kind every day.
Video picks
FAQ
Are Blood Hunt rewards worth farming before the event ends?
If you play the mode anyway, yesâevent rewards are often the most time-efficient way to progress during the window. If you do not enjoy PvE, do not force it; a game should not feel like a second job.
What should I do if RNG feels bad?
Switch routes, improve mechanics, or take a break. Sometimes the fastest progress is learning a fight well enough that your clears speed up, which increases drops per hour without changing luck at all.