
So, you want all the juicy ways to farm gems in War Inc: Rising without turning the game into a second job? Pull up a chair, Commander—this is exactly the kind of grindy, slightly chaotic journey I live for.
How I First Got Hooked On Gems
When I first booted up War Inc: Rising, I treated gems like that “just in case” snack in the fridge—I hoarded them, stared at them, and refused to touch them. Then one night, half-asleep, I mis-tapped and dumped a chunk of my gems into something totally useless… and suddenly decided I should probably learn how to get them properly instead of crying over my own clumsiness.
From that point on, I basically turned into a gem truffle-pig: if there was a hidden source, I was sniffing it out.
The Easy Wins: Daily Stuff You Should Never Skip
Let’s start with the boring-but-broken-good basics: the stuff you can do every day without sweating.
Daily logins: Log in, grab your freebies, log out if you’re busy—just don’t miss them. Some days it’s a tiny drip, some days it’s a fat gem injection, but it all stacks up over a week.
Achievements and missions: Any time I see a red dot on quests or achievements, my caveman brain goes “shiny” and taps it. Those “do X battles” or “upgrade Y times” tasks often sneak gems in there.
Mailbox and event rewards: This is where I’ve found random gem drops just sitting there because I forgot to check for a few days. Nothing feels more “main character energy” than opening your mail and getting showered with stuff you didn’t even remember earning.
Free shop chests: Most games like this throw in a free chest or refresh timer shop rewards that occasionally include small gem amounts or things you’d normally buy with gems. Set a mental timer, or, if you’re like me, just check it compulsively every time you’re waiting for your coffee.
Tiny bits, sure—but this is idle-strategy land; the whole game is secretly about stacking small wins.
Game Modes That Quietly Feed You Gems
One of my favorite moments in any game is when I realize, “Oh, this mode is secretly the ATM.”
In War Inc: Rising, here’s how I treat it:
Push as far as you can in the main progression: The game loves milestone rewards—chapters, levels, power thresholds. When I’m low on gems, I deliberately push a little harder in whatever “main” mode the game is nudging me toward.
Events and limited-time modes: If there’s an event going on, I treat it like a temporary job that actually pays in gems. Even if you can’t rank high, just hitting participation or point milestones often pays out a few.
Co-op or clan activities: If there are rewards tied to team play, do them. I’ve had sessions where I jumped in “just to help the squad” and walked away with more gems than I planned on earning that day.
PvP / arena ladders: I’m not always in the mood to sweat in PvP, but climbing certain rank thresholds can drop gems or premium currency. I usually do a burst of PvP at the start of a season, hit a comfy rank, and then coast.
My rule of thumb: if a mode has a “progress bar,” “ladder,” or “milestones,” it probably throws gems (or gem-equivalent value) at you somewhere along the way.
F2P Gem Strategy: How I Spend (And Don’t Cry Later)
Let’s talk about the part where we don’t sabotage ourselves.
Here’s how I treat gems as a mostly free-to-play gremlin:
Never impulse-spend: If a pop-up appears with a timer, my default answer is “no” unless it’s something I already decided I wanted. Timers exist to bully your brain.
Prioritize long-term value: In games like this, things like:
Permanent progression boosts
Battle passes or gem passes you can consistently complete
High-value bundles of summons or chests
usually beat one-off “speed up this building” or “buy this random chest” clicks.
Avoid single pulls if 10-pulls exist: If the game has pity timers or better odds on multi-summons, I hoard gems until I can do those. Yes, it hurts. Yes, it pays off.
Don’t gem-rush everything: Speeding up upgrades with gems feels great for four seconds and dumb five minutes later. I only speed up when it unlocks a new system or lets me complete a mission that also pays out more gems or premium stuff.
I basically treat my gem stash like a strategy resource, not a panic button.
My Most “Oops” Gem Moment (Learn From My Pain)
One time, I was half-watching a show and half-upgrading my base—bad combo—and I fat-fingered a “Finish Now” button that ate a stupid amount of gems just to shave, like, 15 minutes off a timer.
I wish I could say I stayed calm and rational, but I definitely just stared at the screen in silence, rethinking my life choices.
Since then, I’ve done this:
Turn off “quick confirm” or double-check anything that spends large amounts.
Never upgrade sleepy. If my eyes are drooping, I just queue long upgrades and walk away.
Keep a personal “no touch” minimum: I always try to keep a base amount of gems I don’t go under, unless there’s a truly huge value opportunity.
Highly recommend having a little internal “bank account floor” like that. Your future self will want to high-five you.
Optional Spending: If You’re Willing To Drop A Few Euros
If you’re not strictly free-to-play and you’re okay spending a bit, the trick is getting the most gems for the least regret.
What usually feels worth it to me in games like War Inc: Rising:
Low-cost battle passes: If the pass gives a ton of premium currency and you actually play enough to complete it, it’s often the best gem-per-euro value.
Gem passes or small recurring packs: Those “a few gems every day” deals can stack nicely if you log in regularly.
Avoid big, flashy one-time offers: The giant “80% value!!!” banners are mostly emotional marketing. I only bite if I can clearly see the math giving me better value than the pass.
If you want a quick “do this every day” loop:
Log in, grab daily login, free shop items, and mail.
Knock out daily missions and any easy achievements lingering.
Push a bit in your main progression mode for milestone rewards.
Check events, do the low-effort tasks that give gems or premium loot.
Save gems for big value moments: multi-summons, passes, and long-term boosts.
And most importantly: don’t let gem FOMO ruin the fun.