

Using this information, you can identify which parts to go for and which parts to ignore. You can do something fancy and make a spreadsheet to track it, or just hit up the Raid: Shadow Legends subreddit like I did and find someone who made one like this: This gives you the list of available rare/epic champions available and the schedule of events. When the fusion summon event starts, the news feed will have a list of all of the events pertaining to it. Fusion events take more resources to rank, level and ascend, but yield the option of keeping only the epics you fuse if you can’t get or don’t want the legendary. Fusion events function similar in that you’ll need to participate and progress in regular events and tourneys, but fusion events give you rare champions (and a couple of epics at high levels) that must be ranked up to 4*, ascended and leveled fully, then fused into epic champions which must be ranked to 5*, ascended and leveled. You can only earn these for a limited time, but, as long as you collect at least 100 fragments, you can fuse the champ any time. Tl dr at the very end.įragment events require you to complete regular events and tournaments up to a certain point to gain fragments of a specific legendary champion.

As with the previous guide, this is mostly for players who aren’t already experienced in completing these types of events or who just want a more efficient way of looking at them. In this guide, we’ll break down the differences between the two types, give you a path to guaranteed success in fusing your legendary champion, and show you how to see if you’re ready to attempt the resource intensive event. Unlike the fragment events, fusion events have you collecting rare champions from the events instead of fragments. Essentially, there is a specific legendary champion that can be summoned if you collect enough rewards from most all of the events and tournaments for a couple of weeks. Fusion events are functionally similar to the fragment events that we did a guide on before.
