1. Palworld
  2. News

Palworld News

Palworld isn't good enough—or bad enough—to warrant us losing our collective minds over it




Sometimes a game will make its way into the public spotlight not because it's good, inventive, or bad—but simply because it is. It captures a specific moment and gets a bunch of attention at a specific point of time. A small moon that casts a big shadow, like a solar eclipse. Palworld is one of those games...
Read more.

We regret to inform you that Palworld has a smutty lizard 'seeking a night of love' with humans, which raids bases in hordes of 'rampaging fangirls'




Palworld is an edgy game—more in implication than reality. While it's grown a reputation for a Happy Tree Friends-style subversiveness, everything in its world is pretty sanitised. For instance: Pals eat human cadavers, but they just peck at them until they vanish...
Read more.

Lucky Pals: how 'shiny pals' work in Palworld




Not to be left out of creature catching convention, Palworld does have rarer, more powerful variants that Pokémon players will likely find themselves calling "shiny Pals" out of habit. Officially Palworld calls shinies Lucky Pals instead. You could easily assume otherwise, though, because Lucky Pals literally sparkle while they walk around with a loud, shimmering sound effect...
Read more.

How to build and use a Ranch in Palworld




If you've unlocked the Ranch in Palworld, you might be wondering if it's worth the materials required to craft it. While none of what's required is particularly rare, if you're still quite early on, you may be at the stage where you're having to farm resources yourself to keep up with the demand. The simple answer is yes, it's worth it...
Read more.

Palworld is the Pokémon this sinful world deserves




Let's be honest, if Pokémon were real today, we'd have Pikachu power stations, Poliwraths flushing fatbergs from our sewers, Piplups cleaning crime scenes, and a rentable Chansey subscription service from healthcare providers. Maybe I'm just being cynical, but even the premise the games present—that we'd primarily just make them fight each other for sport—seems optimistic, a beautiful lie that we accept because we can't resist collecting things. Palworld is a take on Pokémon that truly accepts our brokenness, and its smash success has perhaps proved quite how steeped in sin we all really are...
Read more.