Starter Guide
This guide primarily focuses on survival in the sandbox Nomads game mode.
You can also open this guide in-game. Press 0 on the numpad or click the icon in the top-left corner of the screen.
Spawning in
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You begin with only age-appropriate clothing and a torch in your pocket. If it's dark, drag the torch to your hand slot and press Z to activate it.
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If it's winter season or Ice Age map, you also spawn with a fur coat. Losing this will mean cold and miserable death in the icy outdoors.
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Your hunger and thirst levels will start at approximately 50%. You'll receive alerts on the right side of the screen (below your health and stamina indicators) when you're hungry or thirsty. Pay close attention to these alerts.
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First things first: gather flint to craft a flint axe. It's your ticket to not being completely useless out here!
- Locate a large rock or boulder and right-click on it. You should see an option to search for flint. If you don't, try another one.
- Click the rock repeatedly with the flint to sharpen it (you will get a message when it is sharpened).
- Now go to a tree and right click on it. There should be an option to remove a branch from the tree, if there are any suitable ones available. This will pull a branch from the tree and place it in your hands.
- Right-click on the branch and remove the leaves and sharpen it. Then, open the crafting menu (C) and find the **Flint Axe**. Craft it and you're ready!
Crafting Basics
Crafting Menu
You will need some basic things to survive. At the very start you will most likely be using wood, leather, bone, stone, and straw to make them.
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Hit a tree with your flint axe until it breaks. You will then find some wood on the floor.
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Hunt and butcher some animals to get leather and bone.
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Use your knife on a grass tile to gather some straw.
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Use your pickaxe on a rock tile to gather stone and other ores (see below).
Mining 101
Ores are valuable crafting materials which you mine out of the rock.
- You'll need wood and bone for this. Go gather them (bones are obtained by butchering animals - click the carcass with something sharp, like a flint axe or a knife),
- Make a bone pickaxe.
- Find a rock tile.
- Wield the axe (press Z). Go on Combat Mode and click on it while holding the pickaxe on your active hand.
Food and Water
To survive, you will need to keep yourself nourished and warm. Pay attention to the alerts on the right side of the screen, they will tell you when you need to eat and drink.
Letting either hunger or thirst hit 0% will turn you into a caveman cautionary tale. Your body will shut down, and death will come knocking.
Hunger
The easiest way to get food early on is by killing animals and eating the meat after cooking it. Also, you can eat bird eggs, even uncooked!
- Find an animal, preferably one that doesn't have fangs, claws, tusks, or poison. and kill it with any means (even bare fists work). Remember to press the harm intent button to enter combat mode!
For now, stay away from bears, alligators, wolves, snakes, and mammoths. They will fight back and very probably kill you. Wait until you have proper equipment or a hunting party with you.
- Use your knife (flint axe works too) on the dead animal to butcher it.
- Raw meat causes food poisoning! You'll want to cook it first, but if you're starving, food poisoning is the least of your worries.
- To cook meat, place it on a campfire and click the campfire. The campfire is made with wood logs.
Farming is another good source of food (although not an immediate one) that does not involve getting maimed by wild animals. Check the guide to farming.
Thirst
The easiest way to quench your thirst early on is by drinking water or milk.
Water
You can get water from puddles, any water tiles (except saltwater - do not drink nor boil it!), or wells.
- To drink, you need to make a mug from wood or drinking glass from glass.
Milk
- Find a cow, sheep ewe, or goat ewe.
- Make a bucket from wood.
- Use the bucket on Help intent on the animal of choice to gather milk.
- Pour the milk into the mug or glass and drink.
- You don't have to boil milk.
Milk is regenerated in the animals over time, so keep them alive, and you'll never go thirsty.
Temperature
Watch the temperature alert! Flashing blue with a snowflake? You're freezing! Red with a sun icon? You're roasting! Either way, you're in for a bad time if you ignore it.
Winter seasons can bring an icy chill that can seriously hurt and slow you down, or even kill you. Blizzards are especially deadly, and just wearing a fur coat will not cut it, so make sure you have a shelter ready before it is too late.
Southern climates could be merciless in their own way, so be careful that you do not overheat to the point of a heat stroke. Resting in a roofed shelter from time to time and wearing appropriate clothing (for instance, "traditional" desert clothes) can save you from fainting and shrivelling in a sweltering heat.
Fur Clothing
Fur clothing can keep you warm in the winter, but it will not save you if you are caught in a blizzard. You can make fur clothing by skinning large furry animals like bears and wolves.
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Hunt down one or more of the following: bear, wolf, bison, monkey, fox, sheep.
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Bucher the animal by using the knife on it.
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Collect enough pelts and craft fur coat, boots and gloves (you might need to hunt several animals for the whole set).
Shelter
Shelter can save you from even the toughest of conditions.
Any roofed area is considered a shelter.
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Caves: There's a reason Stone Age folks were called cavemen. Look for rock entrances. If it's got a roof, it'll be darker inside, keeping out snow, cold, sun, and rain. It's the easiest way to survive bad weather. Just make sure no bears are already renting the place...
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Building a Roof: Target your inner Bob the Builder and build your own roof.
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Build walls to prop the ceiling up. Craft floor tiles and place them to automatically build a roof overhead.
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You can also build walls with dirt or snow by using the shovel directly on dirt and snow tiles respectively to gather them.
Fire

Crackling fires will keep you warm even without a coat. Both campfires and braziers are refueled by adding wood, coal and charcoal. The brazier could also be refueled with paper- and cloth-based items.
- A campfire warms you when you are right next to it, or within 2 tile.
- A brazier (made with stone) provides more heat and warms you within 3 tiles.
Dangerous animals
The world is teeming with wildlife. Most of them are pretty tame and easy prey, but steer clear of the big game unless you're a skilled hunter, otherwise you'll become minced meat yourself!
You want to avoid these, unless you're robust or need some pelts:
Bears (can provide fur)
Wolves (can provide fur)
Mammoths
Panthers, Jaguars, Lions, and other big cats
Alligators
Also keep an eye for animal dens. Dangerous animals will spawn here!
Night time
You'll need a light source to see in the night and in dark indoor areas. The basic source of light is the torch.
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Gather some wood. Craft a torch and press Z to light it. Torches will last for 5 minutes and then burn out.
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For a static source of light, you can make a campfire, which will also help you cook some food.
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You can also make lanterns with iron. Lanterns require fuel - any form of liquid fuel will do, like olive oil, fat, or petroleum.
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For a more permanent light source, you can build braziers from stone. You can fuel it with any organic matter like wood or clothing - simply use items on the brazier.
Medicine
In the Stone age, most of the medicine you will find is restricted to bandages and medicinal herbs.
You can craft bandages from cloth or leather. They will help you stop bleeding.
You should carry bandages with you at all times. Theres nothing worse than bleeding to death when trying to return to your house after a successfull hunt.
You can find medicinal herbs growing wild around the map. If you harvest them, you will also get some seeds so you can plant them yourself - see the guide to farming.
Elderflower has a long history in European folk medicine for treating colds and sinus issues. It reduces asphyxiation by clearing airways and boosting oxygen intake.
Yarrow has been used since ancient times as a hemostatic (blood-clotting) agent. It's known for its astringent properties that help staunch bleeding.
Comfrey has been used historically to heal bruises, sprains, and fractures due to its anti-inflammatory and tissue-repair properties. Heals brute damage.
Milk Thistle has long been used as a liver tonic, with silymarin compounds believed to detoxify and protect against poisons.
Poppy is the source of opium and morphine, known for sedative and pain-relieving effects, but it can also stabilize shock in small doses by calming the nervous system. Historically, it's been used for pain and trauma management.
Aloe vera's gel is a well-documented remedy for burns, soothing inflammation and promoting skin healing.