Monster Hunter Wilds Event Quest Schedule Guide: Check Weekly Rotations
Monster Hunter Wilds Event Quests are easiest to manage through Capcom's live schedule rather than a copied static list. The official page groups quests into current, next, and later weekly windows and gives each quest its own start time, end time, and participation conditions. As of the July 9, 2026 check, the schedule continues through multiple July windows, which is exactly why an old article can become misleading even when the quest names are correct. This guide explains how to read the live calendar, account for displayed times, verify Hunter Rank or other entry conditions, and decide whether a quest is active now, upcoming, permanent, or already outside its window.
Use the live Capcom schedule
Use Capcom's schedule as the source of truth because it is a live calendar. The page distinguishes current, next, and later windows and can display dates according to the selected locale or time setting. A screenshot or copied table from an older guide can be correct when published and wrong a week later.
As of July 9, 2026, Capcom's schedule is still showing active and upcoming July windows. That current check confirms the guide should teach the reading method rather than freeze one week's quest list into permanent body copy.
Check the weekly window
Start at the top-level weekly grouping. Identify whether the quest sits in This week, Next week, or a later window, then open the quest entry and compare its own start and end timestamps. Do not assume every quest in a visible page section shares identical availability.
For planning with friends, note the end time first. A quest that is active now can still expire before the group's next session. Save the live schedule URL rather than a screenshot so the group can re-check after weekly rotation.
Read start and end times
Read both date and time. The schedule page can reflect locale or time-offset settings, so a boundary near midnight may fall on a different calendar date for another player. When coordinating internationally, compare the displayed end time in one agreed timezone instead of saying only “Tuesday” or “Wednesday.”
The practical rule is simple: treat the website's timestamp as part of the quest condition. If the client says a quest is unavailable near a rotation boundary, refresh the live page and verify the current local display before troubleshooting the game installation.
Check quest conditions
Each quest entry can include participation conditions such as Hunter Rank thresholds or other quest-specific requirements. Availability in the calendar does not guarantee that every hunter can accept or join it. Read the condition line before assembling a party.
For a failed join, compare the player's current progression with the listed condition. This is more useful than assuming the rotation is broken, especially when one party member can enter the quest and another cannot.
Avoid stale quest lists
Do not copy a current quest list into an evergreen guide without a check date. Capcom's live page changes as windows rotate, and the current July 2026 schedule demonstrates that future weeks are already visible while earlier windows disappear from prominence.
For COSM-GAME, the durable content is how to read the schedule; any current quest example should carry a LastCheckedDate. This keeps the guide useful after a weekly rotation instead of turning it into stale news.