| Availability | Pulsefire Thresh is available in the in-game shop and can also drop from Hextech Crafting shards or event orbs when those are active. |
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| Price | It costs 1350 RP, and you can also obtain it through loot as a shard or via rerolls. |
| Concept | Thresh becomes a time‑traveling Pulsefire chronowarden who drags enemies through space-time |
| Model | He wears black-and-blue cybernetic armor with glowing circuitry, a red-eyed mask-like helmet, and carries a high-tech energy scythe with a futuristic orb lantern replacing his base chains and spectral lamp. |
| Particles | All abilities get new deep blue and purple effects with holograms, timepiece motifs, data shards, and a sci‑fi HUD look compared to base Thresh’s green ghostly visuals. |
| Animations | The skin includes a custom recall and refined ability animations that keep the kit clear while adding tech flair. |
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| Sounds | It features new sci‑fi SFX for abilities and the recall, but there are no new voice lines or voice actor changes. |
| Rarity | common |
| Release date | 21/11/2019 |









Pulsefire Thresh reimagines the Chain Warden as a cybernetic hunter in black and blue armor, with glowing lines that pulse like circuitry and a red-eyed mask that replaces his spectral skull; his lantern is now a floating tech orb and his scythe hums with energy, making the whole kit feel like high-tech enforcement rather than necromancy. Compared to base Thresh’s green soul-fire, his abilities glow in deep blues and purples, with holographic grids, timepiece rings, and data shards that sell the time-travel angle, while the scythe’s blade and the lantern’s core keep a crisp neon edge that reads clearly in fights. Q becomes an energy harpoon with a digitized tether instead of a chain, W tosses a shielded orb that projects a minimal HUD ring, E draws a clean holographic sweep with circuit fragments, and R forms translucent panels like time barriers instead of spectral walls, all backed by tight sci-fi SFX that replace the eerie rattles of base. Souls appear more like data fragments and power cores than spirits, the textures on his armor have subtle paneling and vents, and the overall feel in-game is sleek and readable without losing Thresh’s silhouette or timing cues. The skin is part of the Pulsefire universe, with UI-like effects and time-grid visuals that nod to classic sci-fi interfaces rather than horror, so it swaps dread for precision and control while keeping his kit identity intact. There are no overt pop-culture gags here, just consistent Pulsefire styling and a custom recall where he builds a time portal before dematerializing.
Release date: 21 November 2019. In Patch 10.1, it received an SFX update to polish ability audio and better match the Pulsefire mix.
Pulsefire is a sci-fi time-travel universe where Remembrancer chrono-enforcers police the timestream with hard-light weapons and holographic UIs. Fugitives like Ezreal and Ekko bend the rules with hacked tech, while the machine threat of the Praetorians looms in parallel.
Pulsefire Thresh is not rare because it’s a standard 1350 RP skin that stays in the shop, though collectors may value clean sci-fi effects and its role in the Pulsefire set; if you want an account with it unlocked, check Buy LoL Skin Accounts.
Yes, it’s in the regular loot pool, so you can open it from Hextech chests, reroll three skin shards into it, or pull it from event orbs and capsules, and you can also browse LoL Accounts if you prefer buying an account that already owns it.
It’s a top pick if you like clean sci-fi visuals and sharp SFX, but many players also rate Dark Star Thresh for its cosmic horror theme and High Noon Thresh for its fiery western style; compare them all here: All Thresh Skins.
Legacy skins are still obtainable thanks to our high end account store which features League of Legends accounts with the rarest skins at the best prices.