login | register
Mon 06 of Feb, 2012 (05:43 UTC)

Entropia Connections

Your Entropia Connection

Beginners Guide

fuega • Sun 03 of Jan, 2010 (22:31 UTC)

Tutorial for New Players of Entropia Universe - Planet Calypso.

updated 2 Jan 2010

NOTE: Entropia Universe went through a major overhaul on 18 August 2009. I will try to update this guide as Entropia does their updates. MindArk has not brought back pets yet, and the mentor system still doesn’t work. They say they will fix these and other items in coming updates. Until then, items in this guide relating to pet training or finding a mentor/disciple must be skipped for now. For people that can’t play the game because their computer can’t handle the new CryEngine2 graphics… the game looks great, maybe it is a sign to upgrade your system, you’ll love it when you do.


This outline is recommended for anyone needing a good plan to start out in Entropia Universe. Visit their new website at <www.planetcalypso.com> and download the game for free. The best part of this game is that you don’t have to pay any monthly fees to play Entropia.

My qualifications for writing this tutorial are that I have been playing Entropia Universe since 2001, when it was Project Entropia Beta. I have also managed to make a profit playing this game, but only after years of experience and some wise investments. But that is not why I play, I play Entropia to have fun. I have put alot of research into how to play Entropia efficently, and I have helped many players start out in this game. My avatar in game and on entropia forum is named Fuega.

This tutorial is not the fastest path, but I believe it is the most economical one to building lots of good skills. This path is also very methodical, so feel free to deviate for the sake of fun. It is recommended that you join a society and get a good mentor. Mentors should be there to help you, so if you get a mentor, also get their email address, so that you can still ask questions of them when they are not in the game. You should also make some commitments. First, of course, is to put a regular amount of time in the game. Second is to put a regular amount of ped into the game. Such as depositing $10 or $15 a month. That is still less than most other online games cost. You can play this game without depositing, several people have. I only deposited an initial $10 for my first year. But I progressed really slow the first few years too. It all comes down to what makes the game enjoyable for you. Don’t stress out about depositing, there are plenty of fun things to do in this game that don’t require ped.

I will give you web links to follow by copying and pasting them in your browser. I added goals with check boxes for each section. You can do them in any order. There is a glossary of abreviations in section 6, and they are in {}. Also the 1-5 refers to references found in section 6.


[1] Goals:

  • Sign up for Entropia Forum and Entropedia.
  • Set up your quick keys and screen icons.
  • Join a Society and find a Mentor.
  • Collect five teleporters.
  • Gather 1000 vibrant sweat.

First you will need to go to www.entropiaforum.com and join. If you have a question that I don’t answer here, there is going to be an answer there. 1 Second, visit www.entropedia.info and join there too. It is the best website for stats on everything in this game. Also be sure to bookmark/favorite those links in your browser, you will visit them alot.

There are a few bad people that play all online games. If you run into someone that you think is a scammer, usually because they try to trade with you without asking first, you can click the right mouse button on any item in the trade window or your inventory, and look up what the going market value for that item is, or you could research the price in Entropedia. There is also a tutorial for avoiding scammers on Entropia Forum. Fortunately 99.9% of all the players out there are decent people.

Hit the keys I, Y, L, and G (“I” for inventory, “Y” for actions, “L” for editing, and “G” for keyboard setup), and play with editing your desktop icons and F1-F9 shortcut bars to what works best for you. You can drag actions or items to just about any key on your keyboard and/or create icons on your display. I usually place an item on one of my number keys and as a icon on my display. I keep my weapon hotkeys on my F1 bar, my emotes and dances on my F2 bar, my mining tools on my F5 bar, and my animal taming tools on my F7 bar. In all my setups I put “unequip item” action on my End key, and I set up my arrow keys with my move actions, so I can use that instead of the WASD keys. You can now program any extra buttons on your mouse too.

You can change between 1st and 3rd person views by hitting the number 5 on your number pad, or scrolling in and out with your mouse wheel. Use the left mouse button to select what you want to target for hunting or sweating. Get quick at hitting the space bar, to change between aiming and the pointer for selecting things. You move your avatar by using W for walking while using your mouse to steer. Also use Q to change betweens walking and running, S to back up, E to jump, and A and D to straife. Alternately you can use your mouse to move and steer by holding down both right and left mouse buttons. The camera angle can be controlled by holding down the middle mouse button/ scroll wheel and moving your mouse.

Your first week or two in game will be absolutely free, no ped needed. Your first task is to start adding teleporters {TP} to your map, and at the same time learn how to avoid getting attacked, by keeping the monsters {mobs} out of your inner radar circle. Go to Entropedia and click on Locations, to get a map of all the TP sites.

You don’t actually have to run to each teleporter, once you get near enough, and are in that TP’s revival area, you can just die, and you will revive near the TP. But make sure that you actually go to the TP and get the message that it has been added to your map. Avoid the red PVP areas in the middle of the map, you will die there. If you need to get to the other side, run around it or use TP’s to get around it.

If things get difficult, generally, staying to the rivers and oceans are safer. It may take longer, but you avoid the monsters. And for some unknown reason, you can breath underwater, but mobs don’t, so you can drown them. Should you get stuck somewhere contact the nice people at www.euforces.com for a rescue. After you finish getting all the tp’s on the Eudoria continent, you should do the Amathera continent also, but there is no hurry.

TP running can be frustrating if you let it, but if you take your time and enjoy the sights, it can be fun. Remember, you may have to run way out of your way to get around dangerous groups of mobs. Enjoy the challenge, and
don’t worry about dying. You don’t loose anything when you die, you just get sent to the nearest Revival Terminal.

Next task will be to go to Swamp Camp and join in the crowds of people sweating there. Swamp Camp is located at 61253, 77044, on the path heading north from Port Atlantis (you can hit P to get your position). Collecting Vibrant Sweat and selling it to other players can be a way to play this game without having to deposit. To collect vibrant sweat, you equip your VSE Mk1, and aim it at an animal and activate. Hopefully you put it on a number key or an icon on your screen.

You can sweat or hunt in the first person or third person views. In the first person, move close enough to the animal, aim your crosshairs on the animal, and activate your Mk1 by left clicking or hitting the number key you put it on. In the third person, you click on the animal once to select it and then double-click on the animal to auto-move to the right location and begin sweating. Or you can also use the left mouse button to drag a mobs health bar onto your screen. And if you have already equiped your Mk1, you can then right click on its health bar and select “Use Tool” to auto-move to the right distance and start sweating. Once I get the distance figured out, I usually drag its health bar onto the screen, and then switch to first person perspective to sweat or kill it.

Your goal is 1000 Vibrant Sweat. That may take a while, but it is worth it to get the associated skills. I have got over 20000 sweat personally. Afterwards you can sell your sweat, or you can save it for when you get into mind force skills. If you do sell it, ask around to be sure to get the best price you can. If you want a change of scenery, the other place that lots of people sweat is at Nea’s Place on Amethera. I actually prefer sweating there. At Swamp Camp and Nea’s Place there are often people there who skill on healing and focusing, so you might get those services for free. Say “TYVM” to them.

If you have not done so yet, it is a good time to start looking for a Society. Check out a Society Terminal. The thing that I enjoy most about EU is chatting with friends. It is the best part of this game.

next step to follow


[2] Goals:

  • Buy a set of Pixie or Goblin Armor.
  • Buy an Emik S30 (L) BLP Pistol and a Loughlin Masher One (L) Melee Club.
  • Swunt till you max out at least one ranged and one melee weapon.
  • Max out the Vivo T1.
  • Scan people, animals, robots and mutants.
  • Buy or tame a pet and raise it to level 3.

Ok next step involves ped.
Now you are going to buy things to go hunting. I recommend buying a full set of Pixie armor. This is a good time to become familiar with the auction. You want to purchase it with the lowest markup. If you right click on an item, and select Market Value, will get the current sales data for that item, and you can buy wisely, perhaps getting it below current prices. You may have to wait a couple of days for the sale on the auction, while you do something else like sweating, and just check back from time to time on your bids. It should cost you less than 25 ped to purchase a full set of Pixie and repair it if it is not fully repaired. But if you are going to start out with hunting Snablesnots southwest of Fort Argus, your first armor should be Goblin instead of Pixie. Pixie gives very little protection, so when you can afford it you should upgrade to Shogun armor. A full set of Shogun costs about 155 ped fully repaired. These are “Unlimited” armors, so you need to repair them every day you use them. Also with Unlimited armor there is a charge for putting it on, so leave it on all the time if you can. Some people prefer Limited (L) armor because they don’t have that charge. Sometimes I hunt without armor, and save ped that way, but you should carry a healing tool with you if you do that, just in case.

Next you need to go to the Auctioneer and purchase an Emik S30 (L) BLP Pistol. It is the easiest weapon in EU to max out. Also purchase a Loughlin Masher One (L) as soon as you can afford it. You can purchase ammo for your pistol in the Trade Terminal {TT}. Later on in this guide, I will recommend using several weapons while hunting, but for now you should stick to just one weapon at a time, till you max it out and get a feel for how to use it efficently.

VERY IMPORTANT: You should pull up your inventory, and right click on your weapon, and select Item Info, and then select the Show Detailed Information button. Do this often. When you see that BOTH the “Learning period damage” and “Learning period hit” say “Not anymore”, you have maxed it out, and it is time to upgrade to the next model. That is how you judge the Skill Increase Bonus {SIB} on an item. Weapons and tools are most efficent to use when they are almost maxed out with the “Hit ability” at 10/10, but not quite there yet.

Finally the hunt, The first animal you should hunt is the Young Sabakuma 2. Sabakumas are easy to find off the path heading south-east from Swamp Camp. You can also hunt the Diakiba in that area, and your Pixie or Goblin armor will help protect you. Though I recommend sticking to the Young Sabakuma till you max out a weapon or two.

Always try to sweat an animal first, and then kill it when it starts attacking. That way you get extra sweating skills from it, and it is more profitable. It’s called “swunting”. Now if you take my advice, and hunt small things that you can quickly kill, swunt them first, use a weapon that you get a SIB on, and then sell your loot at the going markup (don’t TT it), you should be able to get by with just small deposits, and possibly break even. You waste money when you start hunting outside of your skill level.

You should buy the Vivo T1 from the TT, and use it to restore your health. To save ped you can always just wait in between killing each animal for your health to come back up. Doing that is free, but that makes for very slow going. Besides, you will get useful healing skills from using the Vivo T1. But be careful, you shouldn’t waste 10 points of healing when you only need 5 or 6 points to top off your health. And as always, watch the SIB, and switch to the next model up when you max out the Vivo T1. Again you can determine which model should be your next by checking out Entropedia or my chart in section 5.

You can also get skills from scanning and animal taming, and they come fast and cheap. Scanning and animal taming can be boring, so if you want to move past this paragraph and come back to it later, that is ok. Also it takes ped, and if you are short ped, do this later. First thing I recommend is getting two scanners from the TT. And then stand there for hours and scan animals, people, mutants, and robots. There is a technique for each that makes it easier. Like just scan something with low aggression, like a Diakiba or Globster or MinerBot. And stay outside of their aggression area, moving around when they do. For scanning people, just ask them first, like someone standing by a crafting machine, and scan away. Then I recommend taming/buying a pet. Then you have to buy nutriobars from the auction, and make it do tricks, and you get lots of skills. For both scanning and taming, I recommend getting at least each profession up to level 3. It also makes it a little easier if you drag the “Toggle Auto Use” action to a hotkey. It may be boring, so watch a movie while you hit the button.

I also acknowledge that if for some reason you need to hurry through your discipleship and graduate, that the fastest way is to burn through ammo hunting, or to burn through probes mining. Just don’t forget to have fun.

next step to follow…


[3] Goals:

  • Put in a Mindforce Implant and use a Teleport Chip.
  • Get yourself a good set of armor.
  • Mine tons of ore.
  • Mine tons of enmatter.
  • Max out all the TT weapons, then all the weapons on the chart in section 4.
  • Buy all the books and BPs that the Technician sells.
  • Raise one BP to a Quality Rating of 100 through crafting.
  • Collect all the TPs on both continents.
  • Take a space flight and visit Club Neverdie.

Ok, now you have been playing for a month and you are close to graduating. Now its time to spend more ped. If you don’t have one yet, you should to buy a NeoPsion Aa Mindforce implant from the TT. After you insert it, you can sell the Inserter back to the TT. Then you should check the auction, and consider purchasing a Lesser Teleport Chip. They make getting around quicker, and sometimes help if you get in a dangerous spot, but they do waste ped. Remember, you can always hit T on the keyboard and teleport back to the closest revival terminal for free. If you have not purchased an energy refiner and mineral refiner from the auction yet, you will need those too. You can purchase mind essence from the auction, or you can purchase force nexus and make your own mind essence using sweat and your energy refiner. It is used to power your Teleporter Chip and any other Mindforce chips.

Now that you have some skills at defending yourself, at this time it would be good to start mining. So, go purchase the mining gear from the TT, read the tutorials, and start mining. I have included a list of mining gear and the SIB progression to follow in section 5. Mining is my favorite past-time in the game, and it builds very useful skills.

You should continue working your way down the weapon chart I provided in section 4. 3 You can skip around a little on the order of weapons you skill on, but following the charts is the best way to build weapon skills. I say max out all the weapons with a SIB, because most of the skills are general and help in other areas too. Though it does make for slower skilling, so if you prefer you can always stick to just one weapon type.

Once you have maxed out several weapons, and are starting to hunt big mobs, you may change how you hunt, possibly using multiple weapons per kill. Your dream goals for weapons will to be to have 2 or 3 primary weapons. First, you should have an economical weapon for killing low level mobs that get in your way, and for finishing hits on bigger mobs. Your finishing hit should be just enough to kill the mob. A good example of an economical finishing weapon is an axe. Second, you should have a high power fast kill weapon for when you hunt dangerous mobs. A good example of a fast kill close range weapon is a blp pistol. Third, you should also have a nice long range weapon. Good examples of long range tag weapons are plasma rifles and rockets. Fourth, mid-range. If you have the ped you may also want a nice mid-range rifle that is fast. Fifth, be sure to use amps where you can, starting with the Bull Tac 10 (L) for blp guns and the Shear XR40 (L) for energy guns. You can’t put high end amps on low end guns anymore, so move up the scale of amps as your skill goes up. For efficency sake, you should get a Fi/Ra/Co Beast and a Omegaton A103 or A104 when you can use them.

Remember that the faster that you kill a mob, it does the least amount of damage to you and your armor, and it regenerates less health, saving you ped. Also you don’t want to waste ped by overkilling the mob, so choose the right weapon for the job. A good hunter might change weapons 2 or 3 times per kill. Starting with the long-range tag, then your high damage close-range, and then your finishing weapon for the last hit. And sometimes you get more skills when using more than one weapon per kill.

Also by now you will be needing some good armor.4 It is good to have a set of mid-level armor for general purpose use, such as Aurora (L) or Zombie (L). Personally I have about 7 different sets of armor and plates to use depending on what I am hunting. Armor plates attach to each piece of armor to enhance its protection. The best advice is to go to Entropedia and click on Armor, then click on Armor Adviser, then enter the creature and maturity you are planning on hunting, and just click apply. You will see what is the most efficent combination of armor and plates to wear. My favorite outfit to just run around in is BodyGuard (L), because it looks cool and costs almost nothing, and doesn’t have that nasty charge for changing like clothes do.

Once you get a good set of armor and a decent healing kit {FAP} you can offer your services to others to heal them while they hunt. Most people just charge for the decay on the FAP because it is a good way to gain skills. It is good to carry around a fast heal FAP for emergencies and a slow heal more efficent FAP with a SIB for general use and skilling.

Should you decide to get into crafting there are several helpful tutorials, but be warned, it takes alot of ped and patience to do crafting 5. I enjoy crafting using the stuff I obtain from mining. The best place to start is to find a Technician (usually near an Auctioneer) and buy the Blueprint Book Component (Vol. II) and a Galaxy SI Ion Conductors Blueprint. You get the SIB on that BP and can use the Animal Muscle Oil that you get from hunting. When you have enough ped I also recommend buying one of every blueprint {BP} and book that the Technician sells. Most of those BPs have SIBs. Be sure to stick to level 1 BP’s till you max out your Success Rate (the little green bar) on the crafting machine for each type of BP. Otherwise you will have lots of failures and loose ped.

Finally, if you decide that you want to short-cut the skilling process and use skill implant chips you can. I have never done this, I prefer natural skilling. Perhaps I am too conservative at times, since most uber players I know have chipped skills in. Please research chipping in skills before you go and buy them.

Next step… you are an Uber and tell me what to do.


[4] More hunting advice:

I usually hunt from the first person view, but I move to position in the third person, and I drag the name/health tab from the mob onto my screen to keep track of its health while killing it and to loot it easier. If I am shooting, I will usually start too far away and have it auto-move me to the right distance before I shoot. That way you don’t waste ammo by shooting from too far away, yet you start at the maximum range to hit it.

Know your weapons and how much damage they do, and learn to read the health bar of the mob, so you can judge how much damage to do to finish it off. Sometimes you need to switch weapons if you need just a small hit to finish it off. The TT pistol is a good finishing weapon at first. Place your weapons on hot-keys, preferably your number keys, so you can change weapons quickly.

Hunting really big mobs can be fun, but remember, that if you can’t take it down in less than 20 seconds using your SIB weapon, you are probably wasting ped. It is good, if you don’t mind the cost.

Again I need to point out, that if you want to skill quickly as a hunter, you should skip the sections on sweating and scanning etc., and stick to skilling on just one weapon type, like blp rifles. Same goes for mining.

List of beginner weapons with SIB, and suggested order for training: (if you can’t find a weapon, skip to the next one and come back to it later)

RANGED WEAPONS:            maxed at   auction    max 
   name                      level    category  damage  notes 
1. Emik S30 (L) ............... 4   pistol blp     5 
2. Isis CB5 (L) ............... 4.7 rifle blp      8 
3. Omegaton M2100 ............. 5   pistol laser   4   buy @ TT 
4. ((Solomate Opalo)) ............. 5   rifle laser    8   buy @ TT 
5. Willard Heatray A (L) ...... 6   pistol plasma  18 
6. Breer P1a (L) .............. 6.9 pistol laser   9 
7. Breer M1a (L) .............. 6.9 carbine laser  14 
8. Svempa S40 (L) ............. 7   pistol blp     9 
9. GeoTrek LP120 Niloticus (L). 8   rifle blp      12 
10 Breer P2a (L) .............. 8.1 pistol laser   11
11 Breer M2a (L) .............. 8.1 carbine laser  19 
12 Willard Heatray B (L) ...... 8.2 pistol plasma  22 
13 Isis BL800 (L) ............. 9   pistol blp     22 
   or Emik S50 (L) 
14 Breer M3a (L) .............. 9.5 carbine laser  20
   or Riker UL1 (L)
15 Breer P3a (L) .............. 10  pistol laser   16 
   or Korss H350 (L) 
16 GeoTrek LP175 Sphyra (L) ... 11  rifle blp      17 

MELEE WEAPONS:             maxed at   auction    max 
   name                      level    category  damage  notes 
1. Loughlin Masher One (L) .... 4.5  crush weapon  22 
2. Castorian EnKnuckles-A ..... 5    slash weapon  6   buy @ TT 
3. Castorian Survival EnBlade-A 5    short blade   11  buy @ TT 
4. Castorian Combat EnBlade-A . 5    long blade    20  buy @ TT 
5. Loughlin Smacker One (L) ... 6.9  slash weapon  9 
6. Loughlin Scratcher One (L) . 6.9  short blade   13 
7. Loughlin Cutter One (L) .... 6.9  long blade    23 
8. Loughlin Masher Two (L) .... 7.1  crush weapon  32 
9. Loughlin Scratcher Two (L) . 8.5  short blade   18 
10 Loughlin Smacker Two (L) ... 8.6  slash weapon  12 
11 Loughlin Cutter Two (L) .... 9.2  long blade    49 
12 Loughlin Cutter Three (L) .. 10.1 long blade    53 
   or Rustic Slo (L) 
13 Kesmek Slo (L) ............. 10.2 short blade   25 
14 Force Mace Assail (L) ...... 11   crush weapon  37 

SUPPORT WEAPONS:           maxed at  auction     max 
   name                      level   category   damage  notes 
1. Vumpoor J4 (L) ............. 4  support grenade 30  maybe more 
2. Skildek P40 (L) ............ 5  support rocket  35  if shot at 
3. Eraktor Es10 (L) ........... 6  support grenade 41  mulitple mobs 
4. Eraktor Es20 (L) ........... 8  support grenade 57 
5. DetPil Rv50 (L) ............ 9  support rocket  52 
6. Vumpoor Rx10 (L) ........... 11 support grenade 99 

Note: your support grenade and rocket launchers need explosive projectile ammo, so save that when you get it in loots, and buy more on the auction if you need to. I usually shoot the grenades when I find 2 or more mobs close together.


[5] List of tools, and suggested order for skilling:

You can also go to Entropedia and get other data on these tools, like their range, efficency and rate per second.

Healing Tools (FAP's):       maxed at   heal/ 
   name                        level    click     notes 
1. Vivo T1 ...................... 1.5   10.3     buy @ TT 
2. Vivo T5 (L) .................. 3.5   18.3     (adapted ok) 
3. Vivo T10 (L) ................. 6     25       (adapted ok) 
4. Hedoc SK-20 (L) .............. 11    34.3     (adjusted ok) 

EnMatter Mining Tools:       maxed at 
   name                        level   type       notes 
1. MatterTransformer MT-104 ..... 0   refiner    buy @ auction 
2. Ziplex JU10 MatterSeeker ..... 1   finder     buy @ TT 
3. Genesis Star Energy Ext. EE/01 1   extractor  buy @ TT 
4. MatterFinder MF-210 (L) ...... 2   finder 
5. MatterFinder MF-211 (L) ...... 4   finder 
6. MatterDriller MD-201 (L) ..... 4   extractor 
7. Ziplex JU55 MatterSeeker (L) . 5   finder 
8. MatterDriller MD-202 (L) ..... 6.5 extractor 
9. MatterFinder MF-212 (L) ...... 11  finder 

Ore Mining Tools:            maxed at 
   name                        level   type       notes 
1. OreTransformer OT-104 ........ 0   refiner    buy @ auction 
2. Ziplex Z1 OreSeeker .......... 1   finder     buy @ TT 
3. Genesis Star Earth Exc. ME/01. 1   excavator  buy @ TT 
4. OreFinder OF-210 (L) ......... 2   finder 
5. OreFinder OF-211 (L) ......... 4   finder 
6. OreMiner OM-201 (L) .......... 4   excavator 
7. Ziplex Z15 OreSeeker (L) ..... 5   finder 
8. OreMiner OM-202 (L) .......... 6.5 excavator 
9. Ziplex Z20 OreSeeker (L) ..... 7   finder 
10 Ziplex Z25 OreSeeker (L) ..... 10  finder 

Most miners carry around two extractors: the TT version to save ped (they are the most efficent), and a faster version for when you are in a dangerous location. Also, any refiner is better than the TT version, so buy your refiners on the auction.


[6] Glossary of Common Abreviations:

EU = Entropia Universe (renamed Planet Calypso) PED = ingame money (aprox. 10 ped = $1 depending on fees) (L) = Limited item (can’t repair, but generally more efficent) UL = Unlimited item (repairable at a Repair Terminal) TP = Teleporter (blue dots on your map, once you find them you can use them) TT = Trade Terminal (used to buy ammo and general supplies. To “TT something” is to sell it back at its base cost to the trade terminal.) Mob = animals, robots, and mutants Swunting = Sweat first till it attacks, then kill (most efficient form of hunting) SIB = Skill Increase Bonus (found on the second tab of the items info, extremely important) BP = Blue Print FAP = Healing Tool

References and further explanations:

  1. After reading this guide, you should also check out some of the other tutorials at: www.entropiaforum.com/forums/entropia-universe-tutorials Another very thorough guide for entropia was written by Alice and can be found at http://guide.entropia-connections.net/
  2. If you go to Entropedia, and click on Creatures and then Maturity Levels, and sort the columns by Damage, and you will notice that the Young Snablesnot Male and Young Sabakuma have the lowest Threat level of any creature worth hunting (the small birds run away, and loot poorly).
  3. Make sure you create an account at Entropedia so you can log in and save this. Then go to the Weapons chart; then click on the box next to ‘Configure Columns’; then add a green check mark next to the first two boxes that say ‘Req.’ and ‘Maxed’; then go back and uncheck the box next to ‘Configure Columns’ to save the chart; then click on the header ‘Maxed’ to sort the chart by that. This should give you the list of weapons with Skill Increase Bonus (SIB) you need to skill on and in what order. That is how I got the list of weapons in section 4.
  4. You can read How Armor Works at: http://www.entropiaforum.com/forums/armor/94684-how-armor-works.html
  5. I would check out: http://www.candyman.se/pe/bobthebuilder it has excellent stats on what to craft with the highest ped return.

[8] End Notes:

This document is a work in progress, so I do appreciate suggestions. Private message me your suggestions, so that I can look them over, and add them as an edit. I am not writing this to farm for disciples. Nor did I write it to compete with any other tutorial or to disagree with anyone. I have never borrowed the work of any other tutorial, it is original. I just like helping other people. I wrote the first draft of this for my society and friends back in 2005. I feel that this is a unique tutorial, because it mostly emphasizes getting as many skills as possible as cheaply as possible. Most other tutorials have the perspective of skilling as quickly as possible. My best suggestion is to use this in concert with other tutorials. You can never have enough knowledge. If you haven’t figured it out yet, I like doing everything in this game, and suggest that people try everything in this game at least once, even if they end up concentrating on just one skill. If you use this tutorial or find it useful, please acknowledge such, and say “hi”.

Some friends have received my permission to post this guide on their website, but I can’t keep those updated. I will always post the most up-to-date version of this guide here at GameFaqs and on Entropia Forum. This guide may not be reproduced under any circumstances except for personal, private use. It may not be placed on any web site or otherwise distributed publicly without advance written permission. Use of this guide on any other website or as a part of any public display is strictly prohibited, and a violation of copyright.