Patch 11.2 "Ghosts of K’aresh" unleashes a menagerie of fresh mounts that capture the essence of this cosmic, otherworldly update. From the void-scarred dragons born of shattered worlds to fel-infused elekks corrupted by the Burning Legion, the new mounts embody patch 11.2’s clash of cosmic forces. Adventurers will find themselves chasing spectral chargers resurrected from legend and harnessing Ethereal flying machines straight out of a sci-fi odyssey. The overall theme is a vibrant mix of Void and Fel – otherworldly creatures touched by the Void’s shadow, demonic war beasts, and even high-definition remakes of beloved classics like the Headless Horseman.
In this guide, we’ll break down every new mount in "Ghosts of K’aresh" and how to obtain each one. Whether you’re a hardcore raider eyeing a Mythic-exclusive dragon, a PvP gladiator seeking a fearsome war bat, or a casual collector saving up Trader’s Tender for the latest cosmetic ride, we’ve got you covered. Saddle up and read on for a comprehensive list of all Season 3 mounts!
These are Season 3’s prestige rides, earned where pull timers tick and mistakes cost wipes. Raid mounts reward mastery and teamwork across the hardest encounters, while Mythic+ mounts demand consistency through a gauntlet of timed keys. If you want a mount that broadcasts skill at a glance, start here:
The Unbound Star-Eater is a void-touched cosmic dragon – a massive drake wreathed in swirling starlight and crackling Void energy. This majestic beast looks like it flew straight out of the Great Dark Beyond; its scales shimmer with a galaxy of stars, and an eerie purple aura trails in its wake. It’s effectively a trophy for the very top raiders: only players who defeat Dimensius on Mythic difficulty can earn this mount, and even then only one drops per kill, making it exceedingly rare.
With its unique armored model (reminiscent of Netherwing drakes, but adorned in void-charged plate), the Unbound Star-Eater broadcasts absolute prestige. Obtaining it is no small feat – you’ll need a skilled 20-player team to conquer one of the toughest encounters of the expansion. But those who prevail will literally ride a piece of the cosmos into battle, as a symbol of mastery over the Void.
The Royal Voidwing is a regal Void Drake gifted to heroes who thwart Dimensius’s plans in the Manaforge Omega raid on at least Heroic mode. Visually, it’s a draconic creature with night-purple scales and ominous glowing eyes, exuding an aura of tortured majesty. Lore-wise, this "cosmic terror" was twisted by the Nexus-King’s experiments and now swears loyalty to its new master. The Royal Voidwing closely resembles past void-themed drakes but comes with ornate golden armor and a ceremonial saddle, befitting its royal title.
Unlike the Mythic-only mount, this one is more accessible – it’s awarded via a one-time quest when you achieve the Ahead of the Curve victory. Still, it’s only obtainable while Season 3 is current, so defeating the final boss on Heroic before the patch ends is your ticket to claiming this prestigious void dragon.
The Umbral K’arroc is a technomagical flying creature that serves as the raid meta-achievement reward in 11.2. It isn’t a manta-drake hybrid but a large roc native to K’aresh: layered midnight-blue plumage that fades to silvery tips, a bone-tan beak, and powerful talons. A tall ornate standard rises behind the saddle — a ringed finial with a small blue gem — while subtle void sheen threads the flight feathers. Lore hints that it’s a "living technological marvel" created by desperate Ethereals as a symbol of hope for a renewed K’aresh. Earning it requires coordination and skill: you must complete a series of quirky raid challenges (like defeating bosses in unusual ways) to unlock the Glory meta-achievement. The effort is well worth it: the Umbral K’arroc is both unique to this patch and quite flashy, carrying the proud distinction of "I did all the raid achievements". It’s a one-per-account reward, so every character of yours can then soar on this fusion of science and sorcery.
The Azure Void Flyer is a void-infused flying creature rewarded to dungeon delvers. This mount looks like a cross between a drake and a bat, warped by the Void – it has tattered, shadowy wings and a faint blue glow emanating from within its body. There’s an almost insectoid vibe to it, as if it were a giant Void wasp or drake that emerged from a tear in reality. The azure color scheme signifies the base-tier Mythic+ accomplishment.
The Scarlet Void Flyer is the more intense sibling of the Azure version: a red-hued Void Flyer awarded for truly hardcore Mythic+ performance. Visually, it shares the same model as the Azure, but its coloration is a striking crimson and black palette. This gives it an even more sinister appearance, as if it’s brimming with barely contained rage from the Void. Earning the Scarlet variant is no joke: a 3000+ Mythic+ rating means timing a lot of high-level keys. It’s a mark of elite dungeon mastery in Season 3 and a true badge of honor for PvE enthusiasts, combining a fearsome look with the prestige of top-tier accomplishment.
These mounts are earned in blood, not by luck. Gladiator rides crown the few who climb to the very top of the arena ladder, while Vicious mounts reward steady wins across the season in Arenas and Rated Battlegrounds.
Awarded only to the fiercest champions of Azeroth’s PvP arenas, the Astral Gladiator’s Fel Bat is a terrifying war bat clad in heavy ceremonial plate. Picture a massive bat-like beast with deep violet membranes and gold-steel armor housing bright blue crystal cores at the shoulders and chest. The silhouette screams "battle-ready" through angular plating and spikes — no chains or banners — marking the rider as a Gladiator.
The Alliance’s Vicious Void Creeper it’s a stocky abyssal fish-beast with finlike forelimbs and a long tapered tail, armored in blue-steel plates with violet lattice inlays. The model reads as a void-touched deep-sea predator, not a spider; expect a broad maw and segmented dorsal plating rather than many eyes or webbing. Stormwind colors inform the metal and trims, but there are no fluttering war banners or lion pennons on the mount itself.
The Horde counterpart of the Void Creeper carries the same fin-limbed, long-tailed predator silhouette, sheathed in dark crimson-and-black armor with runed panels and violet lattice accents. It’s a void-wreathed "deep-dweller" more than a spider/bug mount, with plated jaws and segmented back rather than clustered eyes — and without planted battle standards poking from the chassis.
These are the mounts you earn by simply living in the world. They come from map pings and chance encounters, from short story quests, weekly events, hidden caches, and reputation vendors that open up as you progress. Expect a mix of steady grinds and pure luck: some rewards ask for a few days of chores, others drop from a rare you catch once a week.
Blue Barry is a whimsical talbuc mount that proves even a war-torn alien world has room for cute surprises. This mount is a rather small, azure-colored creature native to K’aresh. Blue Barry becomes available after you’ve gained the trust of K’aresh’s inhabitants: once you reach Renown level 9 with the K’aresh Trust, a Stealing What is Ours quest line begins that spans a few days. Through this short daily quest adventure, you essentially rescue and befriend Barry. At the end of the story, Barry happily joins your mount collection!
The Translocated Gorger is a hulking devourer beast that found its way to K’aresh through a dimensional mishap. Visually, this mount resembles the devourer creatures from the Shadowlands – an insectoid, maw-like monster with spiky limbs and an insatiable hunger – but with new coloration and void energies coursing through its body. According to local lore, it was "accidentally brought along during the Brokers’ relocation of Tazavesh", which explains its presence in K’aresh. To obtain it, players must engage in Devourer Invasion events, which spawn periodically in various K’aresh zones. These are frantic 30-minute assaults where waves of devourers attack, culminating in a rare boss. Your first boss kill at each location per week yields a Devoured Energy-Pod. By hoarding 20 pods, you can combine them to receive the mount. This means a few weeks of diligent event participation.
This mount wins the prize for strangest name – and it lives up to it. Sthaarbs’s Last Lunch is a bizarre, otherworldly ground mount with a design unlike any other, essentially the aftermath of one cosmic creature devouring another. To get it, you must hunt Sthaarbs the Unrolling, a rare elite that appears in a special phase of K’aresh (accessible via Phase Diving). Sthaarbs only shows up periodically and only if you’re in the untethered Phase state, so it’s a bit tricky to find. Worse yet, the drop rate of the mount is extremely low – and you essentially get one chance per week per character to loot it. This makes Sthaarbs’s Last Lunch one of the most elusive mounts in 11.2. Persistence (or luck) is key. Those who obtain it will have a truly one-of-a-kind ride: a creepy-crawly void monster that looks like it would happily make you its lunch if not for that saddle on its back!
The Pearlescent Krolusk is a sturdy beast that originates from another world but has been introduced to K’aresh. Krolusks, known from Vol’dun in BfA, are those beetle-like drakes with six legs and a thick, ridged shell. This version has a beautiful opalescent white shell that shimmers with hints of pink and turquoise when the light hits it – like mother-of-pearl. It was apparently brought to K’aresh as an "invasive species" by unscrupulous traders, and has since been put to work as a beast of burden. On K’aresh, Urmag is the name of the rare elite krolusk matriarch that wanders the desert. To get the mount, you’ll need to track down Urmag’s spawn points (only visible when you’re Phase Diving in the zone), and defeat her for a chance at the drop. Urmag can only be looted once per day per character, so it may take many attempts.
Terror of the Night is an imposing Void Flyer mount earned by being a champion of K’aresh’s law and order… in as much as a shattered void planet can have law and order! Essentially, K’aresh has a warrant board system, and completing all of these "Most Wanted" tasks across the zone grants the Vigilante achievement. The creature itself isn’t a batlike Void Flyer but an aqir-style arthropod: a low, broad body with finlike limbs, a single prominent eye set in armored plating, and a long segmented tail with void-lit ridges. Despite the ominous appearance, earning this mount is straightforward: it’s a solo PvE achievement reward for completing zone content thoroughly. If you enjoy open-world questing and hunting down targets, you’ll likely get this naturally.
The Phase-Lost Slateback is a peculiar mount that you effectively rescue from a box, or, more precisely, a number of boxes. In K’aresh, certain armor pieces and relics are hidden in the alternate phase of the zone (accessible with Phase Diving) and you'll need to collect all of them to get the achievement Phase-Lost-and-Found which rewards the mount.
Visually, it’s a spectral slateback carved from phaseglass: translucent rose-to-cyan facets with violet horn-crowns that curl back over the withers, and a frosted ruff that catches light like ground quartz. Layered plates sit just off the body as if slightly out of sync with reality, seams glowing with pink-blue refraction; the tail frays into jagged shards that leave a faint prismatic after-trail when you sprint. The tack is understated — dark leather straps, a narrow saddle — so the refracted body steals the show.
The Curious Slateback is distinguished by its inquisitive, head-tilting demeanor. Visually, it’s a shaggy, hoofed beast with broad curling horns capped in stone, a bronze headplate, a russet-brown coat with a white chest and stockings, and tack with a green saddle cloth and side satchels.
This mount comes from a weekly activity: Ecological Succession, a sort of "help regrow the ecosystem" event in K’aresh. Each week, completing this event awards a Wriggling Pinnacle Cache, which has a chance to contain the mount item. Since it’s luck-based and limited to one cache per week, the drop can be frustratingly random. On the bright side, all your characters can try each week, increasing your chances.
The Resplendent K’arroc is a vibrant flying creature meant to embody hope in the desolate landscapes of K’aresh. This one is a large avian with layered red-orange plumage that fades to lighter tips, a pale bone beak, a shaggy throat ruff, powerful taloned legs, and a long, slender, barbed tail. A dark leather saddle is strapped beneath an ornate silver standard rising behind the rider, capped with a ringed finial holding a small blue gem. It’s described as a "symbol of hope for a renewed K’aresh," which suggests a noble, luminous appearance.
The source is a bit uncertain: early reports list a world quest called "The Hope of K’aresh" as awarding this mount. That could mean when this specific daily pops up, completing it grants the mount outright. If true, it might be one of the more straightforward mounts to get – just don’t miss the quest when it’s active! On the other hand, if the quest is infrequent or requires certain conditions, you’ll have to keep an eye out.
The Delver’s Mana-Skimmer is an arcane hovercraft of sorts – a one-person flying vehicle that lets you zip through both realspace and portals with equal ease. Built by the Ethereal "Delvers", this mount is a compact open-cockpit gyro-skimmer: teal/white plating, a broad single top rotor/wing, stubby side fins with downward blue mana thrusters, short landing skids, and a chunky circular tail engine that glows like an orange eye. The cockpit has hand controls and a violet arcane canister behind the seat; small lanterns and a little pennant perch on the frame. It reads more like a magi-tech autogyro than a disc, with constant hover jets and cool blue exhaust.
The quest Repossessed! suggests you help an Ethereal reclaim this craft, and as a reward, you get to keep it. This mount is great for players who enjoy the more modern or magical-tech mounts as it’s essentially a personal mini-spaceship. And since it comes from a quest, it’s relatively easy to obtain: just play through the new content and you’ll get to zoom around on this Mana-Skimmer, feeling like you’re riding a piece of Tazavesh’s advanced technology.
The Brewfest Barrel Bomber is a riotous new addition to the Brewfest holiday: a squat, keg-bodied gyrocopter. Visually it’s a wood-and-iron barrel hull with a small open cockpit and blue glass windscreen, lifted by a single wooden plank rotor on a central mast. Chunky half-keg sponsons act as stabilizers on each side; ropes, rivets, and orange pennant bunting wrap the body. A circular front intake and rear gauges sell the ramshackle dwarven "brew-engine" look. It hovers on rotor lift and puffs of exhaust—more flying machine than rocket or bomb.
To get it, you have to farm Coren Direbrew in Blackrock Depths during the Brewfest event. The 2025 Brewfest runs from late September to early October, giving you a couple of weeks to try your luck. The Barrel Bomber has both ground and flying capability: on the ground, it might roll or hover a short distance above, and in the air it zips around like a gyrocopter. It’s a seasonal novelty mount that’s sure to delight – nothing says "I love Brewfest" like literally flying a beer barrel that bombs the ground with hops (don’t worry, they probably only explode with confetti).
These are the mounts you can plan for. Push Renown with the K’aresh Trust and the Manaforge Vandals, then turn in the right currency and walk away with a new ride. Resonance Crystals buy the big-ticket rewards at higher tiers, while the early breakpoints hand out practical workhorses and sleek hovercraft. A side vendor track uses Untethered Coins from weekly Phase Diving to pick up themed variants like acid-scarred creepers and lavender k’arrocs. If you prefer steady progress over lottery drops, this is your lane: fill bars, check vendors, and take home mounts that look exactly like the world they came from.
The Bone Freezer is a menacing Void Creeper mount with an icy twist. As a "bitter rival to the Bone Melter", this creature has clearly been through some drama: lore says it was ousted from its lair near Manaforge Omega after a crushing defeat, and now seeks to learn from the one who beat its foe (you, presumably). In appearance, the Bone Freezer is more abyssal fish than spider: a hulking, fin-limbed predator with a broad toothy maw, sea-green hide that shades into indigo, and a long tapering tail. Its back and shoulders are capped in segmented plates that glow with magenta-violet veins, framed by purple latticework "ribs" and red membrane panels; the crest and tail fins carry the same neon sheen, and pink-violet bioluminescence speckles its face.
To earn this mount, you must grind to Renown 14 with the Manaforge Vandals – a new raid-related faction tied to Manaforge Omega. Renown with them increases by doing raid content. Once at 14, you can buy the mount from the faction vendor for a significant sum of Resonance Crystals plus a bit of gold. The Bone Freezer is a ground mount and it scuttles swiftly on its many legs.
Vandal’s Gearglider is an Ethereal hover-board: a long, slim lattice of silver metal and crystal with spherical mana cores set along the sides and at the nose. Each core vents cold azure fire, sheathing the board in blue glow. There’s no seat or handlebars — you stand on the central grate as it levitates — and there are no visible cogs or pistons. The palette is pale steel with icy, neon-blue aether, matching the Vandals’ magi-tech look.
Earning it is relatively quick: reaching Renown 8 with Manaforge Vandals (via raid runs and quests) unlocks it for purchase. Compared to the Bone Freezer at 14, this is an earlier reward and cheaper in currency. The Gearglider has neat animations: when stationary it might bob gently, and in motion it emits a low hum as arcane propellers keep it afloat. It’s a single-rider mount that truly feels like a hovering paraglider, giving you a full view as if you’re surfing the air currents.
The Ruby Void Creeper isn’t a spider at all — it’s a stocky, abyssal fish-beast with finlike forelimbs and a long, tapered tail. Its hide is wine-red/purple, while the segmented dorsal plates glow ember-orange. A violet lattice "harness" frames red membrane panels over the shoulders, and a small blue gem sits on the head crest. The face has a broad, toothy maw with pink-red bioluminescent speckles—no multiple eyes or dripping mandibles, just a predatory deep-sea look in ruby tones.
This mount is a reward from the K’aresh Trust renown track. Upon hitting Renown 15 with them, you unlock the ability to purchase the Ruby Creeper from the quartermaster Om’sirik. Expect the cost to be a hefty sum of Resonance Crystals – after all, this is one of the faction’s top rewards. The Ruby Void Creeper is ground-only, but it’s plenty speedy and can scale obstacles easily (those many legs aren’t just for show).
Terror of the Wastes is the K’aresh Trust’s capstone prize and it looks every bit the apex predator: not a dragon, but a void-touched arthropod with a broad, low body, hooked scuttling legs and a long segmented tail. Bone-pale forelimbs splay like tattered wings when it lifts off; the hide shifts from wine-red to rust while ember-orange dorsal plates glow beneath a narrow chitin helm. A bulging violet void-sac along the flank feeds the same purple energy that threads the eyes and tail, so on the ground it hugs terrain in a stalking crawl, and in the air those "wing-arms" beat while violet motes peel off your wake.
The Acidic Void Creeper is a variant of the creeper mounts, distinguished by its sickly green acid theme. Visually, it is a stocky abyssal fish-beast: a fin-limbed predator with a long tapered tail, moss-brown hide that shifts into teal, and layered carapace plates along the back that glow neon-green like corrosive veins. Purple latticework "ribs" frame dark magenta shoulder panels, while the broad maw bristles with teeth and bright lime bioluminescent speckles. It doesn’t drip sludge or belch fumes; instead the toxic look comes from that steady green radiance seeping from seams and plates — selling the "absorbed toxic fumes" lore without literal ooze. The mount is obtained via Untethered Coins. These coins come from a weekly quest More Than Just a Phase, tied to the Phase Diving activity in K’aresh. Essentially, each week you can earn a handful of coins. It’s a relatively straightforward grind compared to renown mounts.
The Lavender K’arroc is a gentle-hued variant of the K’arroc flying mounts, sporting soft lavender-plum plumage. Visually it’s a large roc: layered purple feathers that fade to pale pink along the flight feathers, a bone-tan beak, a subtle blue eye-glow, powerful taloned legs, and a long tapered tail. An ornate silvery standard with a ringed finial and blue gem rises behind the rider, strapped to a simple dark-leather saddle. No crystalline wingtips or painted arcane swirls here — the elegance comes from the feather layering and muted lavender tones.
This mount is also purchased with Untethered Coins, but at a slightly higher price of 10 coins. As with the Creeper, coins come from doing the Phase Diving weekly quest, so diligent participation for a few weeks will net you enough. The mount is simply beautiful to look at and complements many transmogs (who doesn’t love a purpler mount?). Don’t be fooled by its elegance, though: as a K’arroc it’s still a capable aerial mount, and it shares the new unique model introduced in 11.2. If you fancy a bit of K’aresh’s wild sky for yourself but without a hardcore grind, this coin-bought Lavender K’arroc is an ideal choice.
The Trading Post is where style meets timing. Month by month, you’ll see curated headliners rotate in: remastered Headless Horseman chargers around Hallow’s End, a quartet of fel-scarred Elekks, a suite of Wildhammer gryphons, and the ornery Breezestrider for talbuk fans. Budget your Tender, watch the monthly log for bonus rewards, and don’t stress if you miss one — most rides cycle back.
Important: the mounts listed below are already in the game client and will roll out to players over the coming months, so keep an eye on the Trading Post each reset.
Cinder-seared Elekk: a hulking draenei war-beast armored in heavy bronze plate with angular crests, skull motifs, and ember-orange gems. Its hide is red-ochre under a black warcloth; the tusks are soot-dark and curled forward, wreathed in licking blue fire that also shimmers around the hooves. Lantern-like braziers glow on the barding, and a visor helm frames a cold blue eye — like a walking siege engine dragged from the ashes.
Legion-Forged Elekk is a massive crimson elekk clad in dark Legion iron. Soot-black tusks are shot through with vivid fel, flaring green at the tips and across the hooves. Heavy segmented barding bristles with spikes, skull plates, and rune-edged braces set with neon gems; under the saddle sits a black warcloth with strapped packs and fuel canisters. A ridged visor helm frames a cold eye, while pipes, chains and vent grilles bleed green light. Fel veins pulse under scarred hide — the image of a demonic siege beast.
Thunder-ridged Elekk, the third Elekk in our list, rolls in like a captive storm. A slate-blue war-beast sheathed in heavy draenei plate — pale gold and teal scrollwork, rune sockets glowing cyan — carries a dark saddle cradle between spiked shoulder towers. Amethyst light burns beneath the visor helm. Soot-black tusks arc forward, wrapped in crackling violet lightning that jumps to the hooves and traces veined patterns up the legs. Gemmed braces, skull crests, braided cords and layered warcloth complete the barding, and its long tail swings with thunderhead weight.
Shadows cling to pewter-and-bone barding set over bruised-violet hide; faceted amethyst lenses stud the plates and a ridged visor hides one baleful eye. Tusks start coal-black, then rise ember-red toward the tips, heat-haze pooling at the hooves. Rune panels along the flanks pulse purple, a rear void sigil breathing light through the warcloth. Braided ropes, layered plates and a slow, deliberate tail swing give it a hush of menace — this is the Void-Razed Elekk.
Wind-carved and ceremonial, the Adorned Northeron Gryphon wears a chevroned steel-and-bronze breastplate and bead-laced tack. Ice-blue head plumes and a horned circlet frame a gold beak and cyan eyes; plumage grades from umber to cobalt with ember-blue tips on the primaries. Heavy talons, a banded tail, and a compact saddle with satchel finish the silhouette. In lore, Northeron gryphons roost on high spires of the Eastern Kingdoms and serve the Wildhammer as sky-guides and war heralds; turquoise braids honor storm-kin, and this adorned variant flies as a "northbound torch across the dark summer sky”, a chieftain’s companion and living clan standard.
Born on wind-scoured peaks where Wildhammer drums echo, the Cinder-Plumed Highland Gryphon carries the ember-marks of storm and forge. Its plumage burns from russet and brass along the mantle to sunlit ivory at the flight feathers; the tail ends in a red coal, and faint golden heat rims the wings at full stretch. A horned circlet and turquoise beads crown the white head-ruff, while a stepped steel-and-bronze breastplate guards the chest. In song and story these highland gryphons guide clans through ash-laden skies, omens of safe passage and battle. Broad talons drum the rock, a charcoal beak cuts the wind.
Among Wildhammer tales, the Emberwing Sky Guide is the beacon riders trust when the high paths go dark — gryphons whose ember-lit wings mark safe routes between storm peaks. This one wears ceremonial plate in steel and bronze, a chevron gorget over the chest and bead-lashed tack at the withers. Plumage runs charcoal and chestnut through the body, then flares to translucent ember-red along wing and tail fans; white head-ruff and scarlet crown feathers frame a slate beak and bright cyan eyes. An antlered back crest, a compact saddle, and talons complete a mount born to shepherd travelers through night skies.
Rounding out the quartet of new gryphons, High Shaman’s Aerie Gryphon carries the hush of rites rather than parade shine. Cream-white plumage deepens to sea-green along the flight feathers; the tail ends in frosted fans. The head is crowned by ice-blue plumes and a horned circlet; a charcoal beak sits above cyan eyes. A stepped steel-and-bronze gorget shields the chest, bead-laced tack and a compact saddle ride the back, amber talons gripping rock. In Wildhammer telling, these gryphons roost on lightning-split aeries, ferry shamans between thunderheads, read winds for omens, and guard clan cairns; turquoise knots mark a pact with sky-spirits to guide travelers home.
Every Nagrand herd has a breezestrider that chooses its rider — and refuses most others. The Ornery Breezestrider wears that stubborn streak openly: ears canted back, a slow challenger’s chew, a head-toss whenever the wind shifts. Tawny coat with cream socks and belly, a smoky dorsal stripe, and a shaggy storm-ruff at the neck. Ramlike horns spiral above amber eyes. Broad dark tack wraps the chest and muzzle, set with amethyst studs; a purple saddlecloth, satchel and horn flask ride the flanks. Hoofguards and fetlock wraps are scuffed from stone. Herders swear the breezes talk to it; it tacks into crosswinds on instinct, skirting dust devils before you ever see them.
Seen at a gallop, it could be a knight’s charger dragged straight from a bonfire — coal-dark hide under scalloped ash-steel barding, blood-red reins, and a horned visor that vents smoke through a grinning jawplate. Hooves burn in layered orange, flame licking up the fetlocks; the mane doesn’t flow so much as smolder, and heat-shimmer halos the silhouette. Chains, studs, and soot-tarnished medallions sway from the saddle skirts. In Hallow’s End tales this is The Headless Horseman’s Burning Charger companion, armor tempered in cursed village pyres; its jack-o’-lantern eyes and ember prints mark the roads, and that long, cackling whinny can snuff a lantern before the wind even rises.
Legends speak of a year when the Horseman outlasted Hallow’s End, his blaze smothered by snow; what rode back was cold instead of cinder — The Headless Horseman’s Chilling Charger. Frost murmurs through layered iron barding, and pale witch-light burns behind the horned visor. Midnight hide shows between scalloped plates, cinched by purple tack and ringed medallions. Hooves shine glacial blue, each step blooming with brief rime; the mane hangs like moonlit smoke, and thin veins of blue fire creep along the chamfron and horns. Even idle it breathes drifting fog, and when it surges into the air the chill gathers into spectral wings that whisper rather than roar.
The Headless Horseman's Ghoulish Charger offers a more ghastly green twist on the Horseman’s mount. Midnight hide shows between scalloped iron plates, the barding laced with purple straps and ringed medallions; a horned visor clamps over the skull, and sour green witch-light leaks from the eye vents and chamfron seams. Each step flares neon, bathing fetlocks in spectral fire while the mane hangs dark, smoke-thin at the edges. Chains clink beneath the saddle skirts, curved hoofguards catching phosphor shine. In Hallow’s End telling, it haunts grave roads and plague bogs, moving with funeral calm, leaving sickly afterglow on the stones — a reminder that the Horseman’s flames can curdle, not just burn.
Some Hallow’s End tales speak of fire made gentle, and from those candlelit rites rides The Headless Horseman's Hallowed Charger — an apparition in festival gold. Midnight hide shows between layered iron-and-brass plates kept polished, not scorched; scalloped skirts hang from ringed medallions, maroon reins tracing the neck. Hooves glow lantern-yellow, warmth feathering the fetlocks; a calm amber light seeps through the horned chamfron and visor seams. The mane smokes in dusky curls, the tail draws a honeyed trail that fades like candlewax. No crackling roar here — only a procession hush, as if each step carries a small benediction across the road: haunted, solemn, radiant, unburning.
Patch 11.2’s mount lineup is truly one for the history books – a blend of cosmic horror, nostalgic callbacks, and creative whimsy that has something for every collector. From slaying raid bosses in the furthest reaches of the Void to indulging in holiday hijinks for a spectral steed, you’ll be busy for months chasing these rides. Remember, some of these mounts are hard-earned trophies that showcase skill and dedication, while others are simply about being in the right place at the right time (and with enough currency in hand). Don’t be discouraged if a few of them test your patience – the satisfaction of finally obtaining that elusive drop or completing that grind is what WoW’s collection game is all about.
That said, you don’t have to walk this journey alone. If you find yourself short on time or lacking a solid group to tackle the toughest challenges, our company is here to help. At ConquestCapped, we specialize in getting players the rewards they covet – including every mount in patch 11.2 (and plenty from past content too). Whether it’s a Mythic raid carry for the Unbound Star-Eater, a PvP boost for the Gladiator Fel Bat, or efficient farm runs for those rare drops, our professional teams have got your back: