Comparison
Game8 Neverness to EvernessvsGameWith NTE
Comparison between the two biggest "checklist" wikis for NTE. Game8 (anglo, multi-language) versus GameWith (Japanese, JP meta). Fine but meaningful differences.
Verdict
Game8 for global audiences with 6-language localization. GameWith for tracking the Japanese meta and advance banner schedule from the JP version.
Side-by-side
| Game8 Neverness to Everness | GameWith NTE | |
|---|---|---|
| Free | Yes | Yes |
| Open source | No | No |
| Official | No | No |
| Type | Web App | Web App |
| Platforms | Web | Web |
| Difficulty | Beginner | Beginner |
| License | — | — |
| Source | — | — |
| Verified | May 27, 2026 | May 27, 2026 |
Which to use for what
- Reading guides in Spanish, Japanese, Korean, or ChineseBetter pick: Game8 Neverness to Everness
Game8 supports English, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, and two Chinese variants. GameWith mainly Japanese and English only.
- Seeing which banners are confirmed months aheadBetter pick: GameWith NTE
GameWith publishes the banner schedule in the JP version, typically 1-2 versions ahead of global. Game8 covers the global schedule but less far ahead.
- Quick onboarding for a new NTE playerBetter pick: Game8 Neverness to Everness
Game8 has a more accessible checklist format and per-section TL;DRs. GameWith is denser and keeps a traditional wiki structure that's less friendly.
- Understanding why the JP meta differs from globalBetter pick: GameWith NTE
GameWith publishes directly from Japan with JP meta perspective. Game8 can show the contrast but its tier list reflects the global meta.
- Reading active-event guides with step-by-step formatBetter pick: Game8 Neverness to Everness
Game8 structures event guides in linear format with numbered bullets. GameWith covers them but with denser, less linear UI.
Game8 and GameWith are the two biggest checklist-style gacha-coverage brands. Both cover NTE with tier list, event guides, builds, and database. Editorially very similar, but fine differences matter depending on your profile.
The language factor
The most obvious difference: Game8 is localized to English, Spanish, Japanese, Korean, and two Chinese variants. GameWith publishes from Japan, with Japanese as its native language and English as a secondary translation.
If you read Spanish, Game8 saves you the translator step. Game8's Spanish translation quality is decent without being native — some forced anglicisms come through, but most guides are directly readable.
GameWith in English is functional but parts of the UI and newer sections retain Japanese terms. If your English is native, no problem; if you lean on a translator, the inconsistency bites.
The JP meta factor
GameWith publishes from Japan with a Japanese meta perspective. For global gachas, that often means advance info: banners confirmed months early, builds based on versions not yet at global, tier lists reflecting expected behavior after future patches.
If you track the CN/JP meta alongside global (either to plan spending early or because you're interested in pure meta), GameWith is an inevitable reference.
Game8 covers the global meta with a more anglo perspective: what's live now, without much anticipation of what's coming from other regions.
Tier list: two reads
Both publish NTE tier lists and sometimes disagree. The why is usually:
- GameWith ranks with future-version expectations. A character who's S+ in 1.0 but drops in 1.1 may already appear downgraded on GameWith before global sites catch up.
- Game8 ranks for the global version's active meta. More conservative with future stuff, more faithful to "what's happening now".
If you want to understand the global active meta without anticipation, Game8. If you want to project how the meta shifts before it arrives, GameWith.
Onboarding and format
Game8 is probably the more accessible of the two for new players. Guides have explicit TL;DRs at the top, clear numbered bullets, and step-by-step structure. For someone starting NTE, reading Game8 gives you the panorama in 20 minutes without getting lost.
GameWith keeps the traditional Japanese-wiki structure: long pages with dense tables, complex side navigation, and less emphasis on visual hierarchy. For users used to the JP format it's natural, but for anglo newcomers it can be confusing.
Ads and UX
Both sites monetize with aggressive ads, especially on mobile. GameWith probably more so; Game8 is also heavy but somewhat less invasive. If you play casually and read from your phone, consider uBlock or similar — unfiltered reading is hard on either one.
When to open each
| Need | Site |
|---|---|
| Reading in Spanish | Game8 |
| Tracking the JP/CN meta | GameWith |
| Quick onboarding for new player | Game8 |
| Banner schedule confirmed months ahead | GameWith |
| Event guides in accessible format | Game8 |
| Anticipating meta shifts via JP meta | GameWith |
Verdict
For most global players who only follow NTE on their server, Game8 is enough and more comfortable. Multi-language localization and accessible format make it the default reference.
GameWith enters when you want JP meta tracking or to see banner schedules ahead. For serious players or those coming from JP-tracking habits in other gachas (Genshin, HSR), it's a required complement.
For Spanish-speaking audiences specifically, Game8 wins without discussion thanks to the Spanish localization GameWith doesn't have.
Comprehensive wiki with team comps, tier lists, and accessible NTE guides in multiple languages
View Game8 Neverness to EvernessJapanese-style wiki with tier list, banner schedule, and dense NTE guides translated from the JP meta
View GameWith NTE