The main story provides the highest XP yield per hour. Stick to the main path through Alexandria and Memphis to level up quickly. 2. Complete Side Missions
Enough to unlock key skills in the Warrior, Hunter, and Seer trees.
If you've already completed the game on console and are switching to PC, a save file allows you to skip the tutorial-heavy early hours [Ubisoft Support]. --- Assassin 39-s Creed Origins Save Game Level 30 Codex
Bayek dodged the first heavy swing, the axe head missing his nose by inches. He countered with a swift shield bash, staggering the brute, then drove his dual blades into the gap in the armor. A satisfying crack echoed as the Adrenaline surged through his veins, allowing him to chain the attack into a devastating Overpower ability.
At Level 30, the codex measures not by experience points but by repair: healed stitches, returned tokens, debts repaid with bread and light instead of knives. The missions are softer but no less dangerous. In Faiyum, the stolen horse sits in a merchant’s display among contraband. The player could buy it or sneak it. The codex insists on the latter, adding a subtle modifier: if you steal and return, the woman’s gratitude will change the way certain NPCs greet you in future—small social consequences that the codex counts but never explains. It is the file’s own private morality engine. The main story provides the highest XP yield per hour
Reaching Level 30 is a significant milestone. At this stage, Bayek is powerful enough to tackle most regions in the main game and has access to advanced Ability Tree Ability Points:
Locate your current save folder and copy all contents to a secure backup folder on your desktop. This prevents permanent data loss if the new file corrupts. Complete Side Missions Enough to unlock key skills
Move the extracted .sav files directly into the Codex save directory. If prompted to overwrite existing files, confirm the action.
What of the game are you currently running?
You walk into the market like a man carrying a wound he is not ready to show. The woman sees the ledger and does not shriek or call guards. She traces the names with fingers that smell of sugar and sun. She reads the name and weeps—not for vengeance, but for the child the name represented. She asks Bayek for a favor: to find one small shop in Faiyum that holds a token—a wooden horse—taken years ago from her brother. The token is a memory. The codex marks this as “Repair.”