logo
Garena Free Fire Max: August 13 redeem codes to win weapon skins, diamonds

Garena Free Fire Max: August 13 redeem codes to win weapon skins, diamonds

Garena Free Fire Max has rolled out redeem codes for August 13, giving players a chance to unlock a range of exclusive in-game goodies. These can include rare costumes for characters, distinctive weapon skins, diamond bundles, and other premium items that are usually hard to obtain through standard gameplay.
Like most Free Fire Max codes, these come with a short validity window and a fixed redemption limit. Once the quota is filled or the deadline passes, the codes become invalid. To secure these special rewards, players should claim them without delay.
Below is today's list of working codes, followed by simple instructions to redeem them and collect your rewards directly within the game.
As per a report by InsideSport, active redeem codes for August 13 are:
F2Q6W1E9R4T7Y3U5
F8I4O2P6A9S3D1F7
F6Y4T8R2E5W1Q9Z3
F1O5P9A3S7D2F6G8
F9M3N7B1V5C8X2Z4
F2E8R4T6Y1U9I3O5
F4N8M2B6V1C7X3Z5
F5L1K7J3H9G4F2E6
F8Z2X6C4V9B1N7M3
F3Q7W5E1R8T2Y6U4
F6I9O3P7A2S5D1F8
F4N1M5B3V7C9X2Z6
F1G8H3J5K2L9M4N6
F5Z3X9C1V7B2N8M4
F7U1Y5T3R9E2W6Q4
F7U3Y9T1R6E4W8Q2
F1O6P2A8S4D9F3G7
F9M4N2B8V6C1X7Z3
Garena Free Fire Max redeem codes: How to use
Visit the official Rewards Redemption website for Garena Free Fire Max.
Log in using your preferred platform — Facebook, X, Google, or VK ID.
Copy the redeem codes from the list and paste them into the provided text box.
Once a Free Fire Max code is successfully redeemed, the rewards are sent straight to the player's in-game mailbox. For items like diamonds or gold, the account balance updates instantly.
These codes often unlock time-limited goodies such as Rebel Academy-themed outfits, Revolt Weapon Crates, Diamond Vouchers, and other rare cosmetic items that are not easily available in the store.
Each code is capped at 500 redemptions per day and usually remains valid for roughly twelve hours. This means players need to act fast to secure their rewards before the window closes.
ALSO READ:
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Independence Day 2025: Google Doodle Celebrates India's Legacy Through Traditional Tile Art
Independence Day 2025: Google Doodle Celebrates India's Legacy Through Traditional Tile Art

News18

timean hour ago

  • News18

Independence Day 2025: Google Doodle Celebrates India's Legacy Through Traditional Tile Art

August 15, 2025 Google Doodle is a tribute to India's unity, artistry, and the spirit of freedom. As India celebrates its 79th Independence Day today, here's a look at Google Doodles featured on August 15 over the past decade: (Image: Shutterstock) 2024: Google marked India's Independence Day with a Doodle by Vrinda Zaveri, highlighting 'Architecture' as this year's theme. The artwork features six doors and windows, symbolizing new beginnings and the limitless possibilities of an independent India. 2023: A Doodle by New Delhi-based guest artist Namrata Kumar celebrated India's rich textile traditions and their deep connection to national identity. (Image: 2022: Kerala-based artist Neethi illustrated a Doodle celebrating India's 75th Independence Day. The artwork paid tribute to the vibrant tradition of kite flying, showcasing the joy, craftsmanship, and sense of community it brings. (Image: 2021: This year's Doodle, created by Kolkata-based artist Sayan Mukherjee, was inspired by India's cultural heritage shaped over centuries. Google wrote: 'At the stroke of midnight on this day in 1947, India's decades-long movement for independence culminated as the nation became a sovereign republic.' (Image: 2017: Artist Sabeena Karnik, based in Mumbai, used a unique paper-cut technique to design a Doodle featuring India's Parliament House—capturing the spirit of the nation's democratic foundation. (Image: 2016: Google reimagined India's historic moment of independence through a Doodle that depicted Jawaharlal Nehru's famous 'Tryst with Destiny' speech, delivered in Parliament on the midnight of August 15, 1947. (Image: 2015: A Doodle illustrated by Leon Hong featured Mahatma Gandhi and commemorated the Salt March of 1930—one of the key events that sparked the Civil Disobedience Movement. (Image:

Embracing coding and culture: The humanities find a home in IITs
Embracing coding and culture: The humanities find a home in IITs

New Indian Express

time2 hours ago

  • New Indian Express

Embracing coding and culture: The humanities find a home in IITs

These shifts raise more fundamental questions. What do we mean by 'valuable' knowledge? Who has the privilege to decide what counts as literature, or art, or insight? For instance, take the Nobel Prize in Literature. When Dario Fo, the Italian playwright, won in 1997, and Bob Dylan in 2016, many critics baulked. They were not 'real' writers, some argued. While others saw it differently. After all, Fo and Dylan were both storytellers in a more encompassing way. Their stories were never supposed to just be read; they were meant to be heard, felt, and performed, like the epics of Homer and Kalidasa, the plays of Shakespeare. Maybe this was a return to the roots of literature. This very rethinking is happening in the humanities classrooms of IITs. Scholars are not only analysing printed texts; they are exploring how Instagram captions and hashtags shape public discourse; how digital platforms like YouTube, Facebook become the repository of language, art, and practice, indigenous or otherwise; or how algorithms control what we read, and how digital archives are reshaping our cultural memory. Discussing interdisciplinarity is much easier than doing it. Conventionally, research funding happened horizontally, but now momentum is building towards the diagonal, raising the question: what role should academics (and academic institutions) play in an evolving world characterised by technological acceleration and cultural upheaval? For decades, STEM disciplines were measured by quantifiable outputs: patents, products, and market impact. But that feels increasingly small in the wake of climate change, AI ethics, and social disconnection. Hence, the questions we face today are not only scientific; they are also social, cultural, and moral. What is emerging within these IITs is a conscious reframing for seeing code and computation in the larger context of history, ethics, language, and social practice. As India endeavours to establish itself as a globally relevant knowledge hub, this interdisciplinary current that is developing within the IITs is likely to be one of its greatest assets beyond metadata and computation. These institutions are not only edifying engineers and scientists but also training the next wave of thinkers who will grapple with the ethical, social, and political implications of their work. The growth of interdisciplinary research in the IITs will not simply depend on institutional changes, but is contingent upon the gradual shift in academic outlook and engagement. Moving in this direction will require institutional and intellectual courage to move beyond the comforts and legacy of established models, and seek a more inclusive, responsive way of 'knowing.' However, should the preliminary signs be considered, the journey has already begun. References Frodeman, Robert, Julie Thompson Klein, and Roberto C. S. Pacheco, eds. The Oxford Handbook of Interdisciplinarity. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017. Kaur, Ravinder. 'Locating the Humanities and the Social Sciences in Institutes of Technology.' Sociological Bulletin 54, no. 3 (2005): 412–27. (The author is an Associate Professor of English and Gender Studies at the Indian Institute of Technology, Patna)

NYU Big Tech Job Video Sparks Racist Backlash as Trump Targets Indian, Chinese Workers
NYU Big Tech Job Video Sparks Racist Backlash as Trump Targets Indian, Chinese Workers

Time of India

time3 hours ago

  • Time of India

NYU Big Tech Job Video Sparks Racist Backlash as Trump Targets Indian, Chinese Workers

An NYU Tandon video celebrating graduates landing roles at Google and Amazon drew a surge of racist remarks online. Many South Asian students featured were targeted over their ethnicity and accents, fueling renewed debate on immigration, H-1B visas, and anti-Asian prejudice in the US.#nyu #nyutandon #google #amazon #southasian #racism #onlinehate #immigration #h1bvisa #antiasianhate #usjobs #techindustry #socialmedia Read More

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store