The biggest change in this release rebuilds your raid logs. WowUtils already pulls your Warcraft Logs data, so now it turns that data into a readable account of your raid week: what you killed each night, how long it took, where the time went, and how your clears are trending. Two more reworks come with it: the Roster Report becomes one consistent tool, and setting your raid times is now a single screen.
Raid logs, rebuilt
The Logs section used to hold a few expert views behind tabs, and answering a simple question, like how long Tuesday ran or what you actually cleared, meant reading a whole report. It now opens on a plain timeline of your raid nights, and you can open any one for the full detail.
Raid Sessions
Warcraft Logs has every detail of a fight; Raid Sessions takes those reports and lays them out as raid nights, so you can read your week at a glance. It's a list of every night you raided, newest first.
- Every night at a glance. Each row shows the date, which raids you touched, what you cleared, how long the night ran, and how many people showed.
- Where the night went. Each night shows how much of it was spent fighting versus setting up, clearing trash, and standing around between pulls.
- Click in for the full story. Open any night to see it laid out start to finish.
A night, broken down
Open a raid night and it's reconstructed from your logs: every boss kill, wipe, trash fight, and gap, in the order it happened.
- The whole night on one timeline. Kills, wipes, trash, and downtime, color-coded, so you can see the shape of the night at a glance.
- The numbers that matter. Cards for time in combat, time on trash, time spent setting up, and your single biggest gap, each with its share of the night.
- Pull by pull. A table of every pull in order, plus a chart of your longest downtime gaps with what happened on either side of each one.
- Mark your breaks. Admins can label what a gap was, flag it as a planned break, and auto-flag any gap over a set length, so a dinner break doesn't read as wasted time.
Clear speed
For guilds pushing a clear, every full clear is now timed and tracked across the season.
- How fast, and how clean. Each raid shows your clear time and how much of that window was downtime rather than fighting.
- Your pace over time. A trend of your clear speed through Midnight Season 1, with your best, average, and latest side by side.
- A read on the field. Your clear time sits next to an anonymous comparison with other guilds in your region, so you can see roughly where you stand.
- Progression pacing. On bosses you're still working on, see your typical time between pulls, so you know whether you're resetting quickly or losing minutes between attempts.
- Clear history. Every full clear you've logged, newest first, with how each one stacked up against the last.
And a smaller fix worth a mention: Warcraft Logs only keeps reports for so long, so an older night can expire before it's synced. When that happens, the import now tells you which nights it had to skip, instead of looking like it pulled everything.
The Roster Report is one tool now
The Roster Report grew a tab at a time, and the tabs didn't all look or behave alike. Now they do, and attendance joins them.
Who actually showed up
Attendance is now a tab in the Roster Report, right next to gear, enchants, and Mythic+.
- Signed up versus showed up. It puts your roster's real turnout, from your logs, next to who signed up on the calendar, and flags the no-shows: people who signed up but never appeared.
- People, not just characters. By default a raider's main and alts roll into one row, so bringing an alt still counts as showing. Flip to a per-character view when you need the detail.
- Fair to everyone. A night you mark "not a main run" drops out of attendance without touching your clears or breakdowns, and trials are only counted from the night they joined.
Group by role, or sort the whole team
- One toggle, every tab. Group the whole audit by role (tanks, healers, melee, ranged) or flatten it into a single list. Flatten it and you can sort the entire team by any column, like item level or rating.
- How fresh is this? Every character now shows a small clock for how recently its data synced, so you know whether what you're looking at is current.
Professions joins the rest
The Professions tab now uses the same layout as the other audit tabs: clickable character names that open the character sheet, the same filters and freshness clock, and a cleaner table in place of the old plain list.
Setting your raid times
Setting up when your guild raids used to mean a longer form. Now it's one screen.
- Pick your days, set the time. Tap the nights you raid and set a start and end time. Raid different hours on different nights? Adjust any day on its own.
- It names itself. Your schedule names itself from the days and difficulty you picked, like "Tue/Thu Mythic." Rename it if you'd rather.
- See what fills in. A live preview shows how many raids will land on your calendar and how far ahead, before you commit. Editing later spells out exactly which nights gain or lose events, and never touches past raids.
A list view for the calendar
The calendar gets a new List view alongside the month grid: every event for the month in a table, with the date, time, who's signed up by role, and a link to that night's Warcraft Logs report when there is one.
Signups and attendance, kept apart
Signups and attendance are two different things, and they're kept apart now. Signups are who committed to an upcoming raid, on the calendar. Attendance is who actually showed, from your logs. The calendar's stats are now labeled Signups, and one click takes you between the two: from who said they'd come over to who really did, and back.
Around the app
- Guild Bank in the Audit Log. Income entries, payouts, and member payout requests now show up in your group's Audit Log with who did it and when, the same way reset and permission changes already do.
- Vault sockets enforced again. Loot officers can require that every droptimizer is simmed with the Raidbots "Add Vault Socket" option, so DPS comparisons stay fair across the roster. It's off by default.
- Cleaner wishlists. Items a member marked "Pass" no longer count toward their wishlist or appear in its tooltip, so the counts reflect only what people actually want.
As always, feedback and ideas are welcome in Discord.