Alfa Pages
A forum for help with the Alfasud And Alfa 33
Welcome
Forums
∇
Main Forum
∇
Alfa Pages Forum Index
FAQ
Search
Memberlist
Usergroups
Register
Profile
Log in to check your private messages
Log in
Old discussion list
Alfa 33 Info
∇
Alfa 33 History
Unleaded Fuel
Gearbox Ratios
Fuel Injection
Tuning
Wheel Offsets
ML4.1 Injection
Manuals
Seat Modification
Speakers
Suspension Tuning
Rear Spring Rates
Suspension Overview
Special Tools
Links
∇
Links
Gallery
∇
Events
∇
Science Museum Alfa Show
Auto Italia at Castle Donington
My Hydrauliced Engine
Spring Alfa Day, 2009
Houten 2005
Spring Alfa Day, 2007
Series 1
∇
Three pictures of P4, with a very highly polished
The series 1 Giardinetta of Anthony Stoner.
The series 1 Green Cloverleaf Ian Kanik.
The series 1 33 of from Aus.
The series 1 33 Green Cloverleaf Alex Pape from Me
The Alfa 33 of Steven McNaught of Brisbane, Austra
The Alfa 33 of Andrew Mabbott of New South Wales,
Series 2
∇
A pair of Alfa 33's owned by Tony Corps
The series 2 33 of Jorge Vazquez
The series 2 TD of Llewellyn Oliver in South Afric
The series 2 Sportwagon with the Veloce kit of Hug
The Alfa 33 of Kris.
The Alfa 33 of Michael Petersen of Denmark.
Series 3
∇
A P4 emulating a P2 for the amusement of David Mac
The series 3 16V 33 of Roland Westerberg
A Alfa 33 16V owned by Lars Hoygaard Michaelsen.
The Alfa 33 owned by Emiliano˙Curia.
The Alfa 33 of Paul Devrieze.
Gritsops 1.4IE
Sprint
∇
The Alfa Sprint of Ken McCarthy.
The Alfa Sprint of Keren.
Alfa Pages Forum Index
->
General
Post a reply
Username
Subject
Message body
Emoticons
View more Emoticons
Font colour:
Default
Dark Red
Red
Orange
Brown
Yellow
Green
Olive
Cyan
Blue
Dark Blue
Indigo
Violet
White
Black
Font size:
Tiny
Small
Normal
Large
Huge
Close Tags
Options
HTML is
OFF
BBCode
is
ON
Smilies are
ON
Disable BBCode in this post
Disable Smilies in this post
Security Question
What is 2 + 2
Three
One
Four
Six
All times are GMT + 1 Hour
Jump to:
Select a forum
Global 33 Forums
----------------
General
Car Chat
Motorsport, Racing & Trackdays
Boxer Workshop
Boxer Restoration
For Sale & Wanted
Spotted A boxer Alfa
Gallery
General Forums
----------------
Introduce Yourself
Jokes & Funnies
Local Forums
----------------
UK
Mainland Europe
Australia & New Zealand
South America
Topic review
Author
Message
CobaltFlame
Posted: Mon Nov 17, 2025 3:00 am
Post subject: Core Mechanics Breakdown of Hinekora's Lock in PoE 2
Understanding how Hinekora’s Lock works in Path of Exile 2 is very important, especially if you want to manage your PoE 2 currency wisely and avoid wasting valuable items like
Divine Orbs, Perfect Regals, or Chromatic Shards
. Below is a simple, clear, and practical guide—written so even a kid can understand—while still giving real, useful tips you can use right away.
What Hinekora’s Lock Actually Does
Hinekora’s Lock is a special item that lets you “peek into the future” before you craft. When you use it with a crafting action, it shows what the outcome will be before you commit your real currency. This means you can check if the craft gives good stats or bad stats. If you don’t like the result, you simply don’t craft it. You only use your PoE 2 currency when the preview shows a result you’re happy with.
This mechanic is very strong because it saves you money and reduces randomness. Instead of gambling, you make smarter choices.
Why It Helps with Currency Management
If you often buy PoE 2 currency to speed up gearing, Hinekora’s Lock makes your spending much more efficient. Instead of wasting multiple rare or expensive crafting items, you use the lock to test results safely.
For example:
Trying to get +Life and +Resists? Check the result first.
Want a perfect roll on a weapon? Preview until the outcome looks good.
Working on sockets or links using special socket currency? Make sure the preview is what you need.
With this method, you are not only protecting your resources—you’re stretching every orb you have. Even if you get your currency from trading or sites like
u4gm
, you want every piece to count.
Best Ways to Use Hinekora’s Lock
Here are simple, practical strategies that actually work:
1. Use It Only on Expensive Crafts
If a craft costs cheap items, don’t waste the Lock. Save it for high-cost moves like:
Divine-style stat crafts
Rare mod rerolls
Late-game weapon upgrades
Amulet and ring suffix/prefix reforges
This ensures the lock provides real value every time.
2. Pair It with Currency That Has High Risk
Some PoE 2 currency gives random results with a big range of outcomes. These are PERFECT with Hinekora’s Lock:
Perfect Regal Orb
Artisan’s Orb
Chromatic Fusion Orb
Any “reforge” or “transform” craft
The lock lets you avoid the terrible rolls and keep only the winning ones.
3. Don’t Spam—Be Patient
Because you can preview the outcome first, patience becomes your strongest tool. You don’t need to rush. Check the result carefully:
Are the numbers high?
Are the mods the ones you want?
Does this item help your build?
If not, walk away. No currency wasted.
A Simple Step-By-Step Example
Choose an item you want to upgrade.
Use Hinekora’s Lock to preview the craft result.
If the stat roll is strong, use your real PoE 2 currency and lock in the upgrade.
If it's weak, do nothing—try again later.
Keep repeating until the preview shows something worth keeping.
This is one of the safest ways to craft in the entire game.
Final Useful Tips
Save your locks for endgame crafts.
Pair them with high-value orbs.
Don’t accept “okay” rolls—wait for great ones.
Always check if the item actually benefits your build.
Use them during big upgrades like weapons, chest armour, and amulets.
With these tips, Hinekora’s Lock becomes a powerful tool that makes your crafting safer, cheaper, and more controlled. It’s one of the best helpers for anyone trying to build strong gear without wasting precious resources.