The G.M.O.D. (short for Gallywix's Mech of Death) is one of the most iconic goblin-flavored mounts from Battle for Azeroth. It is loud, gold-plated, and intentionally overdesigned - the kind of mount that looks like it was built to flex on an entire raid group. If you love mechanical rides with personality and that classic goblin vibe, G.M.O.D. is one of those “must-own” mounts that instantly stands out in your collection.
What makes G.M.O.D. special for collectors is that you can farm it in a very efficient way: the mount drops from High Tinker Mekkatorque on Normal, Heroic, and Mythic difficulty - but on Raid Finder the drop was moved to Lady Jaina Proudmoore. That means you can stack multiple weekly lockouts on one character (LFR + Normal + Heroic + Mythic) to maximize attempts without relying on a single run per week.
To obtain G.M.O.D., you need to farm the Battle of Dazar'alor raid and kill the correct boss depending on the difficulty you are running:
This split matters because LFR is accessed through special NPCs (not the modern Group Finder queue), while Normal/Heroic/Mythic are entered directly at the raid entrance. The best weekly strategy is to do all available lockouts on every alt you can run through the raid with, especially if you are serious about mount collecting.
The raid takes place in Dazar'alor (Zuldazar, Zandalar). How you get there depends on your faction and whether your character has Battle for Azeroth travel unlocked.
If you are a returning player and your portals feel confusing, focus on this simple rule: LFR is queued through an NPC, but Normal/Heroic/Mythic are entered at the actual raid entrance. Once you do it once, repeating it weekly becomes routine.
G.M.O.D. farming is all about choosing the route that matches your character strength and time budget. There is no “one best way” - the optimal plan usually combines both routes across several characters.
Below are the two practical paths collectors use every week:
If your goal is maximum attempts per week, the smartest approach is to run LFR (because it is structured and consistent), then run Normal/Heroic on characters that can clear quickly, and use Mythic only if your character can handle the difficulty without turning the run into a long wipe-fest.
Unlike modern raids, older Raid Finder difficulty is accessed through specific NPCs added later so players could queue solo for legacy LFR wings. For Battle for Azeroth raids, there are two NPCs depending on your faction:
These NPCs allow you to select the Battle of Dazar'alor Raid Finder wings and queue solo. Once inside, your only goal for the G.M.O.D. route is reaching and defeating Lady Jaina Proudmoore, because that is the boss that can drop the mount in LFR.
For non-LFR difficulties, the mount drops from High Tinker Mekkatorque. This is the intended farming route for most collectors because it does not require the LFR NPC, and it can be faster on well-geared characters that can blast through older raid bosses.
Your goal is simple: enter Battle of Dazar'alor, progress to Mekkatorque, defeat him, and loot the boss. If you do not get the mount, reset expectations to the weekly cadence - this is a classic “keep pulling weekly until it drops” mount, so consistency wins.
If you want a clean routine that scales well with multiple characters, use this weekly checklist. It keeps your farming organized and prevents you from forgetting a lockout:
This approach gives you the best balance: LFR is structured and consistent, while Normal/Heroic/Mythic offer extra loot rolls without needing to wait in a queue. Over time, this is how most collectors get G.M.O.D. without burning out.
G.M.O.D. is a legacy raid mount, so the main pain points are not mechanics - they are travel time, remembering lockouts, and running multiple characters efficiently. These addons help you stay organized and reduce wasted time week after week.
If you are farming on many characters, SavedInstances alone can save you a surprising amount of time - it prevents wasted runs on characters that already cleared a difficulty that week.
Mount farming looks simple until you actually do it weekly: travel chains, old raid access, lockout tracking, and the slow grind of repeating the same route across multiple characters. That is why most collectors eventually build a system - a clean routine that avoids wasted time and keeps attempts consistent.
That is the same approach we use at ConquestCapped. Whether the goal is a raid drop like G.M.O.D., a secret mount chain, or a time-gated collectible, we focus on efficiency and correct execution - so progress feels steady instead of random.