Mega Camerupt Mega Raids scheduled May 6–12 — extra raid activity at local gyms and parks
- Pokémon GO rotates Mega Camerupt into Mega Raids on Wednesday, May 6, 2026, replacing Mega Banette and running through Tuesday, May 12. - The same reset brings Nihilego to five-star raids, with a dedicated Raid Hour on May 6 from 6 to 7 p.m. local time. - That matters because raid pools flip at 10 a.m. local time, so local gyms change over all at once.
Mega Camerupt is the next big raid boss in Pokémon GO, and the practical thing to know is simple — it starts Wednesday, May 6, at 10 a.m. local time, and it sticks around until Tuesday, May 12. That same weekly raid reset also swaps in Nihilego for five-star raids, so local gyms are about to look very different from what players saw during the Mega Banette week. If you play around Fremont parks and gym clusters, this is less a one-off event than a full raid rotation you can plan around. (pokemongohub.net) ### What exactly changes on May 6? The raid pool flips over at 10 a.m. local time on May 6. Mega Banette leaves Mega Raids, Mega Camerupt takes its slot, and Nihilego becomes the active five-star legendary through May 12. That means any local gym that hatches a Mega egg after the reset can roll into Mega Camerupt instead of the outgoing boss. (pokemongohub.net) ### Is this a one-day event? No — and that’s the part people often miss. Mega Camerupt is not a special three-hour raid day. It’s the standard Mega Raid boss for almost a full week, from May 6 to May 12, using the normal gym-and-egg system. So you do not need to be out at one exact hour to get it, though concentrated raid windows still matter. (pokemongohub.net) ### What’s the best hour to play? For the five-star side, the most concentrated window is Raid Hour on Wednesday, May 6, from 6 p.m. to 7 p.m. local time, when Nihilego is featured. That hour is specifically for the legendary boss, not Mega Camerupt, but it usually means more players are (pokemongohub.net) eggs are active before or after. (pokemongohub.net) ### What about Shadow Raids? The weekly May schedule shows daily one-star and three-star Shadow Raids, with higher-tier Shadow Raids on weekends. For this stretch of May, the monthly event calendar lists Shadow Cresselia in weekend Shadow Raids from May 6 to June 2. So if y(pokemongohub.net)eas. (pokemongohub.net) ### Why does “local time” matter so much? Because Pokémon GO raid rotations do not switch globally at one universal moment. They change at 10 a.m. local time for each player’s area. Basically, Fremont gyms won’t match New York or Tokyo at the same instant. If you check a gym before 10 a.m. on May 6, you may still see the old lineup. After 10 a.m., the new week starts. (pokemongohub.net) ### So should players in Fremont do anything special? Mostly, just plan smarter. Check dense gym areas after the May 6 reset, especially places where multiple raid eggs can hatch close together. Parks and downtown gym clusters tend to be better for chaining raids because yo(pokemongohub.net)m-dependent — the game gives you a weeklong boss rotation, not a guaranteed appearance at every gym. (pokemongohub.net) ### What’s the bigger picture here? This is part of Pokémon GO’s normal weekly and monthly raid cadence, not a surprise drop. The May 2026 calendar already maps Mega Camerupt for May 6–12, with Mega Glalie queued up right after on May 13. So if Mega Camerupt is the one you want, this is a defined window, and it closes fast. (pokemongohub.net) ### Bottom line If you want Mega Camerupt, the real date to circle is Wednesday, May 6, 2026, after 10 a.m. local time. That’s when the boss rotation changes, local gyms reset into the new lineup, and the weeklong hunt actually begins. (pokemongohub.net)