Monster Hunter Wilds Armor Crafting Guide — How to Get the Best Sets

Armor Crafting Quick Reference
| Topic | Details |
|---|---|
| How to Craft | Hunt monster → collect parts → go to Smithy → craft |
| Armor Rank | Low Rank (story) → High Rank (post-campaign) → Master Rank (expansion) |
| Upgrade Materials | Monster parts + ore/stones found in the biome |
| Max Upgrade Level | Varies by rarity; HR armor upgrades up to +12 (4 tiers of +3) |
| Decoration Slots | Level 1–4 slots on each armor piece; higher slot = bigger decoration |
| Set Bonus | Equip 2–4 pieces from same monster set to unlock exclusive set skills |
| Augmentation | Endgame system: add slots, skills, or defense to armor pieces using Guiding Lands materials |
| Layered Armor | Cosmetic-only armor skin; unlocked from Event Quests and Investigations |
Low Rank vs High Rank Armor
Monster Hunter Wilds has two primary armor tiers during the base game: Low Rank and High Rank. Low Rank armor is crafted from the standard monster materials you collect during the main story campaign. It has lower base defense, fewer decoration slots, and generally weaker skills compared to High Rank armor. Do not invest heavily in upgrading Low Rank armor — you will replace it shortly after completing the main story.
High Rank armor unlocks once you complete the main campaign and reach High Rank status. HR armor is crafted from enhanced monster variants and drops stronger skill combinations with more decoration slots. This is where the real build crafting begins. A single piece of High Rank Arkveld armor might carry Weakness Exploit 2 and two Level 3 decoration slots — double the skill density of a comparable Low Rank piece.
The transition from Low Rank to High Rank is the first major milestone in the game's progression. Do not panic if your Low Rank armor feels inadequate in early High Rank — the HR monsters drop the materials you need to craft replacements quickly. Focus on getting a complete High Rank set of one monster type to stabilize your defense, then begin optimizing for skills and decoration slots.
Set Bonuses — Why You Should Mix Armor
Armor set bonuses activate when you equip a certain number of pieces from the same monster's armor set. For example, wearing 2 pieces of Rathalos armor might grant Rathalos Mastery (2-piece): Critical Boost +1. Wearing 4 pieces of Rathalos armor might upgrade that to Critical Boost +2 plus an additional skill. These set bonuses are separate from the base skills on each piece and stack on top.
However, set bonuses are not always worth pursuing at the cost of losing optimal base skills and decoration slots. The best endgame armor sets in Monster Hunter Wilds are almost always mixed sets — combining pieces from 3–5 different monster armors to get the best combination of base skills, decoration slots, and compatible set bonuses. A common 2-piece set bonus (like Arkveld 2-piece for Weakness Exploit) is worth including in a mixed set, but building 4–5 pieces of the same monster for a larger set bonus rarely beats a well-optimized mixed set.
To build a good mixed set, list your target skills (Weakness Exploit 3, Critical Boost 3, etc.), then identify which armor pieces individually provide the most of those skills with the best decoration slots. Layer in compatible set bonuses where they fit. The game's armor filter system lets you search by skill, making this process much more efficient.
Best High Rank Armor Pieces to Farm
- Arkveld Helm: carries Weakness Exploit 2 natively — the most important offensive skill in the game on a single head piece.
- Rathalos Mail (Chest): provides Attack Boost 2 and Critical Eye 1 with good decoration slots; fits into nearly every offensive build.
- Kaiser Braces (Teostra Arms): Weakness Exploit 1 + Masters Touch (no sharpness loss on crits at 100% affinity); endgame staple for high-affinity builds.
- Odogaron Coil (Waist): carries Critical Eye 2 and Critical Boost 1; great slot count for supplemental decos.
- Arkveld Greaves: Critical Boost 2 with Level 2 decoration slots; strong endgame legs for crit-focused builds.
- Doshaguma Mail: Offensive Guard 2 for Switch Axe, Lance, and Gunlance users — essential for those weapons.
- Chatacabra Greaves: Quick Sheathe 2 for Long Sword and Great Sword draw-attack builds.
Augmentation — The Endgame Layer
Augmentation is Monster Hunter Wilds' endgame armor enhancement system. Once you have fully upgraded an armor piece to its maximum level, you can Augment it using rare materials from Tempered monsters and Investigation rewards. Augmentation adds additional decoration slots to armor pieces — most commonly converting a Level 1 slot to Level 2, or adding a brand new slot that was not there before. This is what allows endgame hunters to achieve skill caps that seem impossible from base armor stats alone.
Each armor piece has a limited number of Augmentation slots (usually 1–3) determined by the piece's rarity. Higher rarity pieces can accept more augments. The materials required are quite rare, so prioritize augmenting armor pieces that will serve you for many hunts. Your chest and head pieces, which tend to carry the most impactful skills, are the highest-value augmentation targets.
Beyond slots, certain augments can add flat skills to a piece — for example, adding one level of Critical Eye or Attack Boost to any armor piece regardless of its original skill list. These skill augments are rarer and require even more premium materials, but they allow for fine-tuning builds to hit exact skill level caps without relying on luck from talisman rolls.
Armor Progression Milestones — Low Rank to Master Rank
| Slot | Recommended pick | Why / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Low Rank Start (HR1) | Hunter's Set or Leather Set (starter armor) | Defense: 50–80. Replace by HR3 with monster-specific Low Rank sets like Chatacabra or Doshaguma armor. |
| Low Rank Mid (HR3–HR5) | Doshaguma Set / Quematrice Set (mixed pieces) | Defense: 120–180. Aim for Attack Boost Lv 1–2 base skills and basic offensive coverage. |
| Low Rank End (HR5–HR8) | Rathalos or Rathian Set with Attack Boost emphasis | Defense: 180–250. Last Low Rank armor — replace immediately upon reaching High Rank. |
| High Rank Start (HR8–HR12) | First HR Mixed Set (Arkveld Helm + filler HR pieces) | Defense: 250–350. Begin acquiring HR-tier Tenderizer and Critical decorations. |
| High Rank Mid (HR15–HR40) | Meta HR Mixed Set with Arkveld + Nergigante + Rathalos pieces | Defense: 400–500. Hit Weakness Exploit Lv 3 + Critical Boost Lv 2 caps. |
| High Rank End / MR Start | HR Endgame Alpha+/Beta+ Sets | Defense: 500–600. Bridge from HR to MR with Health Boost + meta offensive caps. |
| Master Rank Phase 1 (MR1–MR15) | First MR Mixed Set (early MR monsters) | Defense: 600–700. Replace HR pieces incrementally; Health Boost Lv 3 mandatory. |
| Master Rank Phase 2 (MR30–MR50) | Phase 3 Meta MR Set (Alpha+/Beta+ tier) | Defense: 700–800. Full meta skill caps with Augment slot room for expansion. |
| Master Rank Endgame (MR50+) | Augmented MR Meta Set + Title Update pieces | Defense: 800–900+. Multiple Augments per piece; full Lv 1–3 decoration loadouts. |
Best Skills to Look for Per Armor Slot
| Slot | Top Skills to Prioritize | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Helm | Weakness Exploit, Critical Eye, Earplugs | Head pieces often carry the most impactful base skills; aim for WEX Lv 2+ native |
| Chest | Attack Boost, Critical Eye, Offensive Guard, Status Crit | Largest slot capacity; pick chest based on weapon class (Doshaguma Mail for blocking weapons, Rathalos Mail for crit) |
| Arms | Master's Touch (Kaiser set bonus), Critical Boost, Recoil Down, Artillery | Arms often gate weapon-class-specific skills like Master's Touch or Recoil Down |
| Waist | Critical Eye, Critical Boost, Guard, Stamina Surge | Coil slot — usually has the best 2-slot socket on most monster sets |
| Legs | Constitution, Critical Eye, Quick Sheathe, Power Prolonger | Movement and stamina skills congregate on leg pieces; pair with Nargacuga Greaves for crit + stamina combo |
Armor + Decoration Synergy — Skill Stacking Approaches
| Approach | Pros | Cons | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pure Base Skill Stacking | No decoration dependency; works with default jewel pool | Limited skill ceiling; can't cap meta skills without decos | Phase 1–2 progression; pre-decoration farming |
| Decoration-Heavy Build | Maximum flexibility; fits any skill combination | Requires extensive Tempered farming for jewels | Phase 3+ endgame; meta optimization |
| Hybrid (Base + Deco) | Balanced skill caps; decoration efficiency | Requires understanding which skills to cap via armor vs decos | Most endgame players; recommended approach |
| Set Bonus Focused | Strong 2-piece or 4-piece bonus skills | Reduces flexibility; locks pieces in | Specific synergy weapons (Charge Blade for Master's Touch, etc.) |
Verdict: The hybrid approach is the meta default. Aim for 1–2 levels of priority skills via armor base skills, then cap with decorations. This balances decoration scarcity with skill cap requirements. Set bonus focused builds are situational for weapons that uniquely benefit from specific bonuses.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need to upgrade Low Rank armor?
No. It is a waste of materials to heavily upgrade Low Rank armor since you replace it immediately after reaching High Rank. Craft Low Rank armor to maintain adequate defense during the story, but save your upgrade materials for High Rank sets.
How many decoration slots does endgame armor have?
A fully augmented High Rank armor piece can have up to 4–6 decoration slots across multiple slot levels (Level 1, 2, 3, 4). A complete 5-piece set can realistically total 15–20+ decoration slots, allowing for extensive skill customization beyond the base armor skills.
What is Layered Armor and how do I get it?
Layered Armor is a cosmetic skin applied over your real armor. It changes your visual appearance without affecting stats or skills. Layered Armor tickets are earned from Event Quests, the Steamworks (if present), and specific Investigation and Challenge Quest rewards. You apply them from the Smithy under the Layered Armor menu.
Should I focus on one monster's full set or mix armor?
Mix armor in endgame. Full monster sets rarely outperform well-optimized mixed sets because no single monster's armor covers all the skills you need at optimal levels. The exception is if a 2-piece or 4-piece set bonus is specifically powerful for your weapon type — include those pieces, then fill the remaining slots with the best individual pieces from other monsters.
Can I change the skills on my armor after crafting?
The base skills on armor cannot be changed. However, you can add skills via decorations (gems socketed into decoration slots) and Augmentation (adds skill levels to pieces). Talismans also add skills. This system of layering skills on top of base armor is how you reach skill caps that individual armor pieces cannot provide alone.
How important are elemental resistances in armor selection?
Important enough to factor into late-stage build optimization. Each armor piece has innate resistances (fire, water, thunder, ice, dragon) that combine across your full set. A set with -25 thunder resistance against a thunder-element monster takes significantly more damage per hit than a set with 0 or +10 resistance. Before finalizing your set, check total resistance values. Use Resist Jewels (Fire Res, Water Res, Thunder Res, Ice Res, Dragon Res) to fix deficits if changing armor pieces isn't an option. A balanced resistance baseline reduces total damage taken meaningfully.
When should I start augmenting armor?
Augmentation typically unlocks around MR50–MR60 once you have access to Tempered monster materials. Don't augment armor pieces you plan to replace soon — focus Augment investment on your meta endgame pieces (chest, helm primarily). Each Augment slot is roughly equivalent to adding one extra Lv 1 decoration to your build. Across all five armor pieces with full Augments, this can add 5–10 additional decoration capacity, which translates to meaningful skill expansion. Augment chest first (most impactful skills), helm second, then arms/waist/legs.
Sources & verification
- Capcom Monster Hunter Wilds Official Site (2025)
- Monster Hunter Wilds in-game Smithy crafting menus
- Monster Hunter Wilds community armor set builder reference
Continue this guide path
- ›Best High Rank Armor Sets in Monster Hunter Wilds — Top Picks by RoleHigh Rank armor in Monster Hunter Wilds unlocks a dramatic leap in skill slots, gem openings, and set bonuses. This guide covers the best HR armor sets for every major weapon category, their monster sources, and why each set earns its place in the endgame meta.
- ›MH Wilds Armor Progression Guide — Low Rank to High Rank TransitionsKnowing which armor to build at each stage of Monster Hunter Wilds prevents wasted materials and keeps you properly defended through the story campaign and into High Rank. This guide covers the best armor sets at each progression milestone, when to upgrade vs. craft fresh, and skill priorities for early hunters.
- ›Monster Hunter Wilds Decorations Guide — How to Get & Use Skill GemsComplete guide to decorations in Monster Hunter Wilds — how decoration slots work, how to get rare gems, the best decorations for each build, and the Melding Pot system explained.
- ›Monster Hunter Wilds Skill System Explained — How Skills, Levels & Caps WorkA complete breakdown of Monster Hunter Wilds' skill system: how skills are sourced from armor and decorations, how levels and caps work, and which skills matter most for every playstyle.
- ›Arkveld Materials Farming Guide — How to Get Arkveld Parts in MH WildsArkveld is one of Monster Hunter Wilds' most demanding endgame targets and the source of some of the best materials in the game. This guide covers the optimal hunt strategy, part break priorities, drop table details, and how to maximize rewards through investigation farming.