Quick Answer
You do not need perfect passive chains at the start. Breeding makes more sense after your first base can feed itself, craft reliably, and cover core jobs. Learn the facilities, egg flow, passive logic, and incubation rhythm before chasing perfect results.
Before you start
| Check | What to confirm | Why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| Base supply | Food, beds, benches, and materials are stable | Breeding adds more base management |
| Facilities | Breeding and egg-related stations are ready | Without facilities, you are only relying on found eggs |
| Target role | Decide work role or combat role first | Different goals value different passives |
| Duplicate Pals | Keep useful duplicates for now | Extra Pals may carry better traits or pairings |
Beginner route
- Stabilize the first base before turning breeding into the main project.
- Check duplicate Pals for work suitability and passive traits.
- Aim for “good enough” workers before perfect chains.
- Track which hatched Pals improve jobs, combat roles, or mobility.
- Once resources are stable, split targets into transport, kindling, mining, combat, or mounts.
Common mistakes
- Chasing perfect passives so early that base progress stalls.
- Judging Pals by rarity instead of work suitability.
- Starting breeding before food and materials can support it.
- Failing to track hatched Pals, then losing track of which ones are worth keeping.