
If you’re playing Devil Hunter as a Fiend and want to maximize your power, the Violence Fiend NPC is absolutely essential to your progression. I’ve spent countless hours grinding this Chainsaw Man-inspired Roblox experience, and I’m here to share everything I’ve learned about finding the Violence Fiend, completing his quests, and unlocking those crucial talent slots that separate average players from the elite.
| Aspect | Details |
|---|---|
| Location | Outside Skateboard Shop, Shopping District |
| Primary Function | Unlocks additional Fiend Talent slots (3 → 5) |
| Cost to Configure Talents | 15,000 Yen |
| Quests Available | 2 main quests for slot expansion |
| Prerequisites | Complete starter Devil Hunter quests, pick a Division |
| Always Available | Yes (no respawn timer) |
The Violence Fiend is one of the most important NPCs in Devil Hunter, especially if you’re running a Fiend build. This powerful character isn’t just another quest-giver – he’s your gateway to unlocking the full potential of your Fiend Talents system. Unlike other NPCs that offer simple tasks, the Violence Fiend provides game-changing upgrades that dramatically expand your tactical options in both PvE and PvP scenarios.
Violence Fiend serves three critical functions that make him indispensable for Fiend players. First, he allows you to increase your Fiend Talent slots from the default three up to five, giving you significantly more flexibility in building your character. Second, he lets you configure and reconfigure your Fiend Talents for a fee, meaning you can adapt your build to different situations without being permanently locked into bad choices. Third, he can remove cosmetic vanities from your talents if you prefer a cleaner look for your character.
What really sets Violence Fiend apart is that he’s specifically designed for the Fiend class. Human players won’t get much use from him beyond completing Benji’s early quest, but for Fiends, he’s basically your progression mentor. The quests he offers aren’t just busywork – they’re meaningful challenges that reward you with permanent character improvements.
Finding the Violence Fiend can be tricky for new players since there’s no map marker pointing to his location. After consulting multiple sources and verifying the information myself, I can confirm the exact location and route to reach him.
Start from the Public Safety HQ, which is your main faction headquarters. Before you can even leave the HQ, you’ll need to complete the starter Devil Hunter quests from the Starter Devil Hunter NPC and select a Division. This is non-negotiable – the game won’t let you access the outside world until these preliminary steps are done.
Once you’re ready to leave the HQ, exit the building and take an immediate left turn. After the left, make a right turn and continue running straight ahead. You’ll be heading down a main street that leads toward the shopping district. Keep running until you reach a large crossroad intersection – this is a major landmark you can’t miss.
At this crossroad, look toward the other side. You’ll see the Skateboard Shop, which is a distinctive building with skateboarders hanging around outside. The Violence Fiend stands right outside this shop, positioned at the junction near the Pawn Shop. He’s a muscular NPC with a very distinctive appearance that makes him stand out from regular NPCs.
The Skateboard Shop is your primary landmark, but there are other visual cues that help confirm you’re in the right area. The shopping district has a noticeably different atmosphere from the HQ area, with more civilian NPCs and commercial buildings. The crossroad where Violence Fiend stands is quite large and forms a central plaza in this district.
If you’re having trouble, just look for the area with skateboarders doing tricks – Violence Fiend is always nearby. He doesn’t despawn or move locations, so once you find the spot, you can always return to the same coordinates whenever you need his services.
The Violence Fiend offers two main quests that are essential for expanding your Fiend Talent slots. These quests follow a logical progression system, with each quest becoming slightly more demanding than the last. Completing both quests will take your talent slots from three to five, which is the maximum number available in the game.
The first Violence Fiend quest is called “Strength Through Carnage” and it requires you to complete three different objectives. You’ll need to kill five players in PvP combat, obtain ten Uncommon Devil Flesh items, and gather 100,000 Yen. This quest unlocks your fourth Fiend Talent slot.
| Objective | Requirement | Tips |
|---|---|---|
| Kill Players | 0/5 | Focus on lower-level areas or team up for easier kills |
| Uncommon Devil Flesh | 0/10 | Farm Uncommon Devils or buy from Black Market for 35,000 Yen each |
| Money | 0/100,000 Yen | Use Devil Hunter codes for free cash, farm raids |
The player kills can be the trickiest part if you’re not confident in PvP. I recommend either finding lower-level players in beginner areas or teaming up with clan members to make this easier. The kills don’t need to be solo eliminations – assists count toward your progress.
For Uncommon Devil Flesh, you have two main farming options. You can repeatedly kill Uncommon Devils like Mantis, Leech, Frog, Stone, Yurei, or Bat Devils until the flesh drops from their loot tables. Alternatively, you can purchase Uncommon Devil Flesh directly from the Black Market for 35,000 Yen per piece. If you buy all ten pieces, that’s 350,000 Yen total, which is why I strongly recommend farming instead.
The money requirement is straightforward but can be time-consuming. Running raids, completing other NPC quests, and killing devils all provide Yen rewards. However, the smartest approach is to redeem active Devil Hunter codes first – many codes give substantial Yen bonuses that can cut your grinding time significantly.
The second Violence Fiend quest continues with the same name but ramps up the difficulty. You’ll need to kill five more players, obtain two Rare Devil Flesh items, ten more Uncommon Devil Flesh, and gather another 100,000 Yen. This quest unlocks your fifth and final Fiend Talent slot.
| Objective | Requirement | Difficulty Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Kill Players | 0/5 | Same as Quest 1, PvP combat required |
| Rare Devil Flesh | 0/2 | Much harder to obtain, Ghost Devil only |
| Uncommon Devil Flesh | 0/10 | Same farming as Quest 1 |
| Money | 0/100,000 Yen | Additional 100k Yen needed |
The Rare Devil Flesh is where this quest gets significantly harder. Currently, the Ghost Devil is the only Rare-tier devil that drops Rare Devil Flesh. You have two options: farm the Ghost Devil repeatedly until you get two flesh drops, or purchase them from the Black Market for 50,000 Yen each (100,000 Yen total for both).
Ghost Devil farming is notoriously difficult because it’s a higher-level enemy with challenging mechanics, particularly its Ghost Walk ability that makes it temporarily invisible. If you’re undergeared or low level, buying the Rare Devil Flesh might actually be more time-efficient than farming, even though it’s expensive.
When you add up both quests, you’re looking at killing ten players total, obtaining two Rare Devil Flesh, twenty Uncommon Devil Flesh, and gathering 200,000 Yen in total. That’s a significant investment, but the reward – two additional talent slots – is absolutely worth it for serious Fiend players.
Fiend Talents are the core passive ability system for Fiend-class characters in Devil Hunter. These are permanent passive bonuses that activate automatically during combat, providing various advantages from healing to damage boosts to defensive capabilities. Understanding how talents work is essential to building an effective Fiend character.
Fiend Talents are passive abilities that you unlock by consuming specific body parts harvested from Devils you’ve defeated. Each Devil type in the game has an associated talent, and you must kill that particular Devil type twenty-five times before you even have a chance for its body part to drop. This makes talent acquisition a substantial time investment.
Once you consume a Devil’s body part, you permanently unlock that talent and can equip it in one of your talent slots. Some talents are incredibly powerful but require multiple slots to equip, while others are more modest but only take up a single slot. This creates interesting build decisions where you have to balance powerful multi-slot talents against having more variety with single-slot options.
Here’s the complete breakdown of every Fiend Talent currently available in Devil Hunter, including what they do, how to obtain them, and how many slots they consume:
| Talent Name | Slots | Effect | How to Obtain |
|---|---|---|---|
| Life Leech | 1 | Your Flourish drains 2% of enemy health, replenishing your own health | Eat Leech Devil Appendages (kill 25 Leech Devils) |
| Tongue Snatch | 2 | M1 attacks pull enemies toward you on hit | Eat Frog Devil Tongue (kill 25 Frog Devils) |
| Predator’s Angle | 2 | After roll-canceling, attacking from behind triggers additional hit dealing weapon damage | Eat Mantis Devil Arm (kill 25 Mantis Devils) |
| Ghost Walk | 2 | Perfectly timed dodges render you invisible for 2 seconds | Eat Ghost Devil Arm (kill 25 Ghost Devils) |
| Corrosive Touch | 1 | Every blocked M1 applies corrosive status, eroding enemy posture | Eat Sea Cucumber Devil Finger (kill 25 Sea Cucumber Devils) |
| Mold Eruption | 2 | Attacks spread rot; flourishes and wall impacts inflict Mold damage | Eat Mold Devil Flesh (kill 25 Mold Devils) |
| Revive Sprout | 1 | Knocking enemies spawns seed that blooms into health-restoring plant | Eat Tomato Devil Seed (kill 25 Tomato Devils) |
| Borrowed Life | 3 | When knocked down, revive temporarily; secure kill within 20 seconds or get knocked again | Eat Zombie Devil Brain (kill 25 Zombie Devils) |
| Razorfin | 1 | Uppercuts deal 50% more damage and convert to sharp damage type | Eat Fish Devil Appendages (kill 25 Fish Devils) |
| Stone Skin | 3 | 10% damage reduction to all attacks, reduces movement speed | Eat Stone Devil Appendages (kill 25 Stone Devils) |
| Rupturing Cry | 2 | On posture break, unleash deafening scream that disorients and knocks enemies away | Eat Bat Devil Appendages (kill 25 Bat Devils) |
You start with three talent slots unlocked by default. After completing the Violence Fiend’s two quests, you’ll have five slots total. This means you need to make strategic decisions about which talents to equip. For example, you could equip five different single-slot talents for maximum variety, or you could use one three-slot talent plus two single-slot talents, or any combination that totals five slots or less.
The slot system creates meaningful build diversity. Offensive players might prioritize damage-boosting talents like Razorfin and Predator’s Angle, while defensive players might invest in Stone Skin and Borrowed Life for survivability. PvP specialists often favor Ghost Walk for its mind-game potential, while PvE grinders love Life Leech for sustain during long boss fights.
Farming twenty-five kills on each Devil type is tedious, so you’ll want to be strategic about which talents you pursue first. I recommend starting with single-slot talents from easy-to-farm Devils like Leech (for Life Leech) or Fish (for Razorfin). These provide immediate value without requiring multiple slots.
The best farming locations vary by Devil type, but generally you want to find Devils during invasion missions or world events where they spawn in higher concentrations. Using a Surgery Kit purchased from the Black Market (5,000-10,000 Yen) is mandatory for collecting Devil organs, so make sure you have one equipped before you start farming.
One crucial detail that many guides don’t mention: the body part drops are still RNG-based even after twenty-five kills. You’re guaranteed to have a chance at drops after twenty-five kills, but you might need to kill thirty or forty of that Devil type before the body part actually drops. Plan accordingly and don’t get frustrated if you don’t see the drop immediately at kill number twenty-five.
Beyond just unlocking slots, the Violence Fiend also provides talent configuration services. This means you can swap which talents you have equipped, remove talents you don’t want, or adjust your build entirely by paying a fee.
To configure your talents, approach the Violence Fiend and select the second dialogue option. This opens the configuration menu where you can see all your unlocked talents and decide which ones to equip in your available slots.
The configuration service costs 15,000 Yen each time you use it. This might seem expensive, especially early in the game, but it’s actually quite reasonable considering it allows you to experiment with different builds. You can test an offensive setup for raids, then reconfigure to a defensive setup for PvP, all without permanently committing to any single build.
I recommend reconfiguring your talents based on your current activity. If you’re farming raids or hunting Devils, equip sustain-focused talents like Life Leech and Revive Sprout. If you’re heading into competitive PvP, switch to utility talents like Ghost Walk and Predator’s Angle that give you outplay potential.
Boss fights often benefit from defensive builds with Stone Skin and Borrowed Life, since these encounters can drag on and you need to survive long combos. World events with lots of enemies favor AoE-focused talents like Mold Eruption and Rupturing Cry that can handle crowds efficiently.
The 15,000 Yen cost means you shouldn’t reconfigure constantly on a whim, but you should definitely reconfigure whenever you’re transitioning between major activities. Having the wrong build for PvP when you’re built for PvE can be the difference between winning and losing.
Now that you understand individual talents and how configuration works, let’s discuss some of the most effective talent combinations for different playstyles and situations. These builds are based on community testing and my personal experience with various content types.
This build prioritizes pure damage output and is ideal for farming raids quickly or taking down Devil bosses efficiently.
Talent Loadout:
Total: 5 slots used
This setup maximizes your damage in extended fights while giving you enough sustain through Life Leech to survive. Corrosive Touch accelerates posture breaks, which leads to more openings for damage. Predator’s Angle rewards positioning skill, dealing huge burst damage when you successfully get behind enemies.
This defensive build is designed for surviving difficult boss encounters and high-level PvP where staying alive matters more than dealing maximum damage.
Talent Loadout:
Alternative Immortal Build:
Total: 5 slots used
The Stone Skin variant is better for sustained fights where you need consistent damage reduction. The reduced movement speed is a trade-off, but the 10% damage reduction stacks up significantly over long encounters. Life Leech and Revive Sprout ensure you’re constantly recovering health.
This build focuses on outplay potential and mechanical skill expression, perfect for competitive PvP encounters.
Talent Loadout:
Total: 5 slots used
Ghost Walk is the star of this build, allowing you to vanish after perfect dodges and reposition for backstabs with Predator’s Angle. This creates mind games where opponents don’t know where you’ll attack from. Razorfin provides burst damage for finishing combos. This build has a high skill ceiling but rewards players who master the dodge timing.
This build works well for players who want versatility and don’t want to keep reconfiguring between activities.
Talent Loadout:
Total: 5 slots used
This setup gives you sustain for PvE, damage for killing efficiently, and crowd control for handling multiple enemies. It’s not optimized for any single activity but performs competently in all content types.
Beyond the basics, there are several advanced techniques and lesser-known facts about the Violence Fiend and talent system that can give you an edge.
The Violence Fiend quests require substantial Yen investment, especially if you’re buying Devil Flesh from the Black Market. Always redeem active Devil Hunter codes before starting these quests – codes frequently give 50,000+ Yen bonuses that can cut your grinding time significantly.
Join the official Devil Hunter Discord server to stay updated on new codes as they release. The developers drop codes during milestones like 600K members or after major updates, and these codes often expire quickly. Missing out on code rewards means hours of extra grinding.
Consider farming Uncommon Devil Flesh instead of buying it. Ten pieces at 35,000 Yen each is 350,000 Yen total, which is a massive expense early in the game. If you can farm five to seven pieces and only buy the remaining three to four, you’ll save over 200,000 Yen that can be used elsewhere.
Get a Surgery Kit as early as possible – you can’t collect Devil organs without one. The Black Market sells Surgery Kits for 5,000-10,000 Yen, which is a small investment that enables all talent farming.
Focus on farming one Devil type at a time until you get the body part drop, rather than spreading your kills across multiple Devil types. This ensures you’re making measurable progress toward unlocking specific talents. Keep a tally of your kills per Devil type so you know when you’ve hit the twenty-five kill threshold.
Join raid groups in the Discord server to farm Devils more efficiently. Group farming lets you kill Devils faster and increases your total kills per hour. Plus, you can coordinate which Devils your group is targeting to help everyone unlock the talents they need.
If you’re just starting out with three slots, prioritize single-slot talents first. This gives you more variety and flexibility while you’re still learning the game. Life Leech is probably the best first talent because it works in every situation and provides immediate value through healing.
Don’t rush to unlock both additional slots from Violence Fiend until you’ve unlocked at least four to five talents total. Having two extra slots is useless if you only have three talents unlocked – you won’t have anything to fill those slots with.
Test different talent combinations in low-stakes content before committing to a build for important activities. The 15,000 Yen reconfiguration fee adds up quickly if you’re constantly changing your mind, so experiment in raid farming first to figure out what you like.
Through playing Devil Hunter extensively and watching other players, I’ve noticed several common mistakes that slow down progression or waste resources. Avoid these pitfalls to optimize your Violence Fiend experience.
The single biggest mistake new players make is buying all their Devil Flesh from the Black Market. Yes, it’s faster than farming, but it’s incredibly expensive. For both Violence Fiend quests combined, you need twenty Uncommon Devil Flesh and two Rare Devil Flesh.
If you buy everything from the Black Market, that’s 700,000 Yen for Uncommon Flesh (20 × 35,000) and 100,000 Yen for Rare Flesh (2 × 50,000), totaling 800,000 Yen just for Devil Flesh. Add the 200,000 Yen requirement from the quests themselves, and you’re looking at 1,000,000 Yen total.
That’s an astronomical amount of Yen that could be used for weapons, contracts, or other progression items. Farm at least half of the Uncommon Devil Flesh to save hundreds of thousands of Yen.
Devil Hunter codes give massive resource bonuses, including Yen, trait rerolls, clan rerolls, and sometimes even Devil Flesh directly. Not redeeming codes before starting Violence Fiend quests is leaving free resources on the table.
Check code lists regularly because many codes expire after limited time periods or after reaching a certain number of redemptions. The active codes change frequently, especially around update releases and community milestones.
Some new players unlock talents and immediately equip them without considering their build strategy. This leads to suboptimal combinations where talents don’t synergize well or where you’re wasting slots on talents that don’t fit your playstyle.
Before configuring talents, decide what type of content you’ll be doing most and build specifically for that. A scattered, unfocused talent build will underperform compared to a purposefully constructed one, even if the scattered build uses “better” individual talents.
Three-slot talents like Borrowed Life and Stone Skin are powerful, but they consume more than half your total slots even with the Violence Fiend expansions. Some players equip a three-slot talent and then realize they only have two slots left for everything else.
Unless you’re specifically building around a three-slot talent, you might get more value from combining multiple one-slot and two-slot talents instead. Five separate talents (even if individually weaker) can provide more versatility than one three-slot talent plus minimal support.
The Violence Fiend stands outside the Skateboard Shop in the shopping district. From Public Safety HQ, exit and go left, then right, then straight to the crossroad. He’ll be across the street from where you emerge, standing in the plaza area near the Pawn Shop.
You don’t need to be a Fiend to access Violence Fiend – any class can talk to him and complete Benji’s quest. However, only Fiend-class players can do his main quests for slot expansion and use the talent configuration services. Human players won’t benefit from his primary functions.
The maximum is five talent slots total. You start with three by default and can unlock two more by completing both of Violence Fiend’s “Strength Through Carnage” quests.
No, talent reconfiguration costs 15,000 Yen each time you use the service. There’s currently no way to reconfigure talents for free, so budget accordingly if you plan to swap builds frequently.
The fastest way is buying from the Black Market, but it’s expensive. The most cost-effective way is farming the specific Devil types during invasion missions or world events where they spawn in higher numbers. Using a Surgery Kit to extract organs is mandatory.
No, reconfiguring only changes which talents are currently equipped in your slots. All unlocked talents remain permanently available even when not equipped. You can swap between them freely (for the 15,000 Yen fee) without losing any progress.
Absolutely. Two additional talent slots dramatically increase your build flexibility and power level. The resource investment is significant, but the permanent benefit makes it one of the best progression investments in the game for Fiend players.
Player kills in the quest can be obtained through PvP combat, and teaming up with friends makes this easier. However, you need to gather your own Devil Flesh and Yen individually – these requirements don’t share between party members.
The Devil Hunter Update 1 introduced several important changes to the Violence Fiend and Fiend Talents system that players should be aware of.
Update 1 brought the Violence Fiend NPC into the game as a fully functional character. Before this update, Fiend players were stuck with only three talent slots and had no way to expand their build options. The Violence Fiend’s introduction gave Fiend builds the flexibility they desperately needed to compete with other classes.
The talent configuration system also launched with Update 1, allowing players to respec their equipped talents for a fee. This was a game-changer for build experimentation because previously, players would need to create entirely new characters to test different talent combinations.
Update 1 also balanced several Fiend Talents based on early player feedback. Ghost Walk had its invisibility duration slightly reduced from three seconds to two seconds to prevent abuse in PvP. Life Leech’s healing was adjusted to 2% of enemy max health to scale better against high-level enemies.
The developers have hinted at potential future content involving Violence Fiend. Data miners found references to additional quest tiers that might unlock further slot expansions beyond five, though this hasn’t been officially confirmed.
There’s also speculation about Violence Fiend potentially offering advanced talent variations or evolutions in future updates. Some community theorists believe we might see “Violence Fiend Contract” as a Devil Contract option down the line, though again, this is purely speculation based on unused game files.
Keep checking the official Devil Hunter Discord and Trello board for patch notes and sneaks about upcoming content. The developers are active in communicating their plans, and Violence Fiend content is specifically mentioned as something they want to expand over time.
The Violence Fiend is absolutely essential for any serious Fiend-class player in Devil Hunter. His quest line provides two additional talent slots that dramatically expand your build options, giving you the flexibility to tackle any content type effectively.
Finding him outside the Skateboard Shop is straightforward once you know the route, and completing his two quests should be a top priority after you’ve established your basic character progression. Yes, the quests require substantial resource investment between player kills, Devil Flesh farming, and Yen accumulation, but the permanent benefits make it worthwhile.
Remember to redeem active Devil Hunter codes before starting the quests, farm Uncommon Devil Flesh instead of buying it all, and plan your talent builds carefully based on your preferred content. The talent system rewards thoughtful build construction, and having five slots instead of three opens up powerful combinations that can define your playstyle.
Whether you’re focused on PvP domination, raid farming efficiency, or boss fight survivability, the Violence Fiend provides the tools you need to succeed. Now get out there, complete those quests, and start experimenting with the talent combinations that work best for your Devil Hunter journey!
For more Devil Hunter content, strategies, and updates, bookmark this page and check back regularly. The game is constantly evolving with new updates, and I’ll keep this guide updated with the latest information to help you stay ahead of the curve. Good luck hunting, and may your Fiend build strike fear into your enemies!