Abundant Spirit
Abundant Spirit is one of those skills that doesn’t look insane at first glance… until you actually run it on a mage march that already stacks multiple triggered ToK skills. Then it suddenly feels like you unlocked an extra gear your team didn’t have before.

The big catch, though? It’s not a normal Tower of Knowledge skill. It’s locked behind Ability Selection Chest I (with the most expensive skills in the game equal to 2x full legendary skills) however, lucky for you this skill is also available for FREE in the Legion of Frostborne from conquest P1 and onwards. In essence, NEVER waste a selection Chest I on this skill as it is literally F2P from KvK rewards.

Once you get your hands on it, though, it becomes one of the cleanest power spikes you can give a mage immortal—but only when you run it correctly.
Skill Breakdown

Abundant Spirit
“Upon entering battle, increases the triggering probability of your skills by 10% and Magic Damage by 30%.”
Two parts here:
1. +30% Magic Damage
This is basically a second Concentration. Anyone who has played mages for a while knows Concentration has been a staple forever, so getting another Concentration-tier buff in the same slot category is already strong.
2. +10% Trigger Chance for your SKILLS
And this is where people mess up.
The skill says “your skills,” and that only refers to Tower of Knowledge triggered skills, not immortal ultimate abilities.

So:
- Works on: Annihilation, Chase, Infinite Firepower, Heavy Lifter, Poison Thorn, Spell Disintegrator, etc.



- Does NOT work on: Wu’s multi-hit ultimate, Baldwins’s extra explosions, etc.
If it’s from the Tower of Knowledge, it gets buffed. If it’s an immortal’s ultimate, it does not get buffed.
This is important because if you run Abundant Spirit without other triggered ToK skills, you’re basically wasting half the value.
How It Actually Performs in Battles
This is where the skill starts to feel absurd. Since it increases the trigger probability, you’re not just hitting harder—you’re hitting more often. When you combine the two, your burst windows go crazy.
A good example from live testing:
- Annihilation has a 45% trigger rate.
- With Abundant Spirit, that jumps to 55%.
- That’s roughly a 22% damage increase just for Annihilation on average (because extra triggers scale with the 30% magic damage boost too).

When you stack two triggered skills, the effect multiplies – For example in a Spell Disintegration + Chase build.
Abundant Spirit looks like a magic damage skill, but it’s actually a trigger engine.
If you want to get real value from it, you MUST pair it with multiple trigger-based ToK skills.
These are the usual suspects:
- Annihilation – still the king of burst, becomes noticeably more consistent
- Infinite Firepower – extra triggers = extra burn cycles
- Heavy Lifter – surprisingly strong when trigger rate climbs
- Poison Thorn – works fine, very consistent
- Spell Disintegrator – this is the one that went insane in testing
The trick is that Abundant Spirit doesn’t add value in a vacuum. It amplifies whatever trigger-based kit you build around it.
Best Immortals to Run It On
Pretty straightforward: anyone who is a primary magic damage dealer and you are doing a build that relies on chance-trigger skills. Such as a chase-trigger build or just a build with annihilation and spell disintegration / IF / etc.
Wu and Himiko especially love it because they run extremely well with multi-trigger setups. Baldwin benefits a ton too because he’s already burst-heavy. Merlin can run it but feels slightly more mid-game dependent unless you build him aggressively for burst.
Where It Shines Most
On immortals that:
- Already scale from magic damage buffs
- Already have strong triggered ToK setups
- Stay alive long enough to let their skills fire repeatedly
Wu is probably the most “immediate” fit—fire marches already love stacking ToK damage skills and doing chase builds. Problem however is you are replacing a slot which could be a Chase trigger in itself – or the more crucial Fighting Master slot which any Wu fire build short of a Fu Fei fire must be running against the mass control of immortals and builds these days. That makes this imo. a decent spell but not something meta defining. Personally, I am going to out it to use in my second team where it will be with SD and Anni on a Baldwin mage.
Conclusion Summary
Abundant Spirit is basically Concentration 2.0 with a built-in trigger engine. It’s locked behind expensive chests, but if you get it, it becomes one of the strongest mage-oriented skills in the game as long as you pair it with other triggered ToK skills.
What you get from it:
- A flat +30% magic damage buff (always good)
- +10% trigger chance on ALL ToK triggered skills
- Adds consistency to RNG spikes in burst damage
- Synergy with meta mages like Wu and Himiko
Bottom line:
If you’re building a serious mage march and you can stack multiple triggered skills, Abundant Spirit is a great option. It is a powerful damage booster in itself and the reduction of RNG reliance in favor of more consistent and much higher skill damage output, is very good! Many mages will see their tower of knowledge skills being close to as much damage as their ultimates, and with this skill we are boosting the damage of ults, and skills as well as increasing the consistency and damage of skills even further through increased trigger chance. Very cool and a skill I am very glad that they have added. Giving options to smoothen out gameplay and reduce RNG is always something that I am in favor of.
Published: 06-12-2025



