I have always landed very steeply anyway... so unless the wind is really gusty, it isn't that noticeable...
the most important thing imo, is that when you finally do touch down at walking speed or less... that you actually point into the wind as you touch down...
I believe that many gyrocopter tip over/run off the runway type crashes, is when people have been taught to fly a gyro like a Cessna... landing at FW speeds, then trying to land at speed and follow the center line .... this is recipe for disaster in a gyro....
My suggestion (what works for me) is to fly a gyro, like a gyro.... not like a Cessna.
As I say often, a gyro is an awesome FLYING machine.... but a lousy GROUND machine.... Ground running such as taxying above walking speed (especially with stationary rotors) needs to be kept to a minimum.... landing speed needs to be kept to a minimum. Crosswind takeoff and landings in gyros shouldn't need to happen.... If the wind is strong enough across the strip to be any risk, in all of the machines I have flown, facing across the runway into the wind I could have the rotors up to speed and be off before the other side of the runway.... if there is spam cans around, once off, turn and fly down the runway so it looks a bit 'normal' for any spam canners on approach.
When landing, as I have said before, at an airport with spam cans around... I would line up with the runway, fly down to 5-10' off the ground, then slow down, slow down, slow down until a normal-ish taxi speed (but still flying) then 'air taxy' to the runway/taxy way turn..... if turning into the taxy way is into wind, I just plop it on as I finish turning and taxy along the taxy way.... If there is no other traffic around, keep air taxying til a safe distance from the parking area entrance.
If turning onto a taxy way facing down wind, I would just plop onto the runway before the turn.....
The reason for all of that, is that spam can pilots like to see normal stuff.... doing a swoop, stop and plop landing.... then a slow.... slow taxy is not normal to them.... and you know how 'forgiving' of anyone not doing anything 'normally' they are (not at all) So, I would make my landings look like their landings.... just to not have to listen to them whining
I remember at A couple of strips, there were spam cans of all varieties (parachute nationals were on) .... my machine was capable of 90kts, so on approach there might be a 172 or bigger, sometimes even a twin.... so I would approach at 75-80 kts...... level out 10' over the strip, then slowly back off the gas and lift the nose.... and be slow enough to touch down by the end of the strip
But, at least it 'looked normal' to them so they didn't bother me, because I didn't bother them.
So John, I would say, in my case, I would approach steeper, rather than faster.... which was probably both.... I didn't pay too much attention to air speed... it felt right.... but the critical thing is to not land at any speed with a crosswind....
Making not crashing great again ....