Limgrave is your introduction to Elden Ring’s open world, and it’s packed with bosses that range from trivial to terrifying. Here’s how to beat every one of them.
Beastman of Farum Azula (Groveside Cave): This is your tutorial boss. Stay close, dodge his three-hit combo, and punish during recovery frames. R1 spam works if you’re aggressive. If you’re a mage, keep distance and spam Glintstone Pebble. Drops a decent talisman early.
Tree Sentinel (First Step): The classic “you’re not ready” boss. Come back after leveling to 25+. On Torrent, ride in circles and punish his charge attacks. On foot, hug his shield side — his attacks have blind spots there. Drops a powerful halberd.
Margit, the Fell Omen: The first real skill check. Phase 1: Learn his jump attack timing — dodge INTO it, not away. Phase 2: He pulls out a holy hammer. Stay aggressive. The NPC summon (Rogier) draws aggro. Use it. Recommended level: 25-35 with +3 weapon minimum.
Godrick the Grafted: Phase 1 is manageable — dodge his axe swings and punish the ground slam. Phase 2 (dragon arm) is where it gets spicy. His fire breath has a huge telegraph — run laterally. Stay behind him during combos. Summon Nepheli Loux for help. Drops his Great Rune (equip at a site of grace, activate at Divine Tower).
Crucible Knight (Stormhill Evergaol): Optional but worth it. This enemy teaches you to parry. His attacks are telegraphed but hit HARD. Parry his sword swings for massive riposte damage. If you can’t parry, wait for his shield bash — it’s slow and punishable. Don’t get greedy — hit once or twice, then reset.
Dragon Agheel (Dragon-Burnt Ruins): Torrent is essential. Ride under him and hack at his legs. When he flies up for fire breath, ride perpendicular to his path. His tail sweep has surprising range — stay near his chest, not his tail. Drops a dragon heart (trade at Cathedral of Dragon Communion).
General tips for Limgrave bosses: Level Vigor first (aim for 25+). Upgrade your weapon to +3 before Margit. Craft fire pots for the Tree Sentinel. And remember: you can always leave, level up, and come back. That’s the beauty of open-world design.
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