Dark Souls 3: The 7 Best Boss Weapons (& 7 That Aren’t Worth It)

Tough boss fights and Dark Souls are synonymous with each other. The franchise’s incredible fights and unique settings have made for one of the most recognizable and cherished franchises in recent memory. Part of that praise comes from how many ways players can topple the challenges Dark Souls presents.

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Defeating the game’s hardest bosses rewards their soul, a powerful item that can either grant a large sum of currency or new weapons and spells. These weapons are some of the most unique in the series, yet all are not created equal. Some of these weapons are meta-defining while others are not worth the hassle. Here are the 7 best and worst boss weapons players can find in Dark Souls 3. Spoilers below.

Updated December 20th, 2020 by Charles Burgar: Boss weapons are some of the most unique weapons in the Dark Souls franchise. They might have lost some of the raw power they held in the original Dark Souls and arguably Dark Souls 2, yet the boss weapons in Dark Souls 3 offer a fresh set take on certain weapon categories that are hard to find elsewhere. Not all of these weapons are great, sadly. To help players avoid the more mediocre to downright terrible choices, four additional entries have been added that cover a few more of the game’s best and worst boss weapons.

14 Best: Demon’s Scar

Transposed from the Soul of the Demon Prince, the Demon’s Scar is a curved sword made of pure flame. This weapon only deals fire damage, scales with dexterity and intelligence, and it can cast pyromancies with its heavy attack.

Utility is this weapon’s greatest strength. For only 0.5 weight, this weapon can grant you a suite of excellent attacks thanks to its curved sword archetype, the ability to mix up your swings with pyromancies, and it can even serve as a solid flame shield if need be. Its damage output is certainly lacking for every other build type in the game, but the utility this weapon brings is hard to beat.

13 Worst: Cleric Candlestick

Slaying the Deacons of the Deep allows the player to create the Cleric Candlestick, a straight sword that doubles up as a staff. That sounds fantastic in theory, allowing gish builds to use a melee weapon besides the Moonlight Greatsword. Sadly, there are so many issues with this weapon that it’s not even worth considering.

Spells cast from the Cleric Candlestick scale from the player’s faith stat instead of intelligence. Strangely, the weapon scales its magic damage from intelligence and not faith. Since faith is what scales the player’s spells, the fact it doesn’t influence this weapon’s damage is absurd. It doesn’t end there; this weapon deals a pitiful amount of damage when it’s upgraded. Not even its weapon art can save the Cleric Candlestick.

12 Best: Twin Princes’ Greatsword

Image from Moose Torrent (YouTube)

Perhaps a reference to the Nothern Regalia sword from Demon’s Souls, the Twin Princes’ Greatsword is a hidden boss weapon that can only be obtained by owning Lothric’s Holy Sword and Lorian’s Greatsword. Since those weapons drop from the same boss, this weapon is locked behind a New Game cycle.

RELATED: Dark Souls 3: 10 Most Powerful Spells, Ranked

After fighting this late-game boss twice, players can take both blades to Ludleth and have him combine the two into this deadly weapon. While it only has a D scaling in its stats, this weapon scales from strength, dexterity, intelligence, and faith. This weapon is best suited for hybrid builds because of this. Builds that can scale this weapon will notice its excellent greatsword moveset and powerful weapon art—allowing the player to send out a piercing ray of light or a wave of flame. It’s good for applying pressure to targets, closing the gap, and catching rolls. Both PvE and PvP players can get a good bit of mileage out of this weapon.

11 Worst: Darkmoon Bow

The Darkmoon Bow is Dark Souls 3’s weakest bow. Slaying Aldrich, Devourer of Gods grants players access to this weapon. Statistically, the Darkmoon Bow is the worst in its class.

With only an E rating in strength and B in intelligence at +5, this weapon struggles to compete with even the standard Short Bow unless paired with Moonlight Arrows and its weapon art. Hybrid characters and roleplay-centered builds will get a kick out of this weapon, but Aldrich’s bow is a massive disappointment considering how solid Lifehunt Scythe is.

10 Best: Frayed Blade

Transposed from the Soul of Darkeater Midir, the Frayed Blade is arguably the strongest katana in Dark Souls 3. While it requires a whopping 40 dexterity to wield properly, it more than makes up for it with one of the most devastating weapon arts in the game.

Rapid slashes that extend as far as a Washing Pole along with a solid moveset are the Frayed Blade’s largest boons. If it wasn’t obtained so late in a playthrough and had better durability, the Frayed Blade would be much higher on this list. This is certainly a reward that was worth the effort.

9 Worst: Crystal Sage Rapier

Crystal weapons are supposed to be some of the hardest-hitting weapons in the Dark Souls franchise. Sadly, that does not hold true for the Crystal Sage’s Rapier. This blade deals low damage due to its terrible scaling with strength and dexterity alongside its split damage types. Worse, it has a rather lackluster weapon art and a mediocre moveset.

Its greatest strength is increasing Item Discovery while equipped, but players tend to two-hand their off-hand weapon with this equipped solely for the bonus. If players aren’t interested in farming for items, there is little reason to transpose the Crystal Sage’s soul.

8 Best: Wolf Knight Greatsword

Followers of Sif and Artorias, the Abyss Watchers are a phenomenal fight with even better items to transpose. Choosing between the Farron Greatsword or Wolf Knight’s Greatsword is a tough choice. Ultimately, the Wolf Knight Greatsword edges over the Abyss Watchers’ signature weapon.

Do not be fooled by its rather lackluster C scaling in both strength and dexterity when upgraded. This weapon has one of the most aggressive and agile movesets in the franchise. Frequent steps and flips make this blade perfect for outdueling foes in PvP or taking down aggressive foes in PvE. It also does 20% additional damage against Abyssal foes, making this weapon perfect for taking down Darkeater Midir and Aldrich.

7 Worst: Firelink Greatsword

Defeating the final boss of Dark Souls 3 can grant the Firelink Greatsword. Wielded by the Soul of Cinder itself, this blade is meant to be the manifestation of fire itself. Unfortunately, it doesn’t scale with intelligence nor faith.

Strength and dexterity don’t help, either. Even when fully upgraded, this blade only has a D scaling in its stats. The moveset of this weapon is rather average when compared to its contemporaries. Besides its incredible appearance, the Firelink Greatsword is easily the most disappointing final boss reward in the franchise.

6 Best: Vordt’s Great Hammer

For a hammer that players can obtain within their first couple of hours, Vordt’s Great Hammer is one of the strongest two-handed weapons in the game. This weapon deals great damage per swing, has a B scaling in strength when upgraded, and it passively deals frost damage to annihilate a target’s Health and Stamina.

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Two or three hits is all it takes to activate this effect. Needless to say, it’s a complete powerhouse in PvP and a surprisingly good weapon in PvE when coupled with its Poise-enabling weapon art.

5 Worst: Valorheart

Valorheart’s stylish moveset is the only positive thing about this weapon. Obtained from the Champion’s Gravetender & Gravetender Greatwolf boss, this sword and shield combo provides a solid amount of mobility that is accompanied by a few sword attacks. Thing is, the weapon deals almost no damage.

An Attack Rating of 210 with a D scaling in strength and a C scaling in dexterity is terrible. The shield itself isn’t good, only able to absorb 60% of physical damage and 30-40% of elemental damage. It has some use breaking shield guards thanks to the weapon art’s excellent stamina damage, yet most players will be better off using a bleed-infused dagger to pressure a turtling player. There is no situation in PvE or PvP where this weapon shines. Valorheart is all bark with no bite.

4 Best: Gael’s Greatsword

It seems that all the Executioner’s Greatsword needed to be a top-tier weapon is to snap it in half. Gael’s Greatsword is a broken version of this coveted blade that has one of the strongest weapon arts in the game. The number of rapid slashes in this stance is so great that it gives the great knight Artorias a run for his money.

Solid damage compliments the great moveset as well, making it a must for any greatsword enthusiasts that frequent PvE content. Gael’s Greatsword is rather predictable in PvP, however, and can easily be parried by a skilled opponent.

3 Worst: Dancer’s Enchanted Swords

Curved swords are one of the strongest weapon archetypes in Dark Souls 3, containing classics such as the Sellsword Twinblades and the Demon’s Scar. Dancer’s Enchanted Blades fall into the same category yet lack the same impact, both metaphorically and literally.

Players must deal with a blade that has not one or two damage types but three. This alone makes it a nightmare to use since resistances vary so wildly in PvE and PvP, but it gets worse. A D scaling in every stat even at +5 prevents quality or hybrid builds from making these blades truly shine. Anyone that wishes to slash their way to victory is better off with the Sellsword Twinblades instead.

2 Best: Hollowslayer Greatsword

Take the damage of a hard-hitting greatsword and pair it with the moveset and speed of a straight sword, and the result is the Hollowslayer Greatsword. This blade can be obtained immediately after unlocking Soul Transposition.

No other greatsword has the same easy-to-use moveset and overall speed as this blade. Solid damage and great speed are further complemented by this weapon’s hyper armor with each swing, meaning staggers during attacks are a rare sight. Thrust attacks are particularly devastating on this weapon due to this and pair nicely with Leo’s Ring.

If that wasn’t enough, this sword also gains a 20% damage increase against all Hollows — a category that nearly every enemy falls under. For PvE, it’s an amazing early-game choice that scales to the endgame. For PvP, few greatswords can match its versatility.

1 Worst: Repeating Crossbow

Those that defeat Gael can either obtain his greatsword or the Repeating Crossbow. If players have never seen the Repeating Crossbow before, that is because it is easily the worst boss weapon in the game.

A flat 83 Attack Rating per shot with no scaling whatsoever puts the Repeating Crossbow well behind its peers. Using its main fire requires a reload as with every other crossbow, meaning that this item’s rapid-fire nature is only achieved through using its weapon art that disables movement. In exchange for all of these drawbacks, the weapon consumes a bolt and 13 FP with each shot to hit targets with terrible hip-fire accuracy. Aiming in this stance is next to impossible.

Drawbacks continue with the Repeating Crossbow having a pitiful 20 Durability, the lowest in the category. Firing this weapon for too long will break it. It requires constant upkeep to repair, consumes ammo with every shot, and even still has too many drawbacks to consider using legitimately in PvP or hard PvE encounters. In terms of fun, this weapon is one of the best in the game. For practicality, however, it’s the worst.

NEXT: 10 Hidden Areas You Didn’t Know Existed In Dark Souls 3

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