Chaos Runes are one of the latest additions to Throne & Liberty, and they add even more ways to min-max your build and push the limits of how powerful your character can be. In this guide, we will be showing you how to get these extremely strong but also exceedingly rare resources that you can slot into your gear.
Quick and Easy Way to Get Chaos Runes | Material Transmutation
The primary way of getting Chaos Runes is through the Co-Op Dungeon game mode. More specifically, you will want to participate in the weekly Dimensional Trials, and you need to do them in at least tier 5.
Anything above tier 5 will also have a chance to give you a Rare Chaos Rune Selection Chest, but the rate will stay at 8.5% regardless of the difficulty. Because of this, you are going to want to farm solely tier 5 to be as efficient as possible.
As the reward is a selection chest, this means that you can potentially farm for specific types that you need.
Another way to get them is through the Material Transmutation feature, which will allow you to sacrifice runes in order to try and get a chaos rune. For this part, it is going to depend entirely on how many runes you have laying around.
Idedally, you want to use the convert points feature to sacrifice your runes in order to raise the “Conversion Tier” all the way up to tier 4. Once it is at the 4th tier, you can have a small chance of receiving a Rare Chaos Rune upon using the transmutation feature.
It is important to note, however, that this method has a very low chance of giving you a chaos rune. It is still worth doing if you have a lot of fodder for Material Transmutation, but temper your expectations as you are going to be burning through a lot of resources to get a single one.
That is really all you need to know in order to get these chaos runes. The “fastest” way is still going to be a long grind, so just keep on doing dimensional trials and maybe roll the transmutation slot machine to see if you can get lucky.
Franco is a writer and avid gamer who spends a lot of his free time looking for the next obscure indie roguelike to add to his collection. If he’s not busy working or writing on his personal blog, there’s also a non-zero chance that you stumble into him in pretty much any multiplayer game that has SEA or OCE servers. He’s pretty good at anything unless it’s a fighting game, in which case you’d probably body him.