Free raid timer for MMO and online gaming raids. Track raid duration, boss timers, and session limits. Works for WoW, FFXIV, Destiny, and any MMO.
Most organized MMO raids run 2–4 hours per session for weekly clears. Longer sessions see sharply diminishing performance due to fatigue. Set a 2-hour raid timer and commit to stopping when it alarms — overstaying leads to wipe-fests and frustrated teammates.
Yes — WoW raid lockouts reset weekly (typically Tuesday/Wednesday depending on region). Use the timer to track time remaining until reset, or set it as a reminder before weekly lockout. For individual boss attempts, use shorter 5–15 minute timers to track pull attempts.
Track: enrage timer (when boss becomes impossible to kill), major ability cooldowns (tank swaps, raid-wides), and your own DPS/healer cooldowns. Use the timer for the enrage window specifically — knowing you have 8 minutes to kill the boss shapes your DPS burn strategy.
Successful raid teams set a pull-attempt limit per boss (e.g., 10 pulls max on progression) and a session time limit. This prevents over-spending on a single boss and keeps morale high. The timer makes the session limit concrete — when it ends, the raid ends regardless of where you are.
Yes. Destiny 2 raids typically take 1–4 hours depending on experience level. New raids on day-1 can run 6–12+ hours. Use the timer for session pacing — set 2-hour blocks with breaks. This prevents burnout on long-form raid content that can stretch across entire days.