Layla, Genshin Impact’s new female character, shown from all sides and looked under the dress

Cognosphere studio recently revealed which characters will be playable in update 3.2 for Genshin impact. The patch will be released in five weeks, on November 2.

In the next patch, players will be able to take control of two heroines from the Sumeru region: the long-awaited Dendro Archon Nahida, also known as the Little Master of Kusanali, and the High Elf Layla. The first has already appeared in the plot of the game, and the second was first shown by the authors. Upon the announcement, the developers published art featuring Layla, and the CBT participants leaked renders featuring the new heroine to the network so you can see what she’ll look like in the game itself.

A video has also appeared, showing the heroine from all sides.

Layla becomes a 4-star cryo character with a one-handed sword.

Layla, Genshin Impact's new female character, shown from all sides and looked under the dress

Today, September 28, the game received a major update 3.1, which continued the main story, added a large “desert” location, three playable characters (Saino, Kandakia and Neela), a boss and quests.

Earlier, we remember, a fan united Mona and Lisa into one heroine. And the network also showed an adult version of Kusanali, Dendro Archon from Sumeru.⌚️ Kojima has a double collaboration right away – with NASA and Anicorn

Source: VG Times

Popular

More from author

Ukraine received 18 thousand artillery ammunition from Germany in one month 18:37

Kiev received from Berlin 18 thousand pieces of 155 mm caliber artillery ammunition, as well as ammunition for German Leopard 2A6 tanks. This...

A 3-kilogram hairball was removed from the stomach of a female student in England. 19:00

A 3-kilogram hairball was removed from the stomach of a 13-year-old schoolgirl in England. Daily Star. When Melissa Williams was hospitalized because she couldn't eat,...

Mia Boyka talked about her mother’s religious prohibitions and instructions 18:48

Singer Mia Boyka, in an interview with VK Video's "Session" program, recalled that she goes to church six times a week because of her...

Scientists find that alcoholism destroys the brain’s inhibitory networks 17:08

British scientists from the University of Cambridge examined the effect of chronic alcohol consumption on brain structures. They concluded that alcoholism severely damages...