World of Warcraft Castle Nathria Race to World First leaderboard

The race is on.

Image via Blizzard Entertainment

The dreaded Venthyr master Sire Denathrius awaits his challengers in Castle Nathria, the first raid of the Shadowlands expansion. And with Mythic opening its doors on Dec. 15 comes World of Warcraft’s long-awaited Race to World First event.

Recommended Videos

Last time around, Complexity-Limit came out on top, using a 21-man roster to finally beat Method to the punch and defeat N’Zoth in Battle for Azeroth’s Ny’alotha, The Waking City. This time, the competition is fiercer than ever.

Related: How to watch World of Warcraft’s Castle Nathria Race to World First

Complexity-Limit and Method (albeit with a rebuilt roster) are returning to the race, along with Echo, a new contender from Europe, and Pieces, a dangerous underdog. Big Dumb Guild, FatSharkYes, and Aversion are also in the running.

Here’s a list of the top guilds’ progression so far in the Castle Nathria Race to World First: 

Castle Nathria leaderboard

  1. Complexity Limit 10/10
  2. Echo 9/10
  3. Pieces 9/10
  4. FatSharkYes 9/10
  5. BDGG 8/10
  6. Method 8/10
  7. Skyline 8/10
  8. Jitianhong 8/10
  9. Alpha 8/10
  10. Aversion 8/10

Here’s a list of the first guild to kill each boss:

  • Shriekwing: BDGG
  • Huntsman Altimor: BDGG
  • Hungering Destroyer: Lazarus Imperative
  • Artificer Xy’Mox: Complexity Limit
  • Sun King’s Salvation: BDGG
  • Lady Inerva Darkvein: Complexity Limit
  • The Council of Blood: Complexity Limit
  • Sludgefist: Complexity Limit
  • Stone Legion Generals: Complexity Limit
  • Sire Denathrius: Complexity Limit

This article will be updated throughout the Race to World First event.

Author
Image of Jerome Heath
Jerome Heath
Senior editor at Dot Esports. Jerome has been in and around the gaming industry for the last eight years, and he's not going anywhere anytime soon.
Author
Image of Max Miceli
Max Miceli
Senior Staff Writer. Max graduated from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a journalism and political science degree in 2015. He previously worked for The Esports Observer covering the streaming industry before joining Dot where he now helps with Overwatch 2 coverage.