How to Solve Monolith Crown Puzzle in Crimson Desert

Crimson Desert Monolith Crown Puzzle

When you first reach Monolith Crown, it does not feel like a puzzle. You see the floating cube in the middle, but there is nothing obvious to interact with, so it just feels like you are missing something.

What people miss is that the controller is not actually near the cube but farther on the side of the arena. Once you find it, the Monolith Crown Puzzle in Crimson Desert turns into a timing problem more than anything. You rotate the cube, line up the lasers, and then avoid messing up the last two inputs.

Where to Find the Controller & How the Crimson Desert Monolith Crown Puzzle Works

Monolith Crown Puzzle Location

Image via Pearl Abyss and YouTube/@GGChannelX

You will reach Monolith Crown through the Crow’s Nest route after unlocking the Skybridge path forward. If the area is still blocked, go back and complete the earlier progression first. On arrival, trigger the Abyss Nexus nearby so you can always reload if you mess up.

As I mentioned earlier, the puzzle is built around a floating cube with lasers on multiple sides. Around the room, there are wall targets that need to be hit at the same time. When every beam is aligned, the mechanism activates and allows you to complete the challenge.

The controller is not located in the center. Head toward the northwest side of the arena and go down one level. If you are having trouble finding it, look for the unpowered electrical lines on the floor that lead directly to the control point.

How the Monolith Crown Puzzle Works

Image via Pearl Abyss and YouTube/@ConCon

Once you’re there, use Axiom Force on the glowing ring attached to the cube to gain control over its rotation. The tricky part comes after rotation, if you move it vertically, the lasers slowly change its positions. This means you must consider timing when rotating it.

How to Solve Monolith Crown Puzzle in Crimson Desert

How to Solve Monolith Crown Puzzle in Crimson Desert

Image via Pearl Abyss and YouTube/@ConCon

If you are starting from the default position, you can solve this puzzle by following a fixed sequence. Start by rotating Up three times, to give the lasers enough time to settle. After that, rotate Left twice. Some lasers should now be aligned already.

This is where almost everyone fails on their first attempt. Press Up without waiting for the lasers to fall, then press Up again. This fast rotation is essential because otherwise, the lasers will become misaligned regardless of what you did previously.

This is where most mistakes happen, you have to know exactly when to rotate to ensure that you don’t lose any alignment.

Alternatively, you could align the two lasers on the right-hand side to have a reference point. Rotate the cube slowly and monitor how the lasers change position until you can rotate again. It may take longer, but this will help you memorise the process better.

Monolith Crown Abyss challenge

Image via Pearl Abyss and YouTube/@ConCon

Once all beams are aligned, the controller automatically shuts down. Climb back up and use a jumping Force Palm to the massive cog-like mechanism on the floor to complete the Monolith Crown Abyss challenge.

Understanding the Monolith Crown laser puzzle in Crimson Desert is easy once you learn how to rotate the cube. Just remember that the controller is not near the cube itself. Also, you have to be careful about timing during the final rotation phase.

If things start looking off, just reset and try again instead of forcing it. You will get an Abyss Artifact for finishing it anyway, so it is worth getting done properly.

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FAQs

Where is the Monolith Crown in Crimson Desert?

It is located along the Crow’s Nest and Skybridge route in the Triangle Ring Abyss path.

Because the cube controller is actually on the northwest side of the arena, not in the center.

From the default position, rotate Up three times, Left twice, then Up and immediately Up again.

Yes. You can reset it by loading the game from the Abyss Nexus if the cube is not in the default position anymore.

Because the lasers drop after vertical rotations, so waiting too long before the final inputs can break the alignment.

Probal Das

Probal Das

Author

Probal Das is a gaming content writer and FPS enthusiast who writes about the latest news, guides, and updates across PC and mobile titles. In his spare time, he enjoys playing fast-paced shooter titles like Call of Duty, Battlefield, Apex Legends, Valorant, and other popular titles.

Last updated: 07.04.2026
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