Palworld Beginner's Guide 2026 — Updated for all patches. Bookmark for weekly updates.

Palworld Beginner's Guide — First 10 Hours Walkthrough (2026)

New to Palworld? This step-by-step beginner guide covers your first 10 hours — from starting out to your first base, first flying mount, and first tower boss.

10h
Walkthrough
8
Must-catch Pals
3
Milestones
Last updated:
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Hour 1-2: Survive

Gather wood and stone, craft your first tools, catch your first Pal, and set down a Palbox. The goal is simple: don't starve, don't freeze, and get a roof over your head before nightfall.

Hour 3-5: Build

Establish a functioning base with food production, a campfire, and a feed box. Catch a Foxparks for Kindling and craft a bow so you can defend yourself and hunt stronger Pals.

Hour 6-10: Explore

Upgrade your base to level 7, catch a Nitewing for your first flying mount, unlock fast travel points, and set up a second base at Ore Mountain to fuel your mid-game progression.

🌱 Hour 1-2: The First Steps

You spawn on a beach with nothing but your fists. Here's exactly what to do in the first two hours to set up a strong foundation.

When you first load into Palworld, you'll wake up on a beach in the Plateau of Beginnings. Don't wander inland right away — your first priority is gathering the absolute basics. Walk up to the nearest tree and punch it. Yes, punching trees works in Palworld, and it's how you'll get your first Wood. Pick up loose Stones from the ground nearby. Once you have a handful of each, open the Technology menu and unlock the Primitive Workbench.

At the Primitive Workbench, craft a Stone Pickaxe and a Stone Axe. The Pickaxe lets you mine larger rock nodes for more Stone and Paldium Fragments, while the Axe speeds up tree chopping dramatically. Paldium Fragments are critical — you'll need them to craft Pal Spheres, which are the only way to catch Pals.

Next, craft at least five Pal Spheres. Walk around the starting area and you'll see low-level Pals wandering about: Lamball (the fluffy sheep), Chikipi (the chicken), and Cattiva (the cat-like digger). These are your first catches. Weaken them by attacking with your Pickaxe or fists — don't kill them — then throw a Pal Sphere when their health is low. A red ring on the sphere means the catch might fail; a green or yellow ring means you're in good shape.

Once you've caught 2-3 Pals, find a flat, open area slightly inland from the beach (but not too far) and build a Palbox. The Palbox is the heart of your base — it defines your base radius, lets you assign Pals to work, and stores your Pal collection. Place it on flat ground near both trees and rock nodes for maximum efficiency.

Build a Campfire near your Palbox. Campfires cook raw meat (dropped by Chikipi and other creatures) into Cooked Meat, which restores far more hunger than raw food. They also provide warmth at night, when the temperature drops and Pals can become stressed. Finally, craft a Wooden Chest to store excess materials — your inventory fills up fast in the first hour.

Tip: Keep at least 5 Pal Spheres on you at all times. You never know when you'll stumble across a rare or high-level Pal, and running out of spheres means walking all the way back to your workbench.

🏠 Hour 3-5: Your First Base

Now that you have a Palbox and a few Pals, it's time to turn your camp into a real base with food, defenses, and production.

By hour three, your Pals should be working automatically — Cattiva mines stone, Lamball helps with handiwork, and Lifmunk plants berries. But you need to give them infrastructure. Start by building a Berry Plantation. Berries are the most reliable early-game food source: they grow quickly, your Pals can harvest them automatically, and they keep both you and your Pals fed. Assign a Pal with the Planting skill (like Lifmunk) and a Pal with the Gathering skill to keep the plantation running.

Build a Feed Box next to the plantation. Pals eat from the Feed Box when they get hungry, which prevents them from becoming stressed or slack. A well-fed Pal works faster and won't abandon its tasks. Place the Feed Box in a central location so all your base Pals can reach it easily.

Now it's time to catch a Foxparks. This small fire-type Pal is the single most important early-game catch because it has the Kindling skill. Kindling Pals automatically light campfires, smelt ore into ingots at a furnace, and cook food at cooking pots. Without a Kindling Pal, you have to manually light every fire — which is tedious and wastes your time. Foxparks spawns in the grassy areas near the Plateau of Beginnings and is usually level 2-5, making it easy to catch with basic Pal Spheres.

Once you have Foxparks, build a Furnace and start smelting the ore you've been mining into Ingots. Ingots unlock a whole tier of better tools and weapons. Your next priority is the Old Bow and a stack of Arrows. The bow dramatically increases your combat range — you can damage Pals from a distance before moving in to catch them, and you can defend yourself against aggressive wild Pals that roam at night.

Build a Straw Bed for yourself and a Pal Bed for each of your Pals. Pals need to sleep at night to recover Sanity (SAN). Low SAN causes Pals to slack off, get sick, or even refuse to work. Place beds in a covered structure — even a simple wood shack works — to protect against the elements. Don't skip this step; a base full of exhausted Pals is a base that doesn't produce anything.

Tip: Catch a Daedream as soon as possible. This Dark-type Pal has a partner skill that lets it fight alongside you even when not actively deployed — it floats beside you and attacks enemies automatically. It's essentially a free second party member, which makes early combat and Pal catching much easier.
Tip: Don't cook just for yourself — cook for your Pals too. Raw berries keep Pals alive, but cooked food restores more SAN, which means your Pals work harder and stay healthier. Throw extra berries into a Cooking Pot and let Foxparks handle the rest.

🗺️ Hour 6-10: Expand & Explore

Your base is running. Now it's time to upgrade, take to the skies, and push into the wider world of the Palpagos Islands.

By hour six, you should be around level 12-15. Your main goal now is to upgrade your base to level 7. Base levels are increased by completing base-related tasks — your Pals working, gathering, and crafting all contribute to base XP. At base level 7, you unlock critical structures like the High Quality Workbench, better defensive walls, and most importantly, the ability to assign more Pals to your base simultaneously. More Pals means more automated production, which means faster progress across the board.

Once you hit level 15-20 (achievable through catching, crafting, and combat), head to the fast travel point nearest your base and start exploring outward. Fast Travel statues are scattered across the map — activate every one you find. They let you instantly teleport between locations, which saves enormous amounts of time when you're managing multiple bases or running back to town for supplies. The first few statues are near the Plateau of Beginnings and the Small Settlement to the east.

Your next major milestone is catching a Nitewing. Nitewing is a Neutral-type Pal that serves as your first flying mount. To ride it, you need to unlock its saddle in the Technology tree (around level 15-20) and craft it at a saddle workbench. Flying changes everything — you can bypass terrain obstacles, escape dangerous encounters, scout for resources from the air, and reach areas that are otherwise inaccessible on foot. Nitewing spawns in the hilly regions north of the starting area, typically at level 15-20.

With a flying mount, it's time to establish your second base at Ore Mountain (coordinates 191, -36). Ore Mountain has 8+ ore nodes in a concentrated area, plus coal and stone. Building a mining base here gives you a steady supply of Ore and Coal — the two resources you need for mid-game crafting, including better Pal Spheres, firearms, and metal building materials. Assign mining Pals (like Cattiva early on, or Tombat and Digtoise later) and a transporting Pal to move ore from nodes to chests automatically.

With two bases running — one for food and crafting, one for mining — you're no longer a beginner. You have infrastructure, automation, a flying mount, and a growing Pal collection. From here, your next targets are breeding (unlock the Breeding Farm at level 19), your first Tower Boss (Zoe & Grizzbolt at the Rayne Syndicate Tower), and eventually catching the mid-tier combat Pals that will carry you into the late game.

Tip: Before setting up your second base, make sure your first base is fully self-sufficient — Pals fed, beds placed, and production running. If your first base collapses while you're away building the second one, you'll lose your food supply and crafting pipeline, which can stall your progress for hours.

🐾 8 Essential Early-Game Pals You Should Catch ASAP

These eight Pals will carry you through the first 10 hours. Catch them all — each fills a critical role in your base or party.

001
Lamball
Neutral · #001
Wool + Handiwork. The sheep you punch on day one. Provides Wool for cloth and helps at the workbench.
003
Chikipi
Neutral · #003
Eggs + Gathering. Drops eggs for cooking and auto-gathers berries from your plantation.
005
Foxparks
Fire · #005
Kindling. Lights campfires, smelts ore, cooks food. The #1 priority catch for any new base.
002
Cattiva
Neutral · #002
Mining + Transport. Digs up stone and ore, then hauls materials to chests automatically.
004
Lifmunk
Grass · #004
Planting + Combat. Plants berries at your farm and doubles as a solid early-game fighter.
019
Daedream
Dark · #019
Night combat ally. Floats beside you and attacks enemies automatically — a free party member.
038
Nitewing
Neutral · #038
First flying mount. Unlocks aerial travel and completely changes how you explore the map.
026
Direhowl
Neutral · #026
Fast ground mount. Sprints across the map faster than running, great before you can fly.

⚠️ Common Beginner Mistakes to Avoid

Every new Palworld player makes these errors. Learn from them now so you don't waste hours fixing the damage later.

1. Don't Build Your Base Right at the Spawn Point

The beach where you spawn seems convenient, but it's a trap. The terrain is uneven, there are limited resource nodes nearby, and aggressive Pals can wander through at night. Walk 30-60 seconds inland until you find a flat, open area with trees and rocks within your base radius. A bad base location will haunt you for hours — you'll outgrow it fast, and moving a base means rebuilding everything from scratch.

2. Don't Ignore Food Production

Many beginners focus on crafting and combat and forget to set up food until their Pals start slacking off or getting sick. By the time you notice the problem, your Pals may have lost significant SAN, and recovery takes time. Build a Berry Plantation and Feed Box within the first hour — before you start chasing combat Pals or exploring far from base. Food is not optional; it's the foundation of a functional base.

3. Don't Forget to Upgrade Your Palbox

The Palbox has a base level that determines how many Pals you can assign to your base and what structures you can build. Many beginners leave it at level 1 and wonder why their base isn't progressing. Upgrade the Palbox by having your Pals work — every task they complete contributes base XP. Check the Palbox UI regularly to see your current base level and what you need to do to reach the next one. Upgrading unlocks more Pal slots, better workstations, and stronger defenses.

Tip: If a Pal is slacking off, glowing red, or refusing to work, check three things: Is the Feed Box full? Are there enough Pal Beds? Is the Pal injured or sick? Fixing any of these usually restores normal behavior within a few in-game hours.

Fast Leveling: Catch 10 of the Same Pal

The single fastest way to gain XP in the early game — and most beginners don't know about it.

In Palworld, the experience system rewards you for catching Pals — but there's a multiplier you need to know about. The first 10 catches of each Pal species grant a massive XP bonus. Catch #1 gives you a huge chunk of XP. Catch #2 gives slightly less. By catch #10, the bonus is still significant but has tapered off. After 10 catches of the same species, the XP reward drops to almost nothing.

This means the most efficient early-game leveling strategy is simple: catch 10 of every Pal species you encounter. Don't just catch one Lamball and move on — catch ten. Don't catch one Foxparks — catch ten. Each set of 10 gives you a large XP injection that can boost you several levels at once in the early game.

Here's the optimal approach: as you explore, make a mental note of every new Pal species you see. When you encounter a new species for the first time, catch as many as you can (up to 10) before moving on. This is especially effective in the starting area, where low-level Pals like Lamball, Chikipi, and Cattiva are plentiful and easy to catch with basic Pal Spheres. You can go from level 1 to level 10 in under an hour just by catching 10 of each starting-area Pal.

The extra Pals aren't wasted either. You can condense them at the Palbox to boost your main Pal's stats, or release them for Ancient Technology Points. Either way, the XP alone makes it worth the effort.

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PalGuide Team

The PalGuide Team has collectively logged over 2,000 hours in Palworld across early access and full release. We test every guide in-game before publishing. This beginner walkthrough was verified on the latest 2026 patch.

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