Genshin Impact Mizuki Build Guide, Weapons & Team Comps
Yumemizuki Mizuki is a 5-star Anemo Catalyst character who plays best as an on-field Swirl driver and healer. Instead of acting like a traditional CRIT-based Anemo DPS, Mizuki wants to stay active, maintain her floating Dreamdrifter stance, trigger repeated Swirl reactions, and keep the party healthy through her Burst.
This Mizuki build guide covers her best weapons, artifacts, main stats, talent priority, team comps, constellations, and practical rotation notes based on the latest available build information.

Mizuki Build at a Glance
| Category | Recommendation |
| Rarity | 5-star |
| Element | Anemo |
| Weapon | Catalyst |
| Main role | On-field Swirl driver / healer |
| Scaling focus | Elemental Mastery |
| Talent priority | Elemental Skill > Elemental Burst > Normal Attack |
| Best artifact set | 4-piece Viridescent Venerer |
| Alternative artifact set | 4-piece Gilded Dreams |
| Sands | Elemental Mastery or Energy Recharge |
| Goblet | Elemental Mastery |
| Circlet | Elemental Mastery or Healing Bonus |
| Key substats | Energy Recharge > Elemental Mastery > HP% |
For most accounts, Mizuki should be built around Elemental Mastery, enough Energy Recharge to Burst smoothly, and the utility of Viridescent Venerer. Her personal value comes from driving reactions and supporting the team, so forcing a standard ATK/Anemo/CRIT build is usually less efficient unless you are deliberately experimenting with a damage showcase setup.
Mizuki Character Profile
| Attribute | Details |
| Full name | Yumemizuki Mizuki |
| Element | Anemo |
| Weapon | Catalyst |
| Progression stat | Elemental Mastery |
| Main job | On-field driver, reaction enabler, healer |
| Best reactions | Swirl, Electro-Charged, Aggravate support, Freeze support, Melt/Vaporize enabling |

Mizuki's gameplay is built around her Elemental Skill, Dreamdrifter. After using it, she enters a floating state that lets her move through the battlefield while periodically dealing Anemo damage to nearby enemies. Because these hits can trigger Swirl, Mizuki works especially well with teammates who apply Pyro, Hydro, Electro, or Cryo from off field.
Her Elemental Burst provides AoE Anemo damage, crowd-control utility against smaller targets, and healing through special snacks. This gives Mizuki a valuable hybrid identity: she is not only enabling reactions, but also covering the sustain slot in many teams. That role compression is the reason she can fit into so many elemental shells.
How Mizuki's Kit Works
Mizuki wants to enter the field after teammates have already placed their off-field effects. Once Pyro, Hydro, Electro, or Cryo is active on enemies, Mizuki uses Dreamdrifter to trigger repeated Swirls while her party abilities continue dealing damage.
Her basic loop is:
1. Set up off-field elemental application and buffs.
2. Switch to Mizuki and use Elemental Skill.
3. Stay active in Dreamdrifter, moving through enemies and triggering Swirls.
4. Use Elemental Burst when healing, grouping, or extra Anemo application is needed.
5. Refresh teammate abilities and repeat.

Because Swirl damage scales with character level and Elemental Mastery, Mizuki benefits heavily from reaching level 90. A level 80 Mizuki with the same artifacts can feel noticeably weaker in reaction damage, so leveling her is one of the most reliable upgrades after weapon and artifact basics are settled.
Mizuki Talent Priority
| Talent | Priority | Why it matters |
| Elemental Skill: Dreamdrifter | Highest | Core stance, field time, and repeated Anemo application |
| Elemental Burst | High | Healing, AoE Anemo damage, and utility |
| Normal Attack | Low | Useful only as filler; not the core of most Mizuki builds |
Elemental Skill
Level Mizuki's Elemental Skill first. Dreamdrifter defines her entire playstyle and determines how comfortably she can act as an on-field reaction driver. If you are short on talent materials, this is the one talent that should not be neglected.
Elemental Burst
Level the Burst second. It improves Mizuki's healing window and gives her a stronger emergency button when the team needs recovery. The Burst also helps stabilize teams that run more aggressive off-field damage units instead of dedicated defensive supports.
Normal Attack
Normal Attack is the lowest priority. Mizuki may weave attacks depending on the rotation, but the value of the build comes from Swirl driving, EM scaling, and healing support rather than raw Normal Attack multipliers.
Best Weapons for Mizuki
Mizuki prefers Catalysts that provide Elemental Mastery, Energy Recharge, team utility, or supportive passives. CRIT weapons are generally less valuable unless you are building an off-meta personal damage variant.

| Weapon | Type | Why it works |
| Sunny Morning Sleep-In | 5-star signature | Best EM-focused option; stacks more EM through Swirl, Skill hits, and Burst hits |
| A Thousand Floating Dreams | 5-star | High EM and strong team utility in reaction teams |
| Sacrificial Fragments | 4-star | High EM and a chance to reset Skill cooldown |
| Wandering Evenstar | 4-star | EM stat plus team ATK support based on EM |
| Mappa Mare | 4-star craftable | Accessible EM option with elemental damage bonus after reactions |
| Favonius Codex | 4-star | Solves team Energy issues if Mizuki can trigger its passive |
| Hakushin Ring | 4-star craftable | Useful in Electro-Charged or Aggravate-style teams |
| Prototype Amber | 4-star craftable | Extra healing and Energy if the team needs more sustain |
| Thrilling Tales of Dragon Slayers | 3-star | Cheap support option for buffing a dedicated DPS |
Sunny Morning Sleep-In
Sunny Morning Sleep-In is Mizuki's signature weapon and her strongest all-around option when you want maximum Elemental Mastery. Its EM substat and EM-stacking passive align perfectly with Mizuki's Swirl-focused kit. If you want Mizuki to be a high-investment on-field driver, this is the premium weapon to beat.
A Thousand Floating Dreams
A Thousand Floating Dreams is excellent because it gives a large amount of Elemental Mastery and can also help the rest of the team. It is not tailored specifically to Mizuki's kit the way her signature is, but it remains a very strong 5-star Catalyst for reaction-heavy teams.
Sacrificial Fragments
Sacrificial Fragments is one of Mizuki's best 4-star options. The EM main stat is immediately useful, and the cooldown reset can make her rotations more flexible. The reset is not always necessary, but when it triggers at the right time, it lets Mizuki extend her pressure or recover from a missed setup.
Wandering Evenstar
Wandering Evenstar is valuable when Mizuki has high EM and teammates appreciate extra ATK. It is especially good in teams where Mizuki is supporting off-field damage dealers rather than acting as the only meaningful damage source.
Mappa Mare
Mappa Mare is the practical free-to-play pick. It is craftable, gives Elemental Mastery, and rewards Mizuki for triggering reactions. It does not have the comfort of Sacrificial Fragments or the ceiling of her signature, but it is more than enough for a functional build.
Favonius Codex
Favonius Codex is for teams with Energy problems. Mizuki is often on field, so she can help generate particles if she has enough CRIT Rate to activate the passive. This is not her best damage weapon, but it can make the full rotation feel much cleaner.
Best Artifacts for Mizuki
1. Viridescent Venerer
4-piece Viridescent Venerer is Mizuki's default best artifact set in most teams. It increases Swirl damage and, more importantly, reduces enemy resistance to the Swirled element. Since Mizuki is already driving Swirls from the field, she can keep this resistance shred active with very little extra effort.
Use Viridescent Venerer when Mizuki is supporting:
· Electro-Charged teams
· Pyro, Hydro, Cryo, or Electro off-field damage dealers
· Freeze teams that want Hydro and Cryo spread
· Aggravate teams that benefit from Electro resistance shred
· General reaction teams where Swirl uptime matters
2. Gilded Dreams
4-piece Gilded Dreams is a good personal EM alternative. It can give Mizuki a large amount of Elemental Mastery, which improves Swirl damage and healing-related value. However, it lacks Viridescent Venerer's resistance shred, so it is usually worse for team damage unless another Anemo unit is already holding Viridescent Venerer.
3. Ocean-Hued Clam
Ocean-Hued Clam can be considered if you want to emphasize healing output and convert some of that healing into extra damage. It is not the standard recommendation, but it can be comfortable in casual play or sustain-heavy teams.
4. Two-Piece Combos
While farming, use any strong two-piece combination that gives:
· Elemental Mastery
· Energy Recharge
· Healing Bonus
· HP% if you need extra survivability
Substats matter more than forcing a weak 4-piece set. A clean mixed build with enough Energy Recharge often performs better than a full set with poor rolls.
Artifact Main Stats and Substats
| Slot | Recommended main stat |
| Sands | Elemental Mastery or Energy Recharge |
| Goblet | Elemental Mastery |
| Circlet | Elemental Mastery or Healing Bonus |
Substat priority:
Energy Recharge until comfortable > Elemental Mastery > HP% > CRIT Rate if using Favonius Codex
If Mizuki cannot Burst on schedule, use an Energy Recharge sands or a Favonius weapon. If her Burst is already consistent, Elemental Mastery is the better offensive and utility stat.
For Favonius Codex builds, add enough CRIT Rate through substats to trigger the passive reliably. You do not need a full CRIT build; just enough rate to make the weapon do its job.
Best Mizuki Teams
Mizuki's teams are built around off-field elemental application. She wants teammates who can create an aura for her to Swirl while she stays active.
Electro-Charged Driver
Mizuki + Furina + Fischl + Yae Miko or Ororon
This is one of Mizuki's most natural team styles. Hydro and Electro coexist on enemies, allowing Mizuki to Swirl and spread both elements while off-field units continue dealing damage. Furina appreciates Mizuki's healing because it helps maintain Fanfare generation and keeps the team stable.
Rotation idea:
Furina Skill/Burst > Fischl Skill > Yae Miko Skill setup or Ororon setup > Mizuki Skill > Mizuki Burst as needed > continue driving Swirls
Aggravate Swirl Support
Mizuki + Nahida + Fischl + Yae Miko or Kuki Shinobu
In Aggravate teams, Mizuki can Swirl Electro and reduce Electro resistance with Viridescent Venerer while Nahida maintains Dendro application. Fischl and Yae Miko benefit heavily from consistent Electro reactions, and Mizuki provides healing without taking away too much team structure.
If you use Kuki Shinobu, the team becomes safer but may lose some damage. If you use Yae Miko, the ceiling rises but the team depends more on Mizuki's healing and positioning.
Freeze Driver
Mizuki + Furina or Mona + Ganyu or Ayaka + Diona or Shenhe
Mizuki can help Freeze teams by Swirling Hydro and Cryo across grouped enemies. She is especially comfortable when the team wants Anemo utility and healing in one slot.
Use Diona for shielding, healing backup, and lower investment comfort. Use Shenhe when you want higher Cryo damage and are confident that Mizuki's healing is enough for the content.
Melt or Vaporize Enabler
Mizuki + Bennett + Xiangling + Cryo or Hydro DPS
Mizuki can function as a Swirl enabler in teams that want Pyro spread, resistance shred, and healing compression. Xiangling and Bennett form the classic Pyro core, while the final slot depends on whether you want Melt or Vaporize pressure.
This setup can be strong, but it requires more attention to aura ownership. If Pyro application overwhelms the enemy, the intended DPS may not trigger reactions consistently. Test the rotation before committing all resin and upgrades into this archetype.
Accessible Free-to-Play Team
Mizuki + Xingqiu + Fischl + Xiangling
This is a practical account-friendly team. Xingqiu supplies Hydro, Fischl supplies Electro, Xiangling adds Pyro damage, and Mizuki drives reactions while keeping the team alive. It can become chaotic, but that chaos is exactly why Mizuki's repeated Swirls are valuable.
If Energy feels rough, replace one unit with a battery or use Favonius weapons where possible.
Mizuki Rotations
A general rotation looks like this:
Off-field elemental skills and bursts > Mizuki Elemental Skill > drive Swirls in Dreamdrifter > Mizuki Burst when healing or grouping is needed > refresh supports
For Furina teams:
Furina Skill > Furina Burst > Electro or second elemental setup > Mizuki Skill > Mizuki Burst > continue driving
For Viridescent Venerer setups, make sure Mizuki Swirls the element you actually want to shred. If the enemy has the wrong aura, refresh your support abilities and try again before committing the full damage window.
Mizuki Constellation Value
Mizuki is complete at C0. Her core role as an on-field reaction driver and healer does not require constellations, which makes her friendly for players who only want one copy.

C1
C1 improves Mizuki's Swirl-related damage during Dreamdrifter. It is a strong early constellation if you want her personal contribution to feel more noticeable, especially in teams that trigger Swirl constantly.
C2
C2 is usually the most attractive stopping point for higher-investment players. Its resistance reduction and EM-based elemental damage support can raise team damage significantly, especially for Pyro, Hydro, Cryo, and Electro teammates.
C4
C4 improves comfort by adding Energy restoration and extra healing value tied to Mizuki's Burst mechanics. This is useful, but it is more of a quality-of-life constellation than a must-pull damage spike.
C6
C6 is the luxury constellation. It dramatically improves Swirl damage rules by allowing nearby party members' Swirl damage to score CRIT hits under its conditions. This is powerful for dedicated Mizuki fans, but far beyond what is needed for a normal build.
Should You Pull Mizuki?
Pull Mizuki if you want:
· An on-field Anemo driver with healing
· A flexible reaction unit for Electro-Charged, Freeze, Aggravate, and mixed-element teams
· A character who scales well with Elemental Mastery
· A comfortable Furina teammate
· A unit who compresses reaction driving and sustain into one slot
Skip or delay Mizuki if you want:
· A traditional hypercarry with simple CRIT scaling
· A pure off-field Anemo support
· A character who can fit into every team without caring about aura setup
· A build that does not need level 90 or EM farming
Conclusion
Mizuki is best understood as a reaction engine with healing attached. Her strongest builds focus on Elemental Mastery, Viridescent Venerer, and enough Energy Recharge to keep her Burst available when the team needs recovery. With the right off-field teammates, she can continuously Swirl important elements, reduce enemy resistance, and keep the party stable through longer fights.For most players, the recommended path is simple: level Mizuki to 90, equip 4-piece Viridescent Venerer, use an EM or Energy-focused Catalyst, and pair her with strong off-field elemental applicators. From there, you can tune the build toward more damage, more healing, or more Energy depending on the team.











































