Mastering Imperator Averzian Tic Tac Toe Mechanics
This guide is a complete, battle‑tested walkthrough for clearing Imperator Averzian in The Voidspire on both Normal and Heroic difficulties. It assumes a basic familiarity with raid roles and terminology but explains every mechanic, assignment, and tactic you need to clear the encounter reliably. Read this once to learn the fight, then use the printable raid plan and practice drills to turn the strategy into muscle memory. The emphasis is on coordination, movement, and timing rather than raw item level—teams that communicate and execute will clear this boss faster than teams that rely on gear alone.
Encounter summary and win condition
Imperator Averzian is a territory control fight built around tile claims and timed soaks. The boss repeatedly spawns waves of adds that attempt to claim tiles on the arena. Each claimed tile creates a persistent hazard and empowers the boss; if Averzian secures three adjacent claimed tiles in a straight line, he casts March of the Endless, an unavoidable wipe mechanic. The raid’s objective is simple in concept: deny claims by using Umbral Collapse soaks, kill or control adds before they can claim tiles, and manage the resulting Oblivion circles and portals. The encounter is a repeating loop of add waves, two rapid soaks per wave, portal management, and single‑player Oblivion responsibilities. On Heroic, add pressure, portal frequency, and Oblivion penalties increase, demanding tighter execution and stricter assignments.
Mindset and preparation
Approach this fight with a coordination mindset. This is not a pure DPS race; it is a choreography problem. The raid must move in sync, call soaks clearly, and assign reliable players to single‑target soak duties. Before the pull, assign soak teams, Oblivion soakers, interrupt rotations, and a small group to handle portal control. Decide whether you will use a “two‑soak sprint” method (recommended) or a slower, spread soak method. Practice the sprint once or twice in early pulls to build confidence. Consumables, movement cooldowns, and speed boosts matter more than a few item levels—bring potions, flasks, food, and at least two raid speed cooldowns.
Raid composition and roles
A standard raid composition works well: two tanks, four healers, and the rest DPS. Ranged cleave and mobility are valuable. Key role considerations:
Tanks: Two tanks are required. One holds the boss while the other is ready to pick up adds or swap for Blackening Wounds stacks. Tanks must be comfortable with swapping and moving the boss away from claimed tiles.
Healers: Healers must be prepared for raid‑wide damage spikes from Umbral Collapse detonations and single‑target spikes on Oblivion soakers. Assign one healer to each Oblivion soaker if possible.
DPS: Mobility and interrupt capability are important. Assign high‑mobility DPS to soak teams and to chase down adds that try to reach portals.
Utility: Players with speed boosts, immunities, or damage reduction should be assigned to critical soaks or to rescue failed soaks.
Pre‑pull assignments and markers
Before you pull, set the following markers and callouts. Keep assignments simple and repeatable.
Soak markers: Two fixed soak markers on opposite sides of the arena or at pre‑agreed tiles. Use raid markers and announce which two tiles will be saved when adds spawn.
Oblivion assignments: Label players 1–4 (or however many tiles are likely to be claimed) who will soak Oblivion circles. These players must be reliable and able to handle single‑target damage.
Portal control: Assign two DPS to handle portals and beams. These players should be able to interrupt or kite adds away from portals.
Interrupt rotation: A short, rotating interrupt list for Pitch Bulwark and other empowering casts.
Keep the plan minimal and repeatable: fewer moving parts means fewer mistakes.
Core mechanics explained
Understanding the core mechanics is the key to success.
Tile claims and Umbral Collapse Adds attempt to claim tiles. Each wave of adds gives the raid two Umbral Collapse soaks—these are the only guaranteed ways to deny claims. Umbral Collapse appears as a targeted area that must be stood in to detonate and deny the claim. The collapse detonates on the add and prevents the tile from becoming claimed. The typical execution is to use two soak teams to chain soaks quickly: stack on the first marker, detonate, then sprint to the second marker and detonate again. Timing and movement are critical; slow or disorganized soaks allow the add to claim the tile.
Portals and beams When an add survives the soaks, it spawns a portal that emits damaging beams and spawns Oblivion circles. Portals create persistent pressure and must be controlled or destroyed quickly. Portals also interact with certain adds—if a Voidmaw reaches a portal it can heal, so prevent that by killing or kiting the Voidmaw.
Oblivion circles Each claimed tile produces an Oblivion circle that must be soaked by a single player. Oblivion soaks are high single‑target damage events; assign players who can survive and who have a healer assigned. If multiple Oblivion circles are active, the raid must spread and manage cooldowns carefully.
March of the Endless If Averzian secures three adjacent claimed tiles in a straight line, he casts March of the Endless, an instant wipe. Preventing this is the primary win condition. Always prioritize denying claims that would create a line of three.
Blackening Wounds and tank swaps The boss applies stacking debuffs to tanks. Swap at comfortable thresholds (commonly around 8–10 stacks) to avoid tank deaths. Tanks should also avoid standing on or near claimed tiles to prevent empowering the boss.
Pull strategy and the two‑soak sprint
The recommended method for consistent clears is the two‑soak sprint. It minimizes movement confusion and concentrates responsibility.
Pull and initial positioning: Tanks pick up the boss and position him centrally but away from tiles likely to be claimed. Ranged spread slightly to reduce cleave overlap.
Add spawn and call: When adds spawn, the raid leader calls the two tiles to save. The first soak team stacks on the first marker; the second soak team prepares to sprint to the second marker.
First Umbral Collapse: The first team stacks and detonates the collapse on the add to deny the first claim. Healers pre‑cast raid cooldowns if needed.
Sprint to second marker: Immediately after the first detonation, both soak teams sprint to the second marker. The second team stacks and detonates the second Umbral Collapse.
Portal and Oblivion handling: If an add survives and spawns a portal, the portal team moves to interrupt or destroy it. Oblivion soakers move to their assigned circles and soak with healer support.
Reset and prepare: After the wave, reset positioning, move the boss away from any claimed tiles, and prepare for the next wave.
Practice this sprint until the movement becomes automatic. The sprint is forgiving if everyone knows their role.
Add priority and handling
Not all adds are equal. Prioritize based on what each add does to the encounter.
Abyssal Voidshapers: These are the primary claimers. Deny their claims with Umbral Collapse soaks. If they survive, they spawn portals—kill them quickly.
Voidmaws: Dangerous because they path to portals and heal. Burn them before they reach ~35% HP or kite them away from portals.
Shadowguard Stalwarts / Annihilators: These adds cast Pitch Bulwark or other empowering shields. Interrupt these casts to prevent wasted DPS windows.
Other specialty adds: On Heroic, adds may gain extra abilities—identify these in early pulls and adjust kill order accordingly.
A clear kill order: deny claimers first, then burn Voidmaws, then handle shielded adds with interrupts. If a portal is active and threatening, divert two DPS to it immediately.
Positioning and movement details
Positioning is a constant concern. Keep the boss centered but away from tiles that are likely to be claimed. Use the following movement principles:
Predictable lanes: Establish two or three sprint lanes for soakers and mark them. Predictability reduces mistakes.
Avoid clustering near portals: Portals emit beams; avoid standing in their line of fire.
Use movement cooldowns wisely: Speed boosts and gap closers are best used to secure the second soak or to rescue a failed soak.
Healer positioning: Healers should be positioned to reach Oblivion soakers quickly but not be in the direct path of portal beams.
Tanking specifics
Tanks must manage Blackening Wounds stacks and keep the boss away from claimed tiles. Swap at pre‑agreed stack thresholds. Use defensive cooldowns when the boss is near a claimed tile or when multiple Oblivion circles are active. Tanks should also be prepared to pick up adds that path to portals; coordinate with DPS to avoid accidental pulls.
Healing strategy
Healers must balance raid‑wide and single‑target healing. Umbral Collapse detonations create raid‑wide spikes; Oblivion soakers create heavy single‑target spikes. Assign one healer to each Oblivion soaker when possible. Save major raid cooldowns for multi‑portal or multi‑claim windows on Heroic. Mana management is important—this fight can be long if the raid struggles with claims.
DPS rotations and utility
DPS should focus on quick, controlled bursts to kill adds before they claim tiles. Use interrupts on Pitch Bulwark and similar casts. High mobility DPS should be assigned to soak teams and portal control. Use defensive utility (immunities, stuns, slows) to control adds that try to reach portals.
Heroic differences and adjustments
Heroic ramps up pressure in several ways: adds spawn faster, portals appear more frequently, and Oblivion penalties are harsher. To adapt:
Tighten soak teams: Use smaller, more reliable soak teams of players who can consistently execute.
Reserve cooldowns: Keep major defensive cooldowns for multi‑portal windows.
Increase interrupts: Add more interrupt coverage to prevent empowered adds.
Shorten decision windows: Call soaks earlier and more decisively; hesitation on Heroic is punished.
Heroic requires discipline. If your raid struggles, slow down and practice the two‑soak sprint until it is flawless.
Markers, macros, and addons
Use raid markers and simple macros to speed communication. A few recommended macros:
A macro to mark the first soak marker and announce it in raid chat.
A macro to mark the second soak marker and announce sprint direction.
A simple raid warning macro for “Oblivion on X” to alert healers.
Addons that help: a reliable raid frame addon, a boss mod that shows tile claims and Umbral Collapse timers, and a movement addon that highlights portal beams. Keep the UI clean—too many visual elements create confusion during the sprint.
Consumables, enchants, and gear tips
Consumables matter. Bring flasks, potions, and food that boost movement or survivability. Speed potions and movement trinkets are especially valuable for soak teams. Enchants that increase survivability or mobility are useful. On Heroic, prioritize survivability and utility over raw DPS if your raid struggles to survive Oblivion windows.
Practice drills and training pulls
Turn the first 10–15 pulls into practice drills. Focus on one element at a time:
Drill 1: Two‑soak sprint only. Ignore DPS and portals; practice movement and timing.
Drill 2: Oblivion soak practice. Have assigned players soak Oblivion circles while healers focus on them.
Drill 3: Portal control. Practice killing portals and preventing Voidmaws from reaching them.
These drills build muscle memory and reduce panic during real pulls.
Troubleshooting common problems
If your raid keeps wiping, diagnose the failure mode.
Wipes from March of the Endless: This means the raid failed to deny claims. Tighten soak execution and call tiles earlier.
Wipes from portals/Oblivion: Assign more reliable Oblivion soakers and ensure healers are assigned.
Wipes from tank deaths: Swap earlier and use more defensive cooldowns.
Wipes from movement confusion: Simplify the plan. Use fewer soak markers and repeat the same sprint lanes.
Fix one problem at a time. Overcomplicating the plan during a recovery attempt usually makes things worse.
Printable raid plan (one paragraph)
Assign two soak teams (Team A and Team B), four Oblivion soakers (Players 1–4), two portal controllers, and an interrupt rotation. Use two fixed soak markers on opposite sides of the arena. On add spawn, call the two tiles to save, Team A stacks and detonates the first Umbral Collapse, then both teams sprint to the second marker and detonate the second Umbral Collapse. Portal controllers kill portals and prevent Voidmaws from reaching them. Oblivion soakers soak with healer support. Tanks swap at 8–10 stacks and keep the boss away from claimed tiles. Repeat until the boss dies.
Advanced tips and tricks
Use a speed boost on the second soak to guarantee arrival; a single well‑timed sprint beats multiple small movements.
If a soak fails, immediately call a rescue: either a healer to top the failed soaker or a second player to take the Oblivion.
If a Voidmaw is low and pathing to a portal, use a stun or root to delay it while DPS finish it off.
On Heroic, consider rotating a high‑survivability player through Oblivion soaks to reduce healer strain.
Keep voice comms short and decisive: “First soak left, second soak right, portal team on me” is better than long explanations.
Logs, metrics, and improvement
After each raid night, review logs to identify weak points. Look for failed soaks, missed interrupts, and portal deaths. Track which players repeatedly fail soaks and rotate them into less critical roles until they improve. Use logs to measure time between add spawns and to optimize cooldown windows.
FAQ
Q: Who should soak Umbral Collapse? A: Assigned soak teams—two reliable groups—should handle Umbral Collapse. Teams of 2–4 players work depending on your raid’s comfort; more players reduce individual damage but increase movement complexity.
Q: What happens if a portal is left unchecked? A: Portals emit damaging beams and spawn mechanics that escalate raid pressure. They can also allow certain adds to heal if they reach the portal. Prevent portals by denying claims or killing adds quickly.
Q: When should tanks swap? A: Swap when Blackening Wounds stacks make the active tank too fragile—commonly around 8–10 stacks. Swap earlier on Heroic if stacks ramp faster.
Q: How many Oblivion soakers are needed? A: One player per claimed tile. If multiple tiles are claimed, you need more soakers or players who can handle multiple soaks with healer support.
Q: Is this fight more about gear or coordination? A: Coordination. While gear helps, teams that communicate and execute soaks and portal control will outperform higher‑item teams that lack coordination.
Q: What addons help the most? A: A boss mod that tracks Umbral Collapse timers and tile claims, a reliable raid frame addon, and a movement indicator for portal beams. Keep the UI minimal to avoid clutter.
Q: How do we practice the sprint? A: Use the first pulls to practice the two‑soak sprint without worrying about DPS. Repeat until movement is automatic.
Q: Any tips for small guilds or pickup groups? A: Simplify the plan. Use larger soak teams to reduce individual responsibility, call soaks early, and assign the most reliable players to Oblivion soaks. Communication and patience are key.
Closing advice
Imperator Averzian rewards teams that practice movement and communication. The fight is a choreography puzzle: once your raid can execute the two‑soak sprint, handle portals, and assign reliable Oblivion soakers, the boss becomes predictable and manageable. Focus on simple, repeatable assignments, practice the sprint until it is muscle memory, and tighten interrupts and cooldown usage on Heroic. With a calm raid leader, clear markers, and a few practice pulls, your team will clear Imperator Averzian consistently.
Good luck—coordinate, move fast, and deny those tiles.
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.







