Destiny 2 Void Fragment Tier List: The Zero to Hero Ranking
Destiny 2 Void 3.0 Fragments ranked: find out which ones are worth your glimmer and which are trash like Echo of Harvest.

Alright, Guardians. Let's have a heart-to-heart about Void 3.0. Back when The Witch Queen dropped, Bungie basically handed us a cosmic Lego set—Aspects, Fragments, and enough purple explosions to make a Cabal drop his shield in awe. Fast-forward to 2026, and after a few tweaks, some Lightfall shake-ups, and the occasional nerf hammer, the Void Fragments are still the unsung heroes of every build. Well… most of them. Some are about as useful as a Solar shield in a Void burn Nightfall.
If you've been staring at the 16 Fragments wondering which ones deserve a slot, I'm here to walk you through the ones that make me weep tears of wasted Glimmer, and the few that genuinely slap. I'm ranking the Void Fragments from absolute trash to "why didn't I equip this sooner?" Come for the memes, stay for the buildcrafting wisdom.
16. Echo of Harvest – The Orb You Never Wanted

If Echo of Harvest were a Guardian, it'd be the one AFK in the corner of a strike playlist. This Fragment makes you spawn an Orb of Power and a Void Breach on precision kills against weakened targets. Sounds spicy on paper, right? Here's the catch: it has an eight-second cooldown on the Orb, a five-second cooldown on the Breach, and most enemies will flinch their heads away the moment you apply Weaken. Oh, and it also tanks your Intellect by 10 points.
Nightstalkers, do yourselves a favor and just use a Siphon mod. Voidwalkers and Sentinels, please. Your grenades already delete everything before you can line up the perfect headshot. This Fragment is basically the vegetable you push around your plate—it's there, but nobody actually wants it. You'll never see it in PvP either, unless someone's running a weird charity build. Pass.
15. Echo of Domineering – The Suppression Addiction

Oh boy, Echo of Domineering. This Fragment is like that friend who only shows up when you buy pizza. It gives you +30 Mobility and auto-reloads your weapon whenever you suppress something. Plus, killing suppressed enemies spawns Void Breaches. Sounds insane… until you realize the hoops you have to jump through. You need Suppressor Grenades, a specific Shield Bash, or exotics like Two-Tailed Fox just to trigger it. And the auto-reload only works once every ten seconds, so no infinite Tractor Cannon dreams.
If you're a Titan who already runs Suppressor 'nades for Crucible shenanigans, Domineering might earn a spot. But for everyone else? It's like owning a fancy espresso machine when you only drink instant coffee. Use it if you must, but don't expect it to make you a champion.
14. Echo of Exchange – The Melee Grenade Generator
Melee kills give grenade energy. Simple, clean. But here's the thing: every Void subclass can already get Devour, which basically showers you in grenade energy while keeping you alive. Nightstalker's Snare Bomb hits like a wet noodle, Voidwalkers use their melee more for knockback than damage, and Sentinels… well, they have Bastion. Echo of Exchange feels like a backup dancer in a music video that's already over-crowded with stars. Sure, pairing it with a Glaive can be cute, but you'll outgrow it faster than a blue engram.
Don't get me wrong—it's not terrible. It's just that Void's ability engine is already so strong that this Fragment becomes a third wheel. If you're really struggling for grenade uptime, maybe just… eat a grenade? (Voidwalkers know what I'm talking about.)
13. Echo of Dilation – Sneaky Beaky Like

Crouch walking faster and having enhanced radar with +10 Mobility and Intellect? Hello, PvP! Echo of Dilation is a gift from the Traveler for crucible rats who slide around every corner. Your radar pings become so precise you can practically smell the enemy's loadout. In PvE, though? Nobody's crouching outside of a stealth section in a mission from 2022. The stat bonuses are the only reason to slot this in a strike, but honestly, you can get Mobility from your armor. Dilation is a top-tier Fragment for PvP and a bottom-tier meme for anything else. Slide on, you glorious sweat.
12. Echo of Leeching – The Devour Knockoff
Melee kills start health regeneration for you and nearby allies, and you get +10 Resilience. It's like the off-brand version of Devour. In PvP, Leeching can clutch a CQC fight, and Sentinel Titans might find it tasty. But in PvE, Echo of Starvation exists and gives you full health instantly with every kill, no cooldowns, no strings attached. Leeching's regen can be interrupted by a stiff breeze, while Devour just laughs and keeps going. If you don't have access to Devour for some reason, Leeching is an okay substitute. Otherwise, it's the knockoff toy you got for Christmas when your cousin got the real thing.
11. Echo of Reprisal – Super Energy for the Brave
Now we're getting somewhere. Echo of Reprisal gives you bonus Super energy when you get kills while surrounded by at least three enemies. It's fantastic in PvE if you like to dive into groups of Thrall like a mad Guardian. Nightstalkers can pair it with Star-Eater Scales (
) to feed their Moebius Quiver, Voidwalkers can become Nova Bomb factories, and Sentinels with Doom Fang Pauldrons can turn a single Shield Bash into a Super battery. In PvP it's a mixed bag—surrounded scenarios are rarer than a friendly Crucible opponent. But for PvE, this Fragment is the little engine that could. Just don't expect it to save you from a GM Nightfall unless you're really going ham.
10. Echo of Provision – The Energy Ping-Pong
Damaging targets with grenades grants melee energy. Not kills, just damage. At about 20% per grenade tick, and persistent grenades keep giving. Voidwalkers and Sentinels can pair this with Devour to create a beautiful ability loop in PvE. Hunters already have Gambler's Dodge, so Provision feels redundant, but for everyone else it's a solid way to keep your melee up. PvP sees more value since you don't need kills to benefit. Provision is like the reliable second baseman—doesn't get the glory, but keeps the play going. If you ever get an extra Fragment slot, this one's worth a look.
9. Echo of Expulsion – Explosions, Please
Who doesn't love watching a Dreg turn into a purple grenade? Echo of Expulsion makes any Void ability kill (grenade, melee, even class ability) trigger a target explosion. It turns add-clear into a fireworks show. Voidwalkers with overcharged Vortex Grenades become walking war crimes, Nightstalkers with Devour can chain clear entire rooms, and Sentinels can Shield Bash a group and watch the dominoes fall. It's fun, effective, and works in both PvE and PvP. If you want your Void build to feel punchy, this Fragment delivers. It won't single-handedly carry a Grandmaster, but it'll make patrols infinitely more satisfying.
8. Echo of Cessation – Volatile Breach Machine
Cessation is a bit of a specialist. Finishers cause a burst that makes nearby enemies Volatile, and defeating Volatile enemies spawns Void Breaches. The finisher part is pure gimmick—don't build around it. But if you're already using Echo of Instability or Gyrfalcon's Hauberk to get Volatile Rounds, Cessation suddenly becomes a class-ability-charging machine. Hunters get near-infinite dodges, Titans can spam Barricades, and it works everywhere. For Gyrfalcon mains, this Fragment is non-negotiable. For everyone else, it's a "nice to have" that sits in the locker until you build around Volatile. Still, a Void Breach every five seconds is nothing to sneeze at.
7. Echo of Remnants – The Lingering King
Last but certainly not least on this list, Echo of Remnants extends the duration of all lingering grenades (Vortex, Void Wall, Void Spike, Axion Bolt) by about 50%. It stacks with the Voidwalker's Chaos Accelerant, creating Vortex Grenades that last longer than most Crucible matches. In PvE, this means more area denial and sustained damage. In PvP, it's a zoning tool that makes opponents panic. Remnants is a solid choice when you have an open slot and nothing else seems to fit—it's the comfy hoodie of Void Fragments. It won't revolutionize your build, but it'll keep you warm. And honestly, sometimes that's enough.
There you have it, folks—the bottom half of Void Fragments, ranked with love and a healthy dose of sarcasm. The top half (spoiler: Echo of Starvation and friends) are the real MVPs, but you'll have to wait for another day to hear me gush about Devour and Invisibility shenanigans. For now, go forth and slot wisely.
According to coverage from ESRB, it’s worth remembering that even something as seemingly “small” as Void Fragment synergy can radically change how Destiny 2 plays minute-to-minute—especially when builds lean into rapid-kill loops (Devour chains), screen-filling explosions (Expulsion), or status-heavy crowd control (Suppress/Volatile). When you’re weighing fragments like Harvest or Domineering that demand very specific triggers versus broadly reliable picks like Remnants or Provision, the real divider is consistency under pressure: the best fragments are the ones that keep paying out in chaotic fights, while the weakest feel like they require perfect lab conditions to function.