World of Warcraft’s $90 Mount Is So Popular the In

Blizzard’s World of Warcraft is no stranger to costly in-game cosmetics, but its latest super expensive mount is so popular it’s causing a shortage of WoW Tokens at the in-game auction house.

The mount in question is the Trader's Gilded Brutosaur, which you can see in the screenshot below.

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What’s so special about this Brutosaur mount and why does it cost an eye-watering $90? Not only does it come with a 20th Anniversary themed harness encrusted with gems representing World of Warcraft’s expansions, it features a genuinely useful time saver not normally found on mounts. The Brutosaur lets players check the in-game auction house and the mail while riding out and about the world of Azeroth via characters Morten and Killia, who sit alongside the beast.

Fueling the mount’s popularity is Blizzard’s decision to make it only temporarily available for purchase. It plans to pull it from sale on January 6, 2025, so players know they only have a few months before this particular Brutosaur is (potentially) gone forever.

To put the cost of this mount into context, it’s the same price as the deluxe edition of World of Warcraft’s latest expansion, The War Within, or about half a year’s subscription to the long-running MMO.

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There are plenty within and without the World of Warcraft community who are understandably critisizing Blizzard for selling an in-game mount for such an eye-watering price. But some players are insisting the Trader’s Gilded Brutosaur is a bargain at $90, and that’s because its value in WoW Tokens compares favorably to the five million in-game gold people paid for the original version of this mount when it was sold for a limited time back in 2018.

WoW Tokens can be exchanged for Battle.net Balance, not just game time, which means players can indirectly buy anything Blizzard sells for real-world money with in-game gold. Here’s how it works: players can buy a WoW Token from Blizzard for $20 and either keep it for later or put it on the in-game auction house. Another player will (hopefully) buy that token from the auction house for in-game gold, then exchange it for $15 of Battle.net Balance (Blizzard effectively takes a $5 tax from the transaction). Battle.net Balance can then be used to buy anything Blizzard sells for World of Warcraft for real-world money, including $90 mounts such as the Trader’s Gilded Brutosaur.

Blizzard may have just hit the jackpot.
byu/rahuonn inwow

This method relies on players selling WoW Tokens in the game’s auction house, and right now they’re scarce because so many players are snapping them up to use to buy this mount. Because of that, WoW Tokens are selling out and their price in gold has skyrocketed.

"The auction house's WoW Token right now is out of WoW Token supplies since you need suppliers to supply the demand, and currently skyrocketing given the 3% price cap per 20 minutes," redditor arasitar explained. "WoW Token was 200k on NA. Probably going to go to 400k in a short bit."

At the time of this article's publication, a WoW Token costs 335,171 gold on U.S. servers. You need six WoW Tokens bought from the auction house to exchange for enough Battle.net Balance to afford this $90 mount (6 x $15), which means, at the current rate, paying just over two million gold. The original Brutosaur cost five million gold.

Quite literally minutes after the new bruto mount was made available
byu/Degenerate_Game inwow

What does this all tell us? Not much that we didn’t know about the World of Warcraft community, anyway. Mounts have, over the years, proved incredibly popular no matter how much money they cost to buy. The original Brutosaur, released in 2018 alongside the Battle for Azeroth expansion, sold like hot cakes, too. World of Warcraft players love their mounts!

For Blizzard, it’s laughing all the way to the bank. Or, as redditor Chuckieshere put it: “This mount probably just made more money than StarCraft 2 for 1/1000th of the effort.”

Wesley is the UK News Editor for IGN. Find him on Twitter at @wyp100. You can reach Wesley at wesley_yinpoole@ign.com or confidentially at wyp100@proton.me.