The World of Warcraft <\/em>Sepulcher of the First Ones Race to World First has officially passed the point where it\u2019s now the longest-running event of its kind in nearly five years. <\/p>
This is the first time an RWF event has entered a third week since 2017. The Jailer has not been taken down by any pro guild after two weeks of raiding. The most recent WoW <\/em>boss to live into a third week was Kil\u2019Jaeden, the final boss of the Tomb of Sargeras raid.\u00a0<\/p>
Since the release of the Tomb of Sargeras in 2017, nine raids have been released in World of Warcraft<\/em>. The previous eight final bosses of raids released prior to the Sepulcher of the First Ones have survived an average of 8.6 days, according to an infographic<\/a> created by European WoW <\/em>team Method.\u00a0<\/p>
The most noteworthy reason as to why the Jailer is still alive on the 17th day of the Race to World First is because several bosses earlier in the raid took multiple days to kill for WoW<\/em>\u2019s top teams. Halondrus, Anduin Wrynn, and Rygelon all took the world\u2019s premier guilds over 200 attempts each to defeat. Halondrus, in particular, became one of the most-pulled bosses<\/a> in WoW<\/em> history before he was downed by Liquid after 357 tries.\u00a0<\/p>
Back in 2017, Kil\u2019Jaeden survived for 19 days and had been attempted 654 times before he was eventually defeated by Method. The Jailer would need to survive until March 27 to surpass Kil\u2019Jaeden\u2019s 19 days without being taken down by a guild. The next-highest mark across relatively recent expansions after Kil\u2019Jaeden\u2019s 19-day undefeated streak belongs to Sinestra in the Bastion of Twilight raid, which was released in 2010. Sinestra stayed alive for 38 days before she was defeated, according to Method<\/a>. <\/p>