Blade Ball: How To Use Martyrdom Ability Featured Image

Blade Ball: How To Use Martyrdom Ability

Alexis Ongsansoy
2 Min Read

Sometimes, knowing the name of a weapon or skill is all that matters. Take the Martyrdom skill in Blade Ball for example.

To a normal person trying to score a kill, it’s just another skill they’ll try to avoid from you. Unbeknownst to the, it’s a skill that’ll only work when you leave the world of the living.

Now, there’s a surprise, right? Still, it doesn’t change the fact that plenty of people still don’t know how to use it. They’re either too terrified to give themselves up for a better tomorrow or simply just don’t know how to make use of it.

With the short guide below and a bit of reading, all of that will go away!

How To Use Martyrdom Ability

Martyrdom is a great passive ability for beginners in Blade Ball, a first of its kind even. What happens is when you die, the ball will transport itself to the last person who made contact with you.

After that, your opponent will have but a brief moment to react before they get killed themselves. Being able to use this ability will cost you 4,000 of your coins.

Martyrdom Ability Blade Ball

All you have to do is have the ability as your passive. Everything else will happen like magic whenever your opponent manages to kill you.

It’s not a complete guarantee that you’ll keep the score close with the other team though. They can still react to it if they know how to time their attacks properly, which they don’t.

If you want an ability that requires more input, then feel free to try Flash Counter. We have a guide that helps you make full use of its capabilities as well!

Blade Ball: How To Use Martyrdom Ability

And that’s how you use Martyrdom in Blade Ball. Let your opponent think that they got the upper hand and give them a good surprise!

ALSO READ: Blade Ball: New Update Guide (December 2023) | Clans, Quantum Arena & Juggernaut

Here we have Alexis, he's been gaming ever since the second Famicom came out. Which is probably the reason why he goes back to platformers every now and then. Somewhere down the line he started getting more and more fascinated about looking at maps change colors for three to eight hours straight. If he's not out strategizing and beating the life out of his space bar in that order there's a good chance you can find him playing an FPS or talking someone's ear out about how game balance gets in the way of realism. You can tell that he really likes getting the full experience of whatever he gets his hands on.
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