Sanctum of Absolution Antumbra’s Sword Step by Step
This guide is a complete, actionable, and player-first walkthrough for beating Antumbra’s Sword in Crimson Desert. The encounter is designed around rhythm, timing, and controlled aggression. If you go in swinging without a plan you will be punished; if you go in overly cautious you will miss windows to deal meaningful damage. The single most important mindset shift is to treat the fight as a loop of observe → bait → parry → punish → reset. Learn the cues, respect the boss’s reach, and you will turn a frustrating encounter into a reliable, repeatable victory. Throughout this guide I’ll use clear, practical language and highlight the keywords you asked for: Antumbra’s Sword, Crimson Desert, parry, Focus, Stab, Triple Illusion Strike, Vessel of Dark Pursuit, and bleed. These are the pillars of the strategy you’ll use.
Preparation and loadout essentials
Before you step into the Sanctum of Absolution to face Antumbra’s Sword, prepare deliberately. Upgrade your weapon and armor to the highest tier you can reasonably afford; aim for tier 3–4 minimum. The fight rewards precision more than raw stat advantage, but a few levels of gear will reduce the number of mistakes that become fatal. Equip a weapon that suits your playstyle but favors reach and quick recovery frames—spears and polearms are excellent because they let you punish from safer distances, while fast swords let you weave in and out of the boss’s attack windows.
Invest in Focus—this is non-negotiable for most players. Focus level 3 is the sweet spot: it slows time enough to convert risky moments into guaranteed parries and gives you breathing room to react to the boss’s teleport and illusion attacks. If your build allows, slot any passive or active that increases parry window or reduces stamina cost for blocking. Bring at least three high-heal consumables (Palmar Pills or equivalent), and carry food that gives steady health regeneration rather than burst heals; the fight has multiple short windows where you can’t heal, so steady regen helps.
For accessories and artifacts, prioritize anything that boosts stamina, focus recovery, or bleed application. If you have a weapon or artifact that increases bleed or damage-over-time effects, bring it—Stab combined with bleed is a core damage loop in this fight. Finally, set your camera to a comfortable distance and enable lock-on; the boss teleports and reappears with a smoke cue, and camera control will help you track reappearance without overcommitting.
Understanding Antumbra’s Sword core mechanics
Antumbra’s Sword uses three signature behaviors that define the encounter: the Triple Illusion Strike, a shadow teleport with a black mist reappearance cue, and a series of fast, long-reaching slashes that punish overcommitment. The Triple Illusion Strike begins with a wide sweeping slash that creates three spectral afterimages; each afterimage performs a follow-up slash or downward strike and often sends a thin sword wave across the arena. These waves are deceptively fast and can clip you even if you think you’re out of range. The teleport leaves a black mist where the boss will reappear; that mist is your cue to wait and punish rather than chase blindly.
Mechanically, the fight rewards parry more than raw evasion. When you successfully parry, Antumbra staggers and opens a short but high-value window for a heavy punish. Focus is the tool that turns risky blocks into guaranteed parries: when you enter Focus and block at the right moment, the game converts the incoming hit into a parry state. Learn the timing of the initial sweep and use Focus to make parries consistent. After a parry, your best follow-up is a short, high-damage combo that ends with Stab to apply bleed. The bleed ticks while you reset and bait the next opening, giving you passive damage that stacks with your active hits.
Phase flow and reading the boss
Antumbra’s Sword doesn’t have rigidly separated phases like some bosses, but its behavior changes as its health drops: attack frequency increases, teleport windows become more aggressive, and the boss mixes in longer combos that punish greedy players. Early in the fight you’ll see more single-sweep attacks and isolated illusions; mid-fight the Triple Illusion Strike appears more often and the teleport becomes a core repositioning tool; late-fight the boss chains multiple illusions and adds a heavy overhead slam that can break your guard if you’re not careful.
Reading the boss is about watching animation cues. The wind-up for the Triple Illusion Strike is a long, deliberate raise of the blade followed by a black ripple across the ground. The teleport is signaled by a swirl of shadow and a brief silence; when you see the black mist bloom, stop moving forward and prepare to block or dodge. The overhead slam telegraphs with a slow, high arc—if you see that, backstep or roll to the side and be ready to parry the follow-up. The more you fight Antumbra, the more these cues will become second nature; the goal is to internalize them so you can react without thinking.
The parry and punish loop in detail
The fight’s most reliable loop is Focus → parry → punish → Stab → reset. Here’s how to execute it consistently:
Enter Focus when you see the boss wind up for a heavy or sweeping attack. Focus slows time and increases your parry window.
Block at the moment of impact while in Focus. The game will convert the block into a guaranteed parry if timed correctly.
Punish immediately after the parry with a short, high-damage combo. Avoid long, committed animations; you want to hit, apply pressure, and be ready to back out.
Finish with Stab to apply bleed. Stab is fast, applies a reliable bleed, and lets you back away while the damage ticks.
Reset by moving to a safe distance, watching for the teleport smoke, and preparing to re-enter Focus for the next heavy.
This loop is repeatable and scales with your gear. If you can parry three times in a row and apply bleed each time, the boss’s health will melt. The trick is not to get greedy—after a parry and a couple of hits, back out and let the bleed do work while you prepare for the next window.
Movement, spacing, and camera control
Movement is as important as timing. Antumbra’s reach is long and its illusions create overlapping hitboxes. Use short, controlled steps rather than long sprints. When the boss teleports, lock your camera on it and watch the black mist; the reappearance is almost always at the smoke bloom. Don’t chase the boss through the mist—wait for the reappearance and strike immediately after the first visible blade movement. If you chase into the mist you’ll often run into a pre-emptive sweep or a trap.
Spacing matters: stay just outside the boss’s primary sweep range so you can bait the initial attack and step in for a parry. If you’re using a spear or polearm, maintain a mid-range distance where you can poke safely and retreat quickly. If you’re using a sword, be ready to weave in for quick combos and out for recovery. Camera control is crucial—set your camera to a distance that lets you see the boss’s full animation and the arena’s edges. Lock-on helps track teleport reappearances without losing orientation.
Offensive optimization and damage windows
Maximize damage by stacking short, high-value windows rather than long animations. After a parry, use a two- to three-hit combo that ends with Stab. If you have a weapon or artifact that increases bleed or damage-over-time, use it—bleed is especially valuable because it continues to chip away while you reset. Use Focus conservatively for parries; don’t waste it on minor attacks. Save Focus for the heavy wind-ups and the Triple Illusion Strike.
If you have burst tools like consumables that temporarily increase attack power or critical chance, use them right after a confirmed parry to maximize the damage of your punish. If you’re running a build with a high-damage heavy attack, only commit to it after a confirmed stagger; otherwise the boss will interrupt you and punish heavily. Timing is everything: a heavy attack that lands after a parry will often net more damage than several light hits that get interrupted.
Defensive priorities and recovery strategies
Defensively, prioritize stamina management and positioning. Don’t block indefinitely—blocking drains stamina and leaves you vulnerable to guard breaks. Use short rolls to avoid sword waves and overhead slams. If you’re low on health, retreat to a safe corner of the arena and let bleed and regeneration do their work while you re-enter Focus for the next parry window. Keep one high-heal consumable for clutch moments; if you get caught in a long combo, that single heal can be the difference between a wipe and a recovery.
If you’re struggling with timing, switch to a slightly more defensive build: increase stamina, equip gear that reduces incoming damage, and use artifacts that lengthen dodge invulnerability frames. This will make the fight longer but more manageable while you practice parries. Remember that the boss’s teleport is a repositioning tool—if you’re constantly chasing, you’ll be punished. Use the smoke cue to plan your next move.
Build recommendations and weapon choices
There are multiple viable builds for this fight, but they all share common traits: Focus investment, reliable bleed application, and a balance between reach and recovery. Here are three archetypes that work well:
Spear/Polearm Parry Build: Focus level 3, spear with bleed affix, stamina and focus recovery artifacts. Playstyle: maintain mid-range, bait sweeps, parry, step in for Stab and quick combos, back out.
Sword Agile Parry Build: Fast sword, high crit chance, moderate bleed. Playstyle: weave in for quick parries and light combos, rely on mobility to avoid illusions.
Heavy Two-Hander Stagger Build: High stagger damage, heavy armor, focus for parries. Playstyle: wait for confirmed staggers, commit to heavy hits, use Stab to apply bleed and then reset.
Choose the build that matches your comfort level. If you’re new to parrying, the spear build is the most forgiving because of its reach. If you’re confident with timing, the sword build rewards aggressive, precise play.
Consumables, artifacts, and optional tools
Bring consumables that increase focus regeneration, stamina recovery, or temporary damage boosts. Artifacts that increase parry window or reduce stamina cost for blocking are extremely valuable. If you have a one-use item that guarantees a critical hit or massively increases damage for a short time, save it for a confirmed parry window to maximize its value.
If you’re playing co-op, coordinate Focus usage so both players don’t waste it at the same time. In solo play, you can be more liberal with Focus but still save it for heavy wind-ups and the Triple Illusion Strike.
Common mistakes and how to fix them
Players often make the same mistakes repeatedly; recognizing and correcting them will speed up your learning curve. The most common errors are: chasing the boss through teleport smoke, overcommitting to long attack animations after a parry, and misusing Focus on minor attacks. To fix these, practice the observe → bait → parry → punish → reset loop in smaller encounters, force yourself to back out after two or three hits, and only use Focus for heavy telegraphed attacks.
Another frequent mistake is ignoring the arena’s geometry. Antumbra’s illusions and sword waves can clip you against walls; always keep an escape route and avoid getting cornered. If you find yourself cornered often, adjust your camera and movement so you maintain a clear path to retreat.
Advanced tactics and speedrun tricks
For advanced players looking to shave time off their runs, chain parries into Focus resets to maintain pressure. After a successful parry and Stab, immediately reposition to bait the next heavy and re-enter Focus so you can parry again. This creates a rhythm where you control the boss’s tempo. Use short invulnerability frames from well-timed rolls to avoid the thin sword waves while staying close enough to punish reappearances.
If you’re speedrunning, practice the boss’s teleport patterns and learn to predict reappearance locations based on the arena and the boss’s last position. Some players use micro-dashes to clip through the smoke and land a single hit before the boss completes its reappearance animation—this is high-risk but high-reward and requires frame-perfect timing.
Solo versus co-op considerations
In co-op, Antumbra’s Sword becomes more forgiving because you can split attention: one player baits and parries while the other punishes. Coordinate Focus usage so one player holds Focus for parries while the other uses damage buffs. Avoid both players chasing the boss into the same corner; spread out to cover reappearance angles.
Solo play demands more discipline. You must manage Focus, heals, and positioning alone. Use the bleed application strategy to create passive damage windows that buy you time to reposition and heal. If you’re struggling solo, consider summoning a friend or NPC to draw some of the boss’s attention while you practice parries.
Troubleshooting and practice drills
If you can’t consistently parry, practice on smaller enemies with similar wind-ups. Create a drill: enter a small arena, find an enemy that uses a sweeping attack, and practice entering Focus and blocking at the exact moment of impact. Repeat until the timing becomes muscle memory. Another drill is to practice the Stab follow-up: after a parry, execute Stab and immediately back out—this conditions you to avoid overcommitting.
Record your runs if possible and watch where you die. Are you getting clipped by sword waves? Are you chasing through smoke? Are you getting hit during long animations? Identifying the exact failure point is the fastest way to improve.
Rewards and post-fight optimization
Defeating Antumbra’s Sword yields unique rewards such as the Vessel of Dark Pursuit and rare upgrade materials. After the fight, spend your materials wisely: upgrade the weapon you plan to use for the next major encounter and invest in artifacts that complement your playstyle. If you got the Vessel, test it in a safe area to learn its move set and synergies with your build.
Final checklist before the run
Gear: Tier 3–4 weapon and armor.
Focus: Level 3 recommended.
Consumables: 3 heals, one clutch heal, damage buff consumable.
Artifacts: Stamina, focus recovery, bleed boost.
Camera: Comfortable distance, lock-on enabled.
Mindset: Observe cues, bait, parry, punish, reset.
FAQ
How do I counter the Triple Illusion Strike? The Triple Illusion Strike is best handled by perfect dodges for the apparitions and Focus-assisted parries for the initial sweep. Time your Focus entry for the heavy wind-up and block at the moment of impact to force a guaranteed parry, then punish with a short combo and Stab to apply bleed. Is Focus level 3 required to beat Antumbra’s Sword? It’s not strictly required, but Focus level 3 makes parries far more consistent and shortens the fight significantly. If you lack Focus, you must rely more on perfect dodges and conservative play. What weapon is best for this fight? Spears and polearms are the most forgiving due to reach; fast swords reward aggressive players who can weave in and out. Heavy two‑handers work if you only commit after confirmed staggers. What does Antumbra’s Sword drop? Expect unique weapons like the Vessel of Dark Pursuit and rare upgrade materials. The exact drop table can vary, but the boss is a reliable source of high-tier gear. Can I solo at low level? It’s possible but not recommended. The fight favors players who have practiced parries and invested in Focus and gear upgrades. If you’re low level, consider summoning help or leveling up first.
Closing advice
Beat Antumbra’s Sword by mastering the rhythm: observe the wind-ups, bait the heavy, use Focus to convert blocks into parries, punish with short combos and Stab to apply bleed, then reset and repeat. Don’t chase the smoke; use it as a cue to wait and punish. Practice the parry timing in smaller fights, refine your build to support Focus and bleed, and keep your movement disciplined. With patience and repetition this boss becomes a test of skill you can consistently pass.
Good luck—go claim the Vessel of Dark Pursuit.
Stay Connected with Haplo Gaming Chef
Haplo Gaming Chef blends gaming guides with casual cooking streams for a truly unique viewer experience. Whether you’re here for clean, no-nonsense walkthroughs or just want to chill with some cozy cooking content between game sessions, this is the place for you. From full game unlock guides to live recipe prep and casual chats, Haplo Gaming Chef delivers content that’s both informative and enjoyable.
You Can Follow Along On Every Major Platform:
YouTube, Twitch, TikTok, Instagram, Twitter/X, Threads, Bluesky, Pinterest, Flipboard, Facebook, LinkedIn, Tumblr, Medium, Blogger, and even on Google Business.







