Every Mythic+ player knows the sound of a key dying: someone leaves after the second wipe, the group dissolves, and your keystone drops a level. Depletion is the tax the system charges for failure — and understanding its mechanics is the first step to paying it less often.

The mechanics in plain terms

Complete a dungeon over the timer and the key survives but does not upgrade. Abandon the run — or fail so hard completion is impossible — and the keystone drops one level. The brutal part is asymmetry: pushing a key up requires beating the timer, but one ragequitter can undo an evening in thirty seconds.

Why pugs brick keys

  • Mismatched expectations: half the group came to time it, half came for the vault slot. First wipe reveals which.
  • No routing agreement: improvised skips and accidental packs cost more deaths than hard bosses.
  • The leaver economy: a DPS with their own key banked loses nothing by abandoning yours.

Protecting your key

Run your own key with people who have something at stake — guildmates, a regular trio, or a community group with reputational cost for leaving. Announce the goal before the first pull: timed push or completion-for-vault changes every routing and cooldown decision. And schedule pushes early in the reset when everyone still cares.

Where carries fit

A professional carry team removes the depletion variable entirely: the group cannot disband on you, the route is rehearsed, and timed completion is the product rather than the hope. That is why key-holders sitting one level below their season goal — the +14 that needs to be a +15 — are the most common carry customers. When one specific keystone matters, renting certainty beats gambling with strangers.

The mindset fix

Treat depleted keys as tuition, not tragedy — but audit what the lesson cost. If the same pug mistakes brick your key three resets running, the problem is not your play; it is your group sourcing. Fix the sourcing, and the keystone climbs.