Complete 33 Immortals 1.0 Class Tier List & Rankings

Complete 33 Immortals 1.0 Class Tier List & Rankings

I remember the first raid I watched collapse: the Specialist blinked out before the boss hit phase two and the whole team scrambled. You can feel the match tilt in the space of a single poor decision. After hundreds of runs on Steam and notes from streamers on Twitch, I stopped guessing and started testing.

I’ve played 33 Immortals 1.0 end-to-end, read the Moyens I/O coverage, and chatted with raid leaders on Discord so you don’t have to repeat my mistakes. Below I strip each class down to what actually matters in raids: damage, survivability, team utility, and learning curve.

Complete 33 Immortals 1.0 class tier list

On my last session, Hunters showed up in almost every successful clear while Specialists swung the outcome in smaller groups.

All four classes—Fighter, Tank, Hunter, and Specialist—are viable when played well. You’re not locked into a single role: swapping weapons flips your class on the fly, and that flexibility matters in public raids and ranked play. Below I rank them by how forgiving they are for new players and how much upside they offer for seasoned ones.

Choosing a weapon in 33 Immortals
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

Which class is best in 33 Immortals?

Short answer: Hunter and Fighter carry the most consistent value across skill levels.

Hunter: The easiest to pick up and the most forgiving in public groups. The Hunter plays like a scalpel, precise and unforgiving. Basic attacks hit hard and at range, and once you master Q and the Guiding Light (RMB), you can influence the battlefield without being the frontline focal point. If you’re learning the game, Hunter accelerates your understanding of spacing and timing faster than any other class.

Fighter: Fighter sits beside Hunter as a hybrid that rewards timing and patience. You get decent HP and solid DPS; there are no flashy inputs to memorize—just rhythm. If you learn the windows for aggressive trades, Fighter gives huge payoff for relatively little mechanical stress.

S-tier

At peak pick rates in public lobbies, Hunters and Fighters win the most games because they fit multiple team compositions.

  • Hunter: Range, raw damage, and an easy learning curve make this the safest first pick for new raiders. It scales well when teammates coordinate—watching experienced Hunters on Twitch shows how much they can control boss positioning with a few well-timed abilities.
  • Fighter: Consistent damage and survivability that rewards timing. It’s the reliable punch your team will depend on when a clear needs a steady hand rather than flash plays.

How do classes work in 33 Immortals?

Classes are defined by weapon sets rather than permanent roles; each class has two weapons and you swap by equipping new gear.

That system makes experimentation cheap: on Steam you can test loadouts between runs, and creators on YouTube and Moyens I/O posts frequently publish quick build guides. Your best bet is to pick one class to learn the rhythm, then branch into another to understand match tempo.

A-tier

In small-group scrims I watched the Tank and Specialist swing fights—one prevents chaos, the other punishes it.

  • Tank: The Tank feels like a freight train—hard to stop once it’s rolling. You absorb hits, hold space, and let your teammates clean up. Tanks forgive positioning errors more than any other class, but they also demand team support; alone, a Tank will die if isolated.
  • Specialist: The hardest class to master. Specialists are glassy spellcasters who slow and debuff enemies, and a skilled Specialist makes fragile enemies trivial for the squad. There’s no margin for error—get closed in and your basic attacks vanish. If you have patience and a hunger for high impact play, Specialist rewards practice with dominant utility.

Is Specialist good in 33 Immortals?

Yes—when played well, Specialists swing the power curve by controlling enemy movement and windows of vulnerability. They’re a classic high-risk, high-reward pick that excels in coordinated groups.

Practical tip: follow a couple of streamer guides on Twitch or short build videos on YouTube to copy weapon combos and ability timings for each class; mimicry speeds mastery far faster than guessing alone.

I’ve ranked these with a focus on playability, team impact, and pick-rate behavior on Steam and community hubs—what I want to know now is which class are you taking into your next ranked run?