Screenshot by Gamepur

Diablo 4 – Den Mother Light Watch Boss Fight Strategies & Tips

Learn everything you need to know about beating the Den Mother boss in this Diablo 4 guide.

Even Side Dungeon in Diablo 4 is home to a boss fight at its end, and in the Fractured Peaks starting area alone, there are 23 such zones to conquer. One of them, called Light Watch, plays host to a boss called the Den Mother. She is a Werewolf that can dish out massive damage, has a huge health pool, and debilitating attacks that can make her a significant damage check if your character is undergeared. We’ll cover all her attacks and how to beat her in this guide.

Recommended Videos

Related: Diablo 4 – How to Beat Vhenard

How to Beat Den Mother in Diablo 4

Screenshot by Gamepur

After traversing the Light’s Watch Dungeon near the center of the Fractured Peaks, you’ll find the Den Mother waiting in a large throne room. She’ll attack immediately, and while her attack list isn’t long, it doesn’t need to be, as what little she can do can chunk your health to nothing in a few strikes.

  • Claw Combo. Den Mother swipes at you three to five times. The combo is relatively slow and easy to avoid, but she’ll stop if you get far enough away. Unbuffed, each swipe did about 1/5 of my health.
  • Fast Claw Combo. A variant of the standard Claw Combo, Den Mother attacks twice before a brief windup that leads to a series of three to five attacks in quick succession. Run when you see the windup.
  • Corruption Spreading Paw Slam. The Den Mother slams down her paws several times, creating more than a dozen pools of corruption on the ground. Entering these pools will do severe damage over time as long as you’re in one, and they make movement tricky.
  • Summon Winter Hunter. After depleting her health by one-third and two-thirds, Den Mother will summon five Winter Hunter wolves. While not threatening on their own, their number, combined with the corruption pools likely to appear during these phases of the fight and the boss herself make things tricky.
Screenshot by Gamepur

I recommend keeping Den Mother at range whenever possible, and if you can’t manage that (as she’ll be constantly running up to you), invest in Barrier Skills. Ice or Flame Barrier on Sorcerer have been a godsend on my playthroughs, both providing immense value for relatively little mana cost.

Alternatively, as long as you stay on the move while playing a Necromancer or Barbarian, you can likely avoid the worst of her attacks while either spinning, Severing, or however else you’ve decided to deal damage. Don’t be afraid to use your potions, either, as you’ll get two each time you break one of her Den Mother’s damage thresholds. Should the boss prove to be too much, there’s no shame in coming back when you’re better equipped.

Screenshot by Gamepur

When you do defeat Den Mother, she’ll drop two pieces of gear, four piles of Gold, and a few healing potions (or she did for us, anyway). If you’re a Sorcerer, you’ll also get the Aspect of Conflagration, which increases the Burning damage caused by Incinerate by 20%. Not bad at all.


Gamepur is supported by our audience. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn a small affiliate commission. Learn more about our Affiliate Policy
Author
Image of Cande Maldonado
Cande Maldonado
Though Cande started her journey in the video game industry as a localization specialist six years ago, she soon realized that her true calling was to annoy NPCS, smash virtual pottery, and complete every side quest available in RPGs. Throwing that useless degree out of the window, she has been writing professionally for the past three years ever since. Her passion for games dates to 2006, when she mounted a Chocobo for the first time. Under Nintendo and Square Enix's chokehold, she will willingly pour hours upon hours into reaching 100% completion in the longest roleplaying games ever made. But hey, who needs fresh air and sunlight when you can just live in Ivalice?
Author
Image of John Schutt
John Schutt
John Schutt is a contributing writer at Gamepur focusing on guides, particularly of the shooter and Souls-like variety. He is a fan of just about any RPG. John has been an active part of Game Journalism since 2010, and is determined to continue his journey on that path.