But if the slot has a polarity symbol on it, equip a mod of the same polarity. If there is no symbol, then it is just a standard slot. The mod menu for a piece of gear also has those symbols on individual gear slots.
A mod’s polarity is one of five schools, each represented with their own small shape. There’s a small symbol next to that number, which denotes polarity. You can raise your capacity and add more and increasingly powerful mods. Each piece of gear has a capacity that scales with its level, maxing out at 30. In the top right corner, you’ll see a number and a symbol. Always check the effect of the mod over the rarity of the card. Especially at lower levels, you may be happy with a selection of mostly bronze mods. Unlike many other games, a rarer mod isn’t usually a sign of being objectively better, despite taking up more capacity than its lower-ranked alternatives.
Purple crystal mods, known as Riven mods, are rare endgame mods that you must equip and unlock via endgame achievements in missions. They range from bronze (Common) to silver (Uncommon), gold (Rare), and platinum (Legendary). The individual mod and its information card can come in different colors, which denote rarity. That includes variants on the Hek, like the Vaykor Hek shotgun. A Warframe mod will fit on any Warframe, but an Atlas mod can only go on the Atlas Warframe. You can also see the category of the mod. The name and the description are front and center. The North Wind mod, which adds Cold damage to any melee weapon. You’ll see these on mission complete screens and on the side of your screen during a mission when you find one in a level. As you collect mods, be sure you equip them and experiment with different combinations. Another build might be about dealing lots of damage in close combat with enemies. For instance, one mod build might be about survivability, making a Warframe tanky and difficult to kill. This means you can experiment with different mod combinations to create different specializations. Image: Digital Extremes via PolygonĮvery piece of gear has three configurations: A, B, and C. Players start with a humble selection of mods and a small capacity to hold them.
Here’s what your Warframe’s mod menu will look like when you open it up on one of your characters. We’ll explain this in more detail later on. Some mod slots will be unavailable at first on certain pieces of gear. This will allow you to see all mods applicable to that piece of gear, to auto-equip them, or to manually apply mods. Select the piece of gear, and then hit Upgrade.
You can access mods through your Mod Station, which lets you browse your collection and install mods into an individual piece of gear from your armory. Choosing mods that boost basic stats like health, shields, and damage is a good strategy and will cover you through the first few planets. While you should always be installing mods and upgrading them (which we’ll cover in more detail below), you don’t have to worry about doing high-level customization and min-maxing. You can find mods as random drops from enemies, get them as awards at the end of missions, or purchased them from faction vendors. If you can equip something, you can mod it - including companions, Archwings, and Warframe accessories like Khora’s Venari.
But when players want to make a piece of equipment stronger so they can take on more challenging enemies and levels, they need to upgrade their mods. Every item you can equip has its own set of stats and properties, which is why a Soma rifle will work very differently than a Hek shotgun. In Warframe, players can unlock new Warframes and weapons to use in missions.