Web of Corruption Prep: the smartest way to handle two fusions
Web of Corruption Prep: the smartest way to handle two fusions
The biggest takeaway from the Web of Corruption rollout is simple: this is not a normal “do everything” event. With a brand-new event dungeon, two fusion tracks, and a wave of free rewards tied to the broader promotion, the best move is to plan around value, not hype. Players who rush every milestone will bleed resources; players who pick the right targets can come out ahead even on a limited budget.
What matters most
A fusion event is only worth fully committing to when the resulting champion clearly upgrades your account. That standard is higher for late-game players, but it is even more important for F2P accounts. If the fusion champ is a long-term Arena or Hydra piece, it may justify a deep push. If the kit is narrow, a partial completion path or fragment-only effort is usually the better play.
The same logic applies to the new content. A fresh dungeon boss is often designed to punish greedy auto teams, so early testing should focus on survivability, debuff reliability, and turn-meter control rather than raw damage. If a team cannot stabilize, the answer is usually better cleanse, better healing, or stronger protection—not more attack.
F2P priorities
For free-to-play players, the safest approach is to hoard before the event starts:
- Save energy refill sources for the highest-value tournaments.
- Keep mystery shards and green food ready for summon checkpoints.
- Bank silver for gear enhancement milestones.
- Avoid chasing every side event unless it feeds directly into the fusion.
A disciplined account can often complete one major fusion and make meaningful progress on the second, but only if resources are allocated with a hard budget. Two simultaneous fusion paths are a trap if you treat them as mandatory.
When spending helps
P2W players have more flexibility, but spending still needs structure. The best purchases are usually energy, sparing gem refills, and any pack that directly accelerates fusion milestones. Random shard chasing is far riskier than targeted progress.
Champion notes that matter
A few recent high-end champions show the kind of utility modern content rewards. Bayek brings a valuable 70 ACC all-battles aura, making him immediately appealing for accounts that struggle to land debuffs in difficult content. Kurosa the Covetous offers a 35% ATK all-battles aura and sits in the Mythical tier, which makes her a premium option when raw offensive scaling matters. King Gallcobar, meanwhile, is a Legendary support from the Sylvan Watchers faction and fits the kind of sustained utility that tends to perform well in new PvE encounters.
Bottom line
Treat Web of Corruption as a resource test, not a checklist. Pick one fusion goal, preserve your energy, and only invest heavily if the final reward or dungeon progression genuinely improves your account. That is how you turn a crowded event calendar into real account growth.