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Neopia's Fill in the Blank News Source | 23rd day of Eating, Yr 26
The Neopian Times Week 90 > Articles > A Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia

A Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia

by noremac9

NEOPIA CENTRAL - In Neopia, life can be tough. Sure, life on any planet's pretty tough, but Neopia's in its own league when it comes to a rough, tough existence. Okay, so maybe that's not entirely true-- there's the Tombola, the Healing Springs, giveaways, free contests, and, well, there's a lot of great stuff. But it's still a rough place, because if you think it's a nice, happy saunter in the park, you're sure not to buy our guide, "The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia," the best selling book in Neopia. Right behind a bunch of other books. But anyway, the point is, if you want to know everything needed to know to survive, you need to know someone who's got the guide, or better yet, own the guide itself.

The first thing you need to know about Neopia is that the only way to survive is to get a pet. Without a pet, you can't really do anything. Without a pet, the only thing to do is Neo. Let's see what the guide has to say about Neo.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that Neo is a prefix to the word "pets". It also says that without a suffix to a prefix, all you have is a Neo. A Neo is defined as a different way to spell "Oen". No one knows what Oen means. That's pretty boring. The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia also recommends that you get a pet, because that's pretty much what the rest of the guide is about, and without one, this guide will be irrelevant to you.

Okay, so if THAT didn't put it frankly, I don't know what could. It's pretty easy getting a pet, you just go to "Create-A-Pet" page, and pick the first one that says restricted. It'll then tell you that you can't get this pet because it's restricted. You now have an accurate definition of the word restricted, so you never have to try to create one again. Here's what the guide says on restricted.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that restricted is a word to save you. If you somehow, and through more than likely shady means, obtain a restricted pet, you will know why it says restricted. Several Neomails a day are sure to land in your inbox, and it's certain people will ask you for some of that restricted pet, too. Just heed the message you get when you first try to create one, "This pet cannot be made this way - you'll have to visit some place and figure it out J"

Anyway, the guide needs to stop accessing entries and get on to creating a pet. Okay, so you created a pet. Now you’ve got to do some things to please this pet. Oh, so now you're wondering why you first got this pet in the first place, aren't you? In short, without the menace, you can't have any items. Without items or a pet, all you've got is a Neo. We've been over that, and it's pretty darn boring.

So, the first thing you should do is getting this pet some food. The food in Neopia is great-- if you're from there. Here's what the guide's got to say on it.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that food in Neopia is abundant. First off, you've got an omelette. It's a really big omelette. It sits in the mud all day as the hot sun bakes down on it, dirty pets stick their paws in it, and Sabre-X sits on it. Furthermore, when it isn't cracked, Tonus hatch out. In other words, the guide is saying that you're eating muddy Tonu. Then, we've got the Giant Jelly. But it doesn't exist, so the guide can't really mention that. There's also a place called the food shop, where everyone rushes at a certain time to grab a certain food for a certain price. The trick is having fast fingers, to buy chicken fingers, so the shopkeeper can finger your cash, and maybe, one day, buy some fingers. He has none. Another excellent choice is the Alien Aisha Vending Machine, but you'll need an extremely expensive token. With this token, you can purchase all kinds of horribly disgusting food. The guide recommends a nice bit of mustard ice cream, just for the sake of your liver.

So there you have it, food in Neopia. Might not be the best in the world, but hey, it's not in the world in the first place, since this is Neopia. Your other best bet is the money tree.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that the Money Tree requires more skill than anything else in Neopia does. The contenders must train hourly, focusing on speed, strength, agility, and sight. They will run, oh yes, as fast as they can, at rocketing speeds to the Money Tree. Their nimble limbs shall sweep up the reward of their hard work, the prize they lust after: junk. The guide also says that they're the number one consumer of grog.

Now that you know how to get food, somehow, one of these hows, you should be set for food. Now you have to do some other things.

One of the most common choices of things to do first is make NP. However, the guide recommends that you first learn what NP is.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that NP is pretty much the only thing most Neopians care about. No one knows what they look like, what they're made of, or where they come from, but most Neopians are obsessed with getting them. They hoard them in little boxes called Bank Accounts, and brag about how many they have. They sometimes, but rarely, spend them on things, mainly the Battledome. The Battledome is a place where you spend all you NP on your pet, and then toss him in a fight with another pet, and the winner gets absolutely nothing. This is what many Neopians spend their NP on. Also, they spend their NP on making their pets look like various vegetables, cloud formation, volcanic eruptions, paint accidents, and the most coveted of all, fat little pets who cry and need their diaper changed. NP is a strange thing, and although none of its uses seem worthwhile, you're going to need it anyway.

So you see, NP is really important. Now, there are several ways to make NP most Neopians use. One, is to play games. The idea being to do something entirely pointless, then get NP from nowhere in particular, just for driving some cars into each other. Then, there's the stock market. The stock market is a place where you give a Chia with a nice car some Neopoints, pick a bizarre company, and wait for that bizarre company's 'stock to go up. But what is a stock exactly? Let's check the guide.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that stocks are something you find in shops. The shopkeeper puts a bunch of stocks in their shop, and this is called restocking. Then, the idea is you rush in to the shop, give the shopkeeper a number of NP, and they give you the item, which you then sell for more NP, so you can restock some more, to get more NP, and thus it loops forever. However, in the stock market, the goal is to put money into stocks, or restocks as they're called, for more money. How this works, no one knows, but it's similar to restocking. And Nigel gets rich, we do know that.

So you see, the stock market is a very interesting place. The final way most people make NP is restocking, but that's just a variant of stocking, or the stock market, so you pretty much know how that goes.

As you can see, NP is extremely important, though no one knows why. The final thing you must do as a new player is build a NeoHome, then you're on your way, and you can ignore this guide (but don't, please don’t). The idea of a NeoHome is simple-- you take a bunch of bizarre material, make a house out of it, live in it, and get a robot Quiggle to go around, and around, and around, for no apparent reason. Let's see what the guide has to say.

The Surviving Player's Guide to Neopia says that picking your material is the most important thing when building a NeoHome. While there are loads of materials, the guide will brush over the three basics-- basic, nice, and extravagant.

Cardboard - Cardboard is better than no home at all, right? The guide says not. It gets wet in the rain, and tuns soggy, it rips as easily as a Skeith without Flat-U-Less tablets, and it's really not all that comfortable. The guide says live on the streets before you use cardboard.

Stone - Stone is like a giant rock-- hard, cold, and stony. In fact, it's so much like a giant rock, if the guide didn't know better, it would say that it IS rock! But we all know it's just Stone. The point the guide is trying to make is that Stone is very boring, and thus the guide had to talk about something else.

Transparashield - Since this stuff's so weird, the guide will break it down via Latin. Trans means to change, or transition. Para means next to. Shield isn't Latin. So basically, this means "Changing Next To Shield." Very odd, and expensive.

As you can see, NeoHomes are bizarre-- truly strange.

That pretty much sums up getting started; now you can go terrorize Neopia!

Anyway, hopefully all the new players have seen a warped view of Neopia, are now entirely confused, and will spit on this guide. Thank you for your time, and remember, buy the guide!


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