B Hero guide
Marvel Rivals Blood Hunt Blade Build Guide · Wiki
Blade is viable, but steeper to pilot under pressure. Best for players who like aggressive play and are willing to invest time into mechanics and gear.
What Blade offers in the Blood Hunt roster
Blade is the pick for players who want a more aggressive, high-execution playstyle, but that excitement comes with a cost in PvE: less room for error when mechanics punish greedy melee trades. The Blood Hunt roster already includes very strong comfort picks, so you should choose Blade because you like the way he plays, not because you think he is a free S-tier. If you are willing to put in the reps, you can still post strong clears, especially when your traits and gear are tailored to the fights and your team knows how to play around a melee carry who sometimes needs help with space. The best Blade players in PvE are not the loudest, they are the most disciplined: they do not take extra hits for no reason, they respect boss recovery mechanics, and they do not make supports burn everything early. If that sounds like you, Blade can feel incredible. If you are still learning routes, you may find yourself progressing faster on another hero, then coming back to Blade with better fundamentals. That is not a bad path; it is a smart one.
Traits and gear: building for real pressure
Start with a survival floor. Blade can feel fragile if you build like a short-match duelist, because Blood Hunt asks for endurance. After you stop dying to obvious mistakes, layer in damage. Traits should follow a clear theme: the tree that best matches your play pattern, not a little bit of everything. Gear should emphasize stats that you can keep active, especially output boost and anything that makes your best windows more frequent. If you build only for a perfect parse, you will be disappointed when a boss forces you to disengage for five seconds, because in Blood Hunt, five seconds is often the difference between a clean phase and a long phase. In forge, be careful about over-dismantling. If you are still learning, keep stable pieces longer. A stable build helps you learn mechanics faster, and mechanics knowledge is the unlock for harder content, not a tiny roll upgrade. When you are ready, optimize.
Surviving Dracula and other punishing end fights
The late run bosses are not only about DPS, they are about not extending the fight. Blade players sometimes lose to themselves: they go for a bit more damage and pay with a feed into healing mechanics, or they misposition in sunlight and waste the best window. If you want to play Blade, treat Dracula like a structured drill: you do the same plan every time until it is clean, and only then do you add aggression. The same idea applies in group play: if your team needs you on a job for ten seconds, do that job. A disciplined Blade is an asset, a greedy Blade is a liability. In Extreme and Nightmare, the margins are small. The players who clear are the ones who stop repeating the same error and adjust after each attempt with one change at a time.
Common Blade mistakes
Overcommitting, ignoring defensive cooldowns, and blaming stats when the fix is movement. The second is skipping fundamentals: you cannot farm your way out of a mechanics wall. Learn the fight, then tune the build.
Videos
FAQ
Is Blade good in Blood Hunt?
He can be good in skilled hands, but he is not the default pick for a first clear. If you want the smoothest path, start with a higher tier hero, then try Blade when you are comfortable with boss patterns.
What should Blade players focus on first?
Survival floors and clean mechanics. A flashy build does not help if you are feeding Dracula or dying to Capwolf’s pressure because you are overcommitting.