How to Use Chanting in Jujutsu Infinite

Chanting is one of those systems Jujutsu Infinite never fully explains, yet it quietly separates average grinders from players melting bosses in half the time. On the surface, it looks like a simple pre-cast ritual, but under the hood it’s a layered damage amplifier with strict timing rules and real combat risk. If you’ve ever wondered why two players with the same cursed technique hit wildly different numbers, Chanting is usually the answer.

At its core, Chanting is a manual power-up that modifies how your cursed techniques behave before they’re released. Instead of raw stat scaling, it temporarily rewrites the output of your next technique, altering damage multipliers, curse efficiency, and in some cases hitbox consistency. The trade-off is obvious: you’re vulnerable while chanting, and mistiming it can tank your DPS instead of boosting it.

How Chanting Actually Works Under the Hood

When you activate Chanting, the game flags your next cursed technique as “reinforced.” This isn’t just a flat damage boost. Chanting increases technique potency, which scales after base damage but before enemy mitigation, making it disproportionately strong against high-defense bosses and late-game mobs.

There’s also a hidden efficiency modifier tied to Chanting. Properly timed chants reduce cursed energy waste, meaning your ability hits harder without draining extra resources. This is why Chanting feels mandatory in longer fights where energy economy matters more than burst spam.

Activation Rules and Timing Windows

Chanting is not automatic and not buffered. You must activate it deliberately, then cast a cursed technique within a short internal window. Cast too early and you get no benefit. Wait too long and the chant expires, putting you on cooldown with nothing to show for it.

The safest timing is during enemy recovery frames. Boss stagger, knockdown animations, or post-teleport recovery are ideal. Attempting to chant during active aggro without I-frames is the fastest way to get interrupted and lose both time and momentum.

Combat Trade-Offs You Can’t Ignore

While chanting, your movement options are limited and your hurtbox is fully exposed. No invulnerability, no damage reduction, no mercy. In PvP, experienced players actively bait chants just to punish the startup.

That risk is intentional. Chanting is designed as a high-skill commitment tool, rewarding players who understand enemy patterns and spacing. Used recklessly, it lowers your real DPS because of interruptions and missed casts.

Synergy With Cursed Techniques

Not all cursed techniques benefit equally from Chanting. High-base-damage, single-instance abilities gain the most value because the multiplier applies cleanly to one massive hit. Multi-hit or damage-over-time techniques still benefit, but the return is spread out and easier to waste if enemies move or phase.

Domain-adjacent techniques and delayed explosions also synergize well, since you can chant during setup phases and release damage safely. This is where experienced players squeeze absurd numbers out of otherwise average kits.

Common Mistakes That Kill Efficiency

The biggest mistake players make is chanting on cooldown instead of chanting with intent. Chanting without a guaranteed cast window is worse than not chanting at all. Another trap is overusing it on weak mobs where the time investment outweighs the damage gain.

Finally, many players chant while already low on cursed energy, assuming the boost will carry them. It won’t. Chanting amplifies technique output, not bad resource management, and running dry mid-fight is a guaranteed wipe against late-game bosses.

How to Activate Chanting Correctly (Inputs, Conditions, and Visual Cues)

Knowing when to chant is only half the battle. Executing it cleanly, without fumbling inputs or misreading the game’s feedback, is where most players lose efficiency. Chanting in Jujutsu Infinite is extremely literal: if you miss a condition or cancel the sequence, the game does not forgive you.

Chanting Inputs: What You Actually Press

Chanting is activated by holding the Chant key and then casting a compatible cursed technique while the chant window is active. On keyboard, this usually means holding the designated Chant bind and pressing your technique hotkey before the chant timer expires. On mobile, it requires holding the Chant button until the visual cue confirms activation, then tapping the technique.

The key mistake is releasing the chant input too early. If you let go before the technique input registers, the chant consumes time but applies no multiplier. Think of it like buffering a charged attack, not toggling a passive buff.

Mandatory Conditions That Must Be Met

You cannot chant while stunned, ragdolled, or animation-locked by another action. Sprinting, dodge-canceling, or taking a hit will instantly interrupt the chant with no partial benefit. Your character must be grounded and in a neutral or idle-compatible state.

Cursed energy requirements still apply in full. Chanting does not bypass energy costs, and if your energy drops below the technique’s requirement mid-chant, the cast fails. This is why low-resource chanting feels inconsistent to many players—it’s not bugged, it’s strict.

Visual and Audio Cues You Should Never Ignore

When chanting begins successfully, your character emits a distinct cursed energy aura that intensifies over time. Subtle runic or ripple effects appear around the feet or hands, depending on your technique type. If you do not see this buildup, the chant is not active, no matter how long you hold the button.

Audio cues matter just as much. A low, rhythmic chant sound confirms that the multiplier window is live. If the sound cuts out abruptly, the chant was interrupted and you should immediately reposition instead of forcing a cast.

Reading the Chant Window Before It Expires

Chanting is not infinite. The visual glow reaches a peak, then stabilizes briefly before fading. That stable phase is your optimal cast window, where the multiplier is locked in and interruption risk is lower if you’re already committed.

Casting too early results in a weaker boost, while casting too late wastes the chant entirely. Experienced players train themselves to release the technique as soon as the aura stops intensifying, not when it starts fading.

Why Failed Activations Kill Momentum

Every failed chant costs time, positioning, and often aggro control. In PvE, this can desync boss phases or trigger additional spawns. In PvP, a whiffed chant is basically a self-stun that competent opponents punish instantly.

Treat chanting as a deliberate action, not muscle memory. Clean inputs, clear visual confirmation, and strict condition checks are what separate high-level damage rotations from sloppy ones that look flashy but underperform.

What Chanting Actually Buffs: Damage Scaling, Cooldowns, and Technique Power

Once you understand how fragile the chant window is, the obvious next question becomes whether it’s even worth the risk. The short answer is yes, but only if you know exactly what chanting modifies under the hood. Chanting is not a cosmetic charge-up or a vague “power boost.” It directly alters how your techniques calculate damage, cooldown flow, and special effect potency.

Raw Damage Scaling: Multipliers, Not Flat Increases

Chanting applies a multiplicative damage modifier to the next eligible cursed technique you cast. This is important because it scales off your existing stats, technique rank, passives, and external buffs instead of adding a flat number. High-investment builds benefit disproportionately, which is why chanting feels underwhelming early game but explosive in optimized setups.

The longer you successfully chant within the valid window, the higher the multiplier, up to a hard cap determined by the technique’s tier. Domain-adjacent or high-grade techniques usually have tighter caps to prevent one-shots, while bread-and-butter cursed techniques scale more generously. This is why chanting basic nukes often outperforms chanting flashy ultimates in sustained DPS scenarios.

Technique Power: Enhanced Hitboxes, Status Strength, and Break Values

Damage numbers aren’t the only thing getting boosted. Chanting also increases technique power, which is a hidden value that governs hitbox size, stagger strength, and status application effectiveness. Players notice this most when a chanted attack suddenly guard-breaks enemies that normally tank it or applies debuffs more consistently.

In PvP, this is huge. A slightly wider hitbox or stronger knockback can turn a normally reactable skill into a confirmed punish after a dash bait or whiff. In PvE, higher break values mean faster boss phase transitions and fewer wasted rotations on shielded enemies.

Cooldown Interaction: Front-Loaded Power at a Time Cost

Chanting does not reduce cooldowns, but it effectively reshapes how you experience them. By front-loading more damage into a single cast, you reduce the number of cycles needed to hit breakpoints like stagger thresholds or phase skips. That means fewer total casts over the course of a fight, which indirectly smooths your cooldown flow.

The trade-off is obvious: time spent chanting is time not dealing damage. If you chant before a long cooldown skill, the payoff is massive. If you chant a low-impact or fast-recharge ability, you often lose DPS over time. High-level players plan chants around their longest cooldown, highest impact techniques, not whatever is off cooldown.

What Chanting Does Not Buff (And Why That Matters)

Chanting does not reduce cursed energy cost, grant I-frames, or make you interruption-immune. Any build that relies on chanting as a defensive crutch will get exposed fast, especially in PvP. You are still fully vulnerable during the chant window, which is why positioning and enemy awareness matter more than raw stats.

It also doesn’t retroactively buff multi-hit techniques already in progress. Only the cast that consumes the chant gets the benefit. Misunderstanding this leads to one of the most common mistakes: starting a chant during an animation-locked combo and expecting the finisher to scale. It won’t.

Why High-Skill Players Treat Chanting as a Resource

At higher levels, chanting stops being a “power-up” and starts functioning like a limited resource you spend at key moments. You chant to secure a kill, force a boss phase, or win a neutral exchange, not on cooldown. Every chant is a calculated risk tied to spacing, enemy behavior, and your current energy economy.

When used deliberately, chanting turns good techniques into fight-defining ones. When used carelessly, it drains momentum and hands initiative to the enemy. Understanding exactly what gets buffed is what lets you make that call confidently instead of guessing mid-fight.

Risk vs Reward: Vulnerability Windows, Interruptions, and When Chanting Is Dangerous

Everything discussed so far hinges on one uncomfortable truth: chanting puts you in real danger. The damage spike is real, but so is the vulnerability window you open every time you commit to it. High-level play isn’t about chanting more often, it’s about surviving long enough for the chant to matter.

If you treat chanting like a free buff instead of a calculated commitment, the game will punish you immediately. This is where most builds fall apart, especially once enemies start reacting instead of standing still.

The Vulnerability Window Most Players Underestimate

When you activate chanting, you are fully actionable by the enemy. No I-frames, no damage reduction, no hidden stagger resistance. You are standing still, broadcasting intent, and betting that nothing touches you before the cast completes.

In PvE, this means stray projectiles, delayed AoEs, or off-screen mobs can clip you out of the chant. In PvP, it’s even worse. Any competent player will recognize the animation and immediately pressure you with a fast poke, dash cancel, or ranged interrupt.

This vulnerability window is why chanting is strongest when the enemy is already locked down. Stuns, knockdowns, long recovery animations, or phase transitions are your safest chant opportunities.

Interruptions: What Cancels a Chant and Why It Hurts So Much

Any hit that causes hitstun will cancel your chant outright. There is no partial credit and no refund. You lose the time, the positioning, and the momentum you gave up to attempt it.

This is especially punishing with longer chants tied to high-impact techniques. Getting interrupted doesn’t just lower your DPS, it often flips aggro or hands neutral control to the enemy. In PvP, that can snowball into a full combo against you.

Latency also matters more than players admit. On higher ping, you can get clipped by attacks that look visually late, making risky chants even less reliable in online fights.

When Chanting Is Actively Dangerous

Chanting during neutral is almost always a mistake. If neither side is committed, you are essentially freezing yourself in place and inviting pressure. This is how players get dash-caught, guard-broken, or forced to burn evasives immediately after.

Boss fights have their own traps. Many late-game bosses are designed to punish stationary players with delayed explosions or tracking attacks. Chanting right before an enrage mechanic or pattern shift is a common way to lose half your health bar for a damage bonus you never get to use.

It’s also dangerous when you’re low on cursed energy. If the chant succeeds but leaves you dry, you may not have the resources to capitalize on the buffed cast or escape afterward.

Safe Windows: When the Risk Is Actually Worth Taking

The safest chants happen after you’ve already created advantage. Knockdowns, wall splats, broken guards, or long enemy recovery animations give you just enough breathing room to chant without gambling your life bar.

In group PvE, chanting behind a tank or while enemies are aggro-locked on teammates drastically lowers the risk. In PvP, forcing a dodge, baiting a cooldown, or catching an opponent in end-lag creates the same opening.

The rule is simple: chant when the enemy can’t interact with you. If they can move freely, attack freely, or cancel into pressure, you’re rolling dice instead of playing optimally.

The Biggest Mistake: Chanting Because It’s Available

Availability is not readiness. Just because chanting isn’t on cooldown doesn’t mean the game state supports it. Using it impulsively is how players lose tempo, waste positioning, and get punished by faster options.

Master-level players activate chanting only after checking three things: enemy commitment, spacing, and follow-up potential. If all three aren’t aligned, they hold it and wait.

Chanting is power, but it’s fragile power. Knowing when not to use it is what separates high DPS builds from consistent, fight-winning ones.

Optimal Chant Timing in PvE and PvP (Bosses, Domains, and Player Fights)

Once you understand when not to chant, the next step is learning how to convert chanting into guaranteed value across different combat modes. PvE bosses, Domains, and PvP all reward chanting differently, and treating them the same is a fast way to waste its potential.

The goal is never to chant more often. It’s to chant at moments where the buff directly converts into damage, control, or tempo without exposing you to counterplay.

PvE Boss Fights: Exploiting Pattern Gaps and Forced Downtime

In PvE, chanting is strongest when bosses are locked into scripted behavior. Long windups, roar animations, phase transitions, or recovery after missed attacks are your green lights.

The ideal chant happens right before a damage window, not during it. Chant first, then immediately unload your highest-scaling cursed technique or combo while the boss is still animation-locked.

Avoid chanting during multi-hit patterns or tracking AOEs. Even if the boss isn’t targeting you directly, splash damage and delayed explosions will interrupt the chant and leave you exposed.

Group PvE and Raids: Chanting Through Aggro Control

Chanting becomes far safer when aggro isn’t on you. Tanks, summons, or teammates pulling threat create natural chant windows that solo players don’t get.

Position behind the boss or at max effective range before chanting. This ensures that even if aggro snaps mid-chant, you’re not immediately inside a hitbox.

In raids, coordinate chants around stagger or break mechanics. Stacking chant buffs right before a team burst phase massively increases overall DPS without risking unnecessary deaths.

Domains: Chanting Around Guaranteed Advantage States

Domains are high-risk environments, but they also create the most consistent chant opportunities. If you are the domain owner, chant immediately after activation while opponents are forced into entry animations or repositioning.

If you’re trapped inside an enemy domain, only chant after triggering a guaranteed defensive state. This includes perfect dodges, invulnerability frames, or after forcing the domain owner into cooldown recovery.

Never chant reactively in a domain. If you’re chanting because you feel pressured, you’re already late, and the domain’s enhanced hitboxes will punish you every time.

PvP Duels: Turning Small Wins Into Big Damage

In PvP, chanting is a tempo play. You chant to snowball an advantage, not to create one from nothing.

The best chant timings come after knockdowns, forced evasives, or blocked supers with heavy end-lag. These moments give you just enough time to chant and still threaten immediate pressure.

Spacing matters more than duration. Even a short chant that boosts a single high-impact technique is better than a full chant that leaves you cornered or predictable.

PvP Team Fights: Chanting Without Becoming a Target

Team fights punish greedy chanting harder than any other mode. Multiple players means more stray hitboxes, projectiles, and unpredictable movement.

Use terrain, verticality, or ally crowd control to create chant windows. Chanting behind walls, above the fight, or during ally ultimates dramatically increases your survival rate.

If you draw focus mid-chant, cancel and disengage. A canceled chant is a lost opportunity, but a completed chant followed by a death is a lost fight.

Understanding the Trade-Off: Power Now vs Safety Later

Every chant is a trade. You’re exchanging mobility and defense for amplified output, and the game expects you to pay for that choice if mistimed.

Optimal players chant with a plan already in motion. They know which technique they’re buffing, where they’ll reposition afterward, and how much cursed energy they’ll have left.

When chanting is treated as part of a combo route instead of a standalone buff, it stops being risky and starts being oppressive.

Technique Synergies: Which Cursed Techniques Benefit Most from Chanting

Once you understand chanting as a calculated risk instead of a panic button, the next step is knowing exactly what to buff. Not every cursed technique scales equally, and chanting shines brightest when paired with abilities that already threaten massive damage, control space, or force unavoidable interactions.

The rule of thumb is simple: chant for techniques that either lock the enemy in place, scale explosively with damage multipliers, or punish defensive habits. If a move already forces respect, chanting turns it into a fight-ending threat.

High-Commitment Burst Techniques

Techniques with long wind-ups or heavy end-lag gain the most raw value from chanting. These abilities are already designed to hit hard, and chanting pushes them over critical damage thresholds that decide fights outright.

Examples include large-area blasts, delayed explosions, and charged finishers tied to major cursed techniques. When chanted, these moves can delete elite mobs, chunk bosses through defensive phases, or force PvP opponents into desperation cooldowns.

The key is preparation. Chant only after creating a guaranteed opening, then commit fully. Half-committing on a burst technique wastes both the chant and the opportunity.

Domain-Adjacent and Domain-Finisher Techniques

Techniques that lead into domains or capitalize on domain pressure scale extremely well with chanting. Buffing these abilities before domain activation increases the payoff of every hit that follows.

In PvE, chanting before a domain opener accelerates boss phase transitions and reduces time spent dealing with enhanced mechanics. In PvP, it turns domain entry into a checkmate scenario, forcing opponents to burn evasives immediately or eat lethal damage.

Avoid chanting after domain activation unless the domain guarantees safety. The strongest synergy happens when chanting amplifies the move that forces the domain in the first place.

Hard Crowd Control and Guaranteed Hit Setups

Any technique that stuns, roots, lifts, or otherwise removes player control is prime chanting material. These moves create the exact windows chanting needs and ensure the buffed follow-up actually connects.

Chanting before launching a guaranteed-hit combo dramatically increases DPS without adding risk. This is especially powerful in team fights, where ally crowd control can let you chant safely and still land a fully amplified finisher.

If a technique guarantees contact, chanting stops being a gamble and starts becoming optimal play.

Damage-Over-Time and Persistent Zone Techniques

Persistent techniques like lingering fields, traps, or damage-over-time effects benefit more from chanting than most players realize. The chant buff applies to every tick, not just the initial hit.

This makes chanting incredibly efficient during prolonged fights, boss encounters, or objective-based PvP where enemies are forced to stay in an area. A single chant can multiply total damage far beyond what a one-hit nuke provides.

The mistake players make is chanting too late. Chant before deploying the zone so the entire duration benefits from the amplification.

Projectile Supers and Long-Range Punish Tools

High-speed projectiles and long-range supers gain massive value from chanting due to their safety and consistency. You’re trading immobility for range, which is one of the safest chant exchanges in the game.

These techniques excel at punishing heals, revives, or failed disengages. A chanted projectile forces respect across the entire arena and can swing momentum without committing to melee range.

In PvP, this is one of the safest ways to chant offensively. In PvE, it lets you maintain aggro pressure without risking close-range punishment.

Techniques That Scale Off Cursed Energy Investment

Some cursed techniques scale directly with how much cursed energy you dump into them. Chanting amplifies this scaling, making energy-heavy builds disproportionately strong.

This synergy rewards planning. You chant, commit energy, and delete a priority target before resources become an issue. Used correctly, this shortens fights and reduces incoming damage overall.

The trap is overcommitting. If chanting leaves you energy-starved with no kill secured, you’ve traded short-term power for long-term vulnerability.

Techniques That Do Not Benefit Much From Chanting

Fast, low-damage pokes and mobility-focused techniques generally don’t justify chanting. The buff rarely outweighs the lost movement and defensive options.

Spam-heavy kits perform better by maintaining pressure and uptime rather than stopping to amplify a single hit. Chanting here often lowers total DPS instead of raising it.

If a technique’s strength comes from speed, mix-ups, or constant harassment, chanting actively works against its design.

Knowing which techniques deserve a chant is what separates efficient players from reckless ones. When chanting is reserved for moves that already control the fight, it stops feeling risky and starts feeling inevitable.

Advanced Optimization: Animation Cancels, Partial Chants, and Combat Rotations

Once you understand which techniques deserve a chant, the real optimization begins. At high-level play, chanting stops being a binary decision and becomes something you weave into your animations, spacing, and rotations.

This is where DPS jumps dramatically. Not because chanting is stronger, but because you’re reducing its downsides while keeping most of its upside.

Animation Cancels: Hiding the Chant Window

Chanting locks you in place, but not all lockouts are equal. Many technique recoveries, knockdowns, and enemy hitstuns create micro-windows where chanting can be buffered without giving up momentum.

The most common setup is chanting during a successful crowd control hit or enemy stagger. If your target is already launched, frozen, or hard-stunned, chanting during that downtime effectively costs you nothing.

Advanced players chain this by canceling recovery frames with movement, block, or technique inputs immediately after the chant completes. The result is amplified damage with near-zero vulnerability, especially against bosses or overextended PvP opponents.

Partial Chants: Trading Perfection for Safety

Full chants aren’t always optimal. Partial chanting, intentionally cutting the chant short before completion, still provides a meaningful damage boost without fully committing to the immobile window.

This is crucial in PvP and high-difficulty PvE where enemies can punish greed instantly. A half-chant into a confirmable hit often outperforms a full chant that never lands.

Think of partial chants as adjustable risk. You scale your commitment based on enemy cooldowns, distance, and awareness instead of blindly maximizing numbers.

Pre-Chanting and Predictive Buffing

High-level chanting often happens before the fight actually starts. Pre-chanting behind cover, around corners, or during enemy spawn animations lets you open with amplified pressure immediately.

This is especially strong in PvE waves and boss arenas. You’re front-loading damage while enemies are still pathing, which shortens encounters and reduces incoming pressure.

In PvP, predictive chanting works when you read intent. If an opponent is healing, reviving, or disengaging predictably, pre-chanting turns their defensive play into a punish window.

Building Combat Rotations Around Chanting

Optimized kits treat chanting as part of the rotation, not an interruption. The core loop usually follows a control tool, chant during downtime, then an amplified finisher or zone.

For example, crowd control into chant, then dump cursed energy into a high-scaling technique. Afterward, you disengage or reset while cooldowns recover, avoiding extended vulnerability.

This rotation mindset prevents overchanting. If chanting doesn’t naturally slot into the flow of your kit, it’s probably not worth forcing.

Common High-Level Mistakes to Avoid

The biggest mistake advanced players still make is chanting on neutral. Standing still without control, distance, or a read is an open invitation to get punished.

Another trap is chanting every cooldown cycle. Chanting is strongest when it swings momentum, not when it’s used on autopilot and drains energy inefficiently.

Finally, don’t chant for ego damage. If a non-chanted hit secures the kill or maintains pressure, take it. Winning clean is always better than losing with bigger numbers on paper.

Common Chanting Mistakes That Kill DPS (And How Top Players Avoid Them)

Even players who understand chanting mechanically still hemorrhage DPS through bad habits. Chanting is powerful, but it’s also unforgiving. The difference between mid-tier output and top-end pressure often comes down to avoiding a few repeat mistakes that quietly sabotage your damage.

Chanting Without a Confirm

The fastest way to lose DPS is chanting raw in neutral. Standing still to amplify a skill without a stun, knockdown, or spacing advantage gives enemies free I-frames, interrupts, or outright punish windows.

Top players only chant when damage is guaranteed. They wait for a crowd control hit, a whiffed enemy ability, or forced movement before committing. If the chant can’t realistically lead into a hit, they skip it and keep pressure instead.

Overcommitting to Full Chants Every Time

Full chants look good on paper, but in live combat they’re often a trap. Longer chant times increase vulnerability, drain more cursed energy, and raise the chance that the ability never connects.

High-level players treat chanting as a spectrum, not a binary choice. Partial chants are used when enemies still have mobility or defensive tools. Full chants are reserved for hard confirms like stuns, freezes, knockdowns, or boss openings.

Ignoring Positioning and Line of Sight

Chanting in the open is one of the most common DPS killers in both PvE and PvP. Even if you finish the chant, bad positioning can force you to reposition before firing, wasting the entire damage window.

Veteran players chant from angles. Corners, elevation, terrain breaks, and enemy pathing all matter. If you can’t release the amplified technique immediately after chanting, you’ve already lost efficiency.

Desyncing Chanting From Cooldowns

Another silent mistake is chanting when follow-up skills are still on cooldown. Amplifying a technique is meaningless if you can’t chain into pressure or capitalize on the hit.

Top players track cooldowns mentally and chant only when their rotation is ready. The chant lines up with a finisher, zone tool, or burst window, not a dead-end cast that leaves them exposed afterward.

Draining Cursed Energy for Low-Value Targets

Chanting consumes resources, and using it on trash mobs or low-HP players is pure waste. Killing something that would’ve died to a normal cast doesn’t increase DPS over time.

Experienced players chant for impact, not numbers. Boss phases, elite enemies, clustered waves, or PvP momentum swings are where chanting belongs. If the target doesn’t justify the energy cost, they save it.

Forgetting That Chanting Is a Commitment

Many players treat chanting like a passive buff instead of an action with risk. Once you start chanting, you’ve locked yourself into an animation and telegraphed intent.

Top-tier players respect that commitment. They bait dodges first, force cooldowns, or create distance before chanting. When they chant, it’s decisive, intentional, and timed to land.

Using Chanting as a Crutch Instead of a Multiplier

Relying on chanting to fix bad rotations or weak decision-making is a hard ceiling. Amplified mistakes are still mistakes, just more expensive ones.

The best players build strong fundamentals first. Clean movement, proper spacing, and smart ability usage come before chanting. Chanting then multiplies good play instead of trying to replace it.

At the highest level, chanting isn’t about chasing the biggest hit. It’s about controlled amplification, smart timing, and knowing when not to press the button. Master that restraint, and your DPS will climb without ever feeling forced.

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