The Echo system is the key to growth in Wuthering Waves, and learning how to add new substats to them is crucial if you want to get stronger. One of the Echo tutorial quests requires you totune an Echo in the Echoes interface, but it doesn’t tell you which menu you need to go to in order to accomplish this task.
You’ll need to tune an Echo to complete theSilver-Haired Echo Trainerside quest for the Echo Hunters event, but most players will still be figuring out the intricacies of the Echo system at this point in the game. If you’re having a hard time figuring out how exactly you’re supposed to tune an Echo, here’s where you may find the Echo interface.

How to Tune Echoes in Wuthering Waves
To tune an Echo in Wuthering Waves, you first need to open the Echo interface. Just open theResonatormenu and select any of your characters. Then, click theEchotab to manage their equipped Echoes.
Select any Echo and you’ll be able to tune it by clicking the icon withthree lines and an arrowon the left side of the screen. Tuning an Echounlocks new substatsfor it, but you need to level it up first before you can do so.Every five levelsunlocks a new tuning slot for an Echo, so higher rarity Echoes will naturally have more potential substats because of their higher level caps.
Tuning requiresspecial upgrade materials, so onlyupgrade your best Echoesunless you want to run out of resources. To complete the Silver-Haired Echo Trainer quest, you only need to tune a single Echo once. Just upgrade any Echo to level five and unlock one new substat for it to move on.
Echo tuning isthe real endgame grindof Wuthering Waves. You’ll need the best of the best substats on your Echoes to get the most damage from your team of Resonators, so stocking up onSealed Tubesand other Echo upgrade materials is key if you want to take on endgame content like the Tower of Adversity.
Diego Perez
Currently serving as a Senior Staff Writer at PC Invasion, Diego Perez has been writing about video games since 2018, specializing in live service games like Destiny and Final Fantasy XIV. His work is featured at publications like Game Rant and Attack of the Fanboy (where he served as Associate Editor), but PC Invasion is home to his best work. When he’s planning content or writing guides, he’s yelling about Ape Escape or grinding Lost Sectors in Destiny. Plus, he has a Bachelor of Science in Telecommunication Media Studies for Texas A&M University.