Questing Your Way To Fame And Fortune by rhoc
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ALL AROUND NEOPIA - Quests are one of the oldest parts of Neopets. From the old
quests of long ago, when you had to help rebuild time machines and fix Virtupets
machinery, to the recent Illusen’s and Jhudora’s quests, quests have been a valuable
source of items, Neopoints, and stats.
“But,” you say, “I’ve done a few quests and mostly I only lost Neopoints!”
Well, it’s all about knowing which quests pay off: when to do them, when not
to do them, and how to get the most out of the quests you try to complete.
In this article, I have covered Island Kitchen, Snow Faerie, Brain Tree, Esophagor,
and Edna The Witch quests. There’s also information on and comparisons between
Illusen’s and Jhudora’s quests, and more information on all the Uber Faerie
quests. I hope that you will find my descriptions, and hints, helpful in some
way.
There’s just one thing I should mention. You can only complete ten Kitchen
quests, or ten Snow Faerie quests, or ten Edna quests, or a mixture of all three,
in one day. Keep this in mind when you decide what quests you want to do - if
you do ten Edna quests, and then decide you want to do some kitchen quests...
Well, you will have to wait for tomorrow to arrive.
Mystery Island Kitchen Quests.
Location: Mystery Island main map.
Limit: Ten quests per day, including Edna and Snow Faerie quests.
Description: The Flotsam Chef originally cooked for the royal family of Maraqua.
When the whirlpool destroyed his home, he moved to Mystery Island where he now
cooks for the impatient Mumbo Pango. If you help him find the ingredients he
needs for his recipes, he’ll reward you.
These are my favorite quests, because I’m a crazy battler and your neopet can
gain stats from them. The Chef usually asks for three to four items of food,
with a time limit of two to three hours.
Rewards: You can gain any one of the following:
- Neopoints: usually about 1000 Neopoints.
- An item: usually worth between 1000 and 50000 Neopoints. You can get more
expensive items, even un-buyables, but this only happens rarely.
- One level
- One attack point
- One defence point
- One hit point
- One movement point
Hints, tips, and additional information:
- When you arrive at the kitchen quest page, it will state the recipe being
made in nice bold letters; for example “Spiced Kippers with Yeast Pancakes.”
This does NOT affect which items you will be asked for.
- If you’re not into the Battledome, or aren’t making more than about 50,000
Neopoints each day, don’t do the quests which will cost you more than 3000 Neopoints.
The chef won’t hold it against you if you come back two hours later to try your
luck on a different quest.
-Unless you’re making more than 150,000np each day, I wouldn’t do quests that
cost more than 10,000np.
- Once you’ve done your “ten quests each day,” you can do more quests when
a new Neopian day starts; it’s not timed from when you last or first did one
of the days ten quests.
Snow Faerie Quests.
Location: Taelias igloo, on top of Terror Mountain.
Limit: Ten quests per day, including Kitchen and Edna quests.
Description: Taelia is working on a spell - an important spell! It’s too cold
for the poor, fragile, delicate - or just plain lazy - Snow Faerie to venture
out and find them. If you collect them for her, she will reward you with an
item.
Taelia will ask you to find three to four items, in a time limit of about one
to two hours.
Rewards: Taelia usually gives you some Neopoints - between about 500 and 2000
- and an item. This item is usually a Battledome weapon, a negg, or a rare food.
Hints, tips, and additional information:
- Taelia will sometimes give you rubbish. Giving her an expensive negg and
getting a peach snowball can be, needless to say, extremely frustrating. To
save on your losses, it’s recommended that you don’t do quests that will cost
you more than 4000 Neopoints.
- If you’re a newer player, and still learning how to effectively make Neopoints,
these quests probably aren’t for you. Of five people I asked on the neoboards,
not a single one of them said that Taelias quests were worth it more than “sometimes,”
and “sometimes” isn’t really good enough if you can’t afford to do lots of her
quests.
Brain Tree Quests.
Location: The Haunted Woods.
Limit: You can only complete one Brain Tree quest per day.
Description: The Brain Tree - yes, that big pile of goo sitting in the tree
is a brain- likes to collect facts. He wants you to find out when a specific
Neopian died, and where. When you return to him with the information, he will
reward you.
Oddly enough, even though he wants to “find out” the required information,
he knows if you’re wrong! To get the information you need, you must complete
two Esophagor quests (see below). When you complete each quest, the Esophagor
will tell you one of the two pieces of information you need to know.
Incidentally, when you complete a Brain Tree quest, you receive Neopoints and
an item. Based on how many Neopoints you get, you receive a score for that quest.
If you do well enough, you may be able to get into the high scores and win a
trophy. Unfortunately, the amount of Neopoints you receive is random.
Rewards:
-The first time you complete a Brain Tree quest, you get the Brain Tree as
a Battledome challenger.
-Each time you complete a quest, you receive a random amount of Neopoints and
one item (usually a Battledome item).
Hints, tips, and additional information:
-In the past, there were set times and places for each deceased Neopian. However,
these answers are now randomized - so you can’t just ask someone else who was
sent to find the same information! Not only that, but even if you do get the
right answer by chance, you still can’t complete the quest until you have fed
the Esophagor twice.
-The rewards for the Brain Tree quest are rather pathetic. Unless you have
a large amount of money and want to try getting into the high scores, or you
need to get the Brain Tree as a Battledome challenger, don’t bother with these
quests.
-If you do decide to do these quests, I suggest that you don’t spend more than
4000 Neopoints on the first Esophagor quest- if you get asked for something
really expensive the second time round, you’ll have wasted your Neopoints.
-If, having completed the Esophagor’s two quests, you find the Brain Tree won’t
accept your answers, it may be because the answers are case sensitive (and yes,
it does matter whether you put a space between the year of death and the “BN”
part!). I suggest writing down the answers you get, very carefully, when you
finish each Esophagor quest.
Esophagor Quests.
Location: The Haunted Woods.
Limit: None.
Description: Aaargh! It’s a... a... a... Giant sapient moving pile of sludge??!?
Well, whatever he is, the Esophagor is hungry - always, sooo hungry. If you
bring him food, he may reward you: with information if you’re on a brain tree
quest, or an item if you’re not doing a brain tree quest.
The Esophagor usually asks for one to three items, which you have to find in
one to two hours. Find them, and he will give you an item. These are often quite
good items, although he will sometimes give you rubbish like a Smashed Cheery
Blossom.
Doing Esophagor quests simply for the item rewards can be quite profitable.
For example, I spent a hundred Neopoints on Pumpkin Cookies to give to the Esophagor,
and he gave me a Double-Headed Uni Plushie (worth 17000 Neopoints) in return.
Don’t be too rash to do these quests, though - I once spent 15,000 Neopoints
on food, only to be given Robin Lupe (worth 1000 Neopoints) in exchange.
Rewards:
- An item, if you’re not on a Brain Tree quest
- One piece of information, if you are.
Hints, tips, and additional information:
- I don’t recommend doing these as part of the Brain Tree quests (see above).
If you do have to complete a Brain Tree quest, see the hints & tips section
of the Brain Tree quest information.
- If you’re doing Esophagor quests for the item rewards, I recommend doing
as many quests costing under 3000 Neopoints as possible.
Edna The Witch Quests.
Location: The Haunted Woods.
Limit: Ten quests per day, including Kitchen and Snow Faerie quests.
Description: Edna the witch needs ingredients for her spells - quickly, or
else the magic will be lost! Starting to sound familiar? Do we have a strange
sense of deja vu? Find Edna her one to three items within one to two hours,
and she will reward you with Neopoints (sometimes) and an item of food. If you’re
very lucky, you might even get the Edna - *Cackle* avatar.
A while back, when there was no spooky food shop, all the items you needed
for the Esophagor, you had to get by completing Edna's quests. (Either that,
or by using the shop wizard). This meant that her prizes were quite rare and
expensive, and her quests were worthwhile even if you weren’t doing one for
the Brain Tree.
Now that the spooky food shop has been in business for a while, though, the
items she gives out are rarely worth more than a hundred Neopoints. You might
occasionally get a very rare, unbuyable food item, but that will hardly ever
happen - and the kitchen quests you miss out on when you complete Edna quests
are more worth your time. The only real reason to do Edna quests now is for
the avatar.
Rewards:
- About zero to two hundred Neopoints.
- An item; almost always food, usually worth fifty to two hundred Neopoints
- An avatar - this is a rare random event you get when completing an Edna quest.
I’ve seen people who have completed more than a hundred Edna quests but still
don’t have the avatar, so don’t get too hopeful!
Hints, tips, and additional information:
- Edna’s spells have many different names. These names DON’T have any bearing
on what sort of items you get asked for. For example, while researching this
quest, I was asked to find B-B-Q Pork for a “Bubbling egg of Chia Transforming”
spell. A lot of refreshing later, I was given the opportunity to do the same
quest. The second time, however, I was asked for Thornberry Tea and Super Shiny
Shampoo.
- Seeing as most of the time you won’t get a prize worth more than 300 Neopoints,
I would suggest only doing quests under 1500 Neopoints. If you already have
the Edna - *Cackle* avatar, I wouldn’t bother doing these quests at all.
Illusen’s Quests.
Location: Meridell
Limit: You can only attempt one quest every twelve hours
Description: Illusen, the reclusive earth faerie, needs you to find her some
items! Nobody knows quite what she wants them for, but if you complete enough
of her quests, the rewards can be great ones.
Illusens quests, like Jhudora's, are in the form of levels. Each time you complete
a quest, you gain a level (a quest level, not a stat for your neopet). Beware,
though! - if you fail a quest, you get put back to the level one quest. Each
level, Illusen will ask you for one item, which you have to find in fifteen
minutes.
When you complete most of the quests, you won’t get anything - at certain levels
of quest, however, you will receive an item. As you complete higher levels of
quest, you will be asked to find more and more expensive items - however, Illusen
will also give you better rewards.
Rewards: These are the rewards for Illusens quests. The first number is the
level at which the item is obtained. Next is the items name, information about
the item. I considered putting the price of each item in this list as well,
but decided against it because the prices of all Neopian items are constantly
fluctuating.
Level 1: Illusens Cream Cookie. Food.
Level 3: Illusens Potion. A weapon that can be used once per battle, doing
a pathetic amount of damage.
Level 5: Illusens Comb. A grooming item that will make your pet happier.
Level 8: Cucumber Eye Cream. Another grooming item.
Level 11: Illusens Novel. Read this book to your neopet to make it smarter.
Level 14: Mud Mixture. Another Battledome item. This one does a little more
damage and heals your pet one to four hitpoints (you can use it once per battle).
Level 17: Flower Cake. Food.
Level 20: Rain Water Shampoo. A grooming item, and the Quester For Illusen
Avatar.
Level 23: Rose Shake. Food.
Level 26: Earth Spell Book. A book.
Level 29: Leaf Shield. This multi-use Battledome weapon is an excellent shield,
protecting your neopet from earth, water, and physical attacks. I highly recommend
it- it’s excellent for its price.
Level 32: Illusens Earth Potion. A once per battle weapon with a fairly nice
attack. It’s a nice buy for its price, and most battlers will use it for a time.
Level 35: Honey Potion. This is the prize which most people do Illusens quests
solely to get. This is a once per battle weapon with a good attack. At the moment
it sells for about 650,000 Neopoints - and it’s worth every bit.
Level 38: Illusens Scroll. A book.
Level 41: Illusens Blade. A multi use weapon that does five earth damage, and
one to six physical damage. For 1,200,000 Neopoints, it’s only value is it’s
rarity. Get a Scuzzys Comb or Ramtors Spell Book instead, if you’re looking
for a battle item in this price range.
Level 44: Leaf Taco. Food.
Level 47: Illusens Orb Plant. Gardening.
Level 50: Illusens Staff. This weapon is fairly amazing... It’s multi-use,
and heals your neopet whenever its health is in the red. It reflects all dark
attacks back at your opponent, does a fair fourteen to twenty icons, and doesn’t
“count” as a healing item. However much you end up paying to Illusen, it’ll
be worth it- if you get it. Getting it is hard. Very, very hard.
Hints, tips, and additional information: The main problem with Illusens quests
is that if you are asked for an item which is too expensive, or UN-buyable (and
nobody is online to sell it to you), you end up being set back to level one,
losing all the Neopoints you had invested so far. It’s a game - a game of calculating
risks. Some people say it’s worth it, some people say it isn’t.
Since most of the people who attempt Illusens quests do so to get a Honey Potion,
I asked the Battledome and quest chatters: “Did you find doing Illusens quests
(for the honey potion) worth the amount of Neopoints you ended up paying?”
Ten people said they found it worth it, seven said that it wasn’t worth it.
I asked them for comments, some of which are here:
“Blah, I hate [Illusens quests]! ... lost like 300k-400k in total” - xbadb0ix
"I could probably reliably make more Neopoints doing something other than [Illusens
quests]”- wuggadad
“I found it is usually cheaper to just trade for [a Honey Potion]” - _odd_collections101
“I think its worth it, besides, you should always take a chance” - reborn_of_storm
“You could spend 2mil on every quest from 1-50 and still come out ahead. Just
need to make sure you have friends online who can help you out ... Taking risks
just adds excitement to your neo-life” - yummycowpie
The Illusens quest game is a game which you can win. You just need to be prepared,
and do everything you can to help your odds of winning. Here are some ideas:
- Have your Neopoints out and ready! Moreover, make sure you have about 250,000
Neopoints on hand before you start any of the later quests: if you do get asked
for an unbuyable on quest 35, but you’re just short of Neopoints, you’re going
to be really, really, annoyed at yourself.
- The faster you complete each quest, the higher your score- so if you’re going
for a trophy, go as fast as you can, and have a shop wizard page open before
you start.
- Write a general, fill-in-the-blanks letter. Make it polite, and explain that
you’re on an Illusen’s quest. If you get asked for an unbuyable item, have it
ready to send to anyone selling it on the trading post.
-If you do a quest for Jhudora, you can’t do one for Illusen for half a day,
and vise versa.
Jhudora’s Quests.
Location: Faerieland
Limit: You can only attempt one quest every twelve hours.
Description: Yes, it’s the dark faerie with the purple and green fixation.
She wants items. You bring the items, and she’ll reward you with UBER MAGICAL
ARTIFACTS OF GREAT POWER AND DOOMISHNESS, one of which happens to be a hairbrush,
but, um, we like, um, don’t mention that.
These quests are exactly the same as Illusen’s - with the exception of being
harder (Jhudora asks for rarity 99s earlier) and with prizes being given out
at later stages. It’s much more common to fail these quests, so I would recommend
doing Illusen’s quests instead (do NOT tell Jhudora I said that...).
That said, Jhudora’s Potion IS a nice bomb, and you can sell it for about nine
million Neopoints. It could turn out to be hard to sell though, and you may
spend nearly that much getting it. To try, or not to try? Personally, I say
no - it’s just too risky. However, if you do happen to have a spare fifty million
Neopoints around, by all means, feel free to try for the Wand Of The Dark Faerie
(not to be confused with Jhudora's Wand, which was sold in the hidden tower).
Rewards:
Level 1: Poisonous Lollypop. Food. Feeding it to your neopet will cause it
to catch a disease.
Level 3: Noxious Nectar. A useless, once per battle, weapon.
Level 5: Jhudoras Brush. Grooming item.
Level 8: Purple Blob Potion. A slightly less useless weapon, that can also
be used once per battle.
Level 11: Jhudora T-Shirt. Clothes.
Level 14: Gnome Shroom. Food.
Level 17: Caustic Potion. Not too terrible a weapon for newbie battlers, this
can be used once per battle, doing a fair amount of damage for its price
Level 20: Dark Faerie Magic, a book & the Quester For Jhudora Avatar.
Level 23: Malice Potion. This potion can only be used outside the Battledome.
If you feed it to your neopet, it will either get sick (with blurred vision),
or be healed three hitpoints, or nothing will happen. If you need healing, just
buy a healing potion for a fraction of the price, or visit the healing springs.
This item is interesting, but only good for selling.
Level 26: Purple Spotted Shroom. This shroom can only be fed to your neopet
outside the Battledome. It will either heal your neopet three hitpoints, or
give it one permanent hitpoint, or give it one permanent strength point. With
a few exceptions, it’s better to just sell these to rich and crazy people, and
train using the training school and Krawk Island academy.
Level 29: Clockwork Rat. Toy.
Level 32: Toxic Shroom. A mystic mushroom that doesn’t appear to do anything.
Level 35: Dark Shroom. Another mystic mushroom that doesn’t seem to do anything.
Level 38: Jhudoras Potion. A once per battle weapon that does a rather nice
amount of damage. At nine million Neopoints, this is a nice item to win - however,
I wouldn’t keep it. There are better bombs than this, and for an extra million
Neopoints you could buy a Sword of Skardsen, which does nearly the same thing
but is multiple use.
Level 41: Bartamus. Petpet.
Level 44: Dark Faerie Collar. A multiple use weapon which does a fair amount
of damage, defends some light, and reflects a quarter of your opponents dark
back at them. At ten million Neopoints, though, I don’t think it’s worth the
price (just sell it).
Level 47: Portable Cloud. This multiple use weapon does a fair amount of damage
(the same amount as the Dark Faerie Collar, and the common weapons Scuzzys Comb
and Ramtors Spellbook). It’s icons are also hard to block, and for a bonus,
it has a little earth defence and can give your opponent watery eyes! If this
had a price tag of about a million Neopoints, it would be quite a steal - unfortunately,
it’s many times that amount and not worth keeping as a weapon. Sell it, and
get something else.
Level 50: Wand Of The Dark Faerie. Ooooh, sparkly! This multiple use weapon
does more damage than Illusens staff, also heals when your Neopets health is
in the red, but reflects (100% of) your opponents light attack, instead of dark.
Again, it doesn’t “count” as a healing weapon. It’s debatable whether Illusens
Staff or Jhudoras Wand is a better goal - Illusens staff blocks a more commonly
used icon (dark), and is easier to get... But Jhudoras wand does more damage.
It’s up to you - if you can afford to even try for one of the two, you’ll have
your battling style all sorted out by now.
Hints, tips, and additional information: All the hints & tips for Illusen’s
quests (see above) are basically exactly the same for Jhudora’s quests. Just
bear in mind that because Jhudora’s quests are harder, you may be asked to find
unbuyables sooner... So be ready! If you’re new to Jhudora’s and/or Illusen’s
quests, I recommend doing Illusen’s quests first, for practice.
Uber Faerie Quests.
Location: Random.
Limit: None.
Description: As you may have seen with Illusen and Jhudora, these faeries seem
to be incapable of doing anything for themselves! Personally, though, I think
it might just be that they want to give us a chance to do something interesting.
At any rate, sometimes the Uber-Faeries need you to bring them an item. You
will get a quest from one of them as a random event. If you can find the item
for them - without using the shop wizard - they will grant you a reward. There
is no time-limit to these quests.
You can refuse to do these quests - however, if you do, Fyora the faerie queen
will ban you from receiving one for five minutes. Big deal? No. However, if,
after the five minutes have gone, you don’t visit the faerie quest centre again
(you can find this in Faerie City) then you still cannot receive new quests!
So you could end up “banned” from getting faerie quests for several months.
For that reason, I suggest doing all the quests you are given. Luckily, every
single one is always worth doing - with the possible exception of earth and
air faerie quests. Air faerie quests only make your pet faster (agility does
nothing, although it looks nice on your pets lookup) and earth faerie quests
only heal and feed your pet (making your pet gain weight: but this has no effect).
Both of them are cheap though, so I would just do them anyway and not risk being
banned from doing quests.
Rewards:
Air Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will gain an agility point. Worth doing,
although I wouldn’t exactly rejoice at being given one.
Earth Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will be fed and healed, and will gain
weight (just a pound). Worth doing, although they’re not that great. Handy if
your pet is sick or has just lost a battle.
Fire Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will gain a strength point. I LOVE
THESE QUESTS! If you get one, do it, and be happy for the rest of the day.
Water Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will gain a defence point.
Light Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will gain a level. These are my second
favourite quests, after the Fire Faerie ones.
Dark Faerie Quests: One of your Neopets will gain a hitpoint. These are excellent
value to everyone except possibly people who use the lab ray- in which case
these quests will only cause the gap between your Neopets hitpoints and other
stats to increase further. I would still do these though, no matter what your
situation.
Faerie Queen Quests: Ooh, these are rare. If you complete these quests, Fyora
will grant your neopet three strength points, three hitpoints, and one level!
Space Faerie Quests: These are rare too - and sometimes quite expensive. They’re
almost always worth it though, because the Space Faerie will grant your neopet
four levels.
Fountain Faerie Quests: If you get one of these, run around hugging people.
When you find the Fountain Faerie her item, you can paint one of your Neopets
for free at the rainbow fountain!
Hints, tips, and additional information:
- Look up the item you’ve been asked for by typing its name into the box in
the yellow sidebar. Have a look in the shop it originates from to see if it’s
in stock.
- Post on a board in the quest chat, or in your guild, asking if someone will
(please and thank you) search for the item on the shop wizard and tell you the
name of the person selling it at the cheapest price. If you want to post in
your guild, remember to check your guilds rules. Some guilds only like people
to post long posts, or actually frown on posting.
- Sometimes people will say things like “it’s in my shop, have a look.” Unless
you know roughly what price the item is supposed to be, I wouldn’t buy it from
there- some people will overprice their items, hoping that people on quests
will buy them.
- If you can’t post on the message boards, then try searching the trading post.
You can compare prices there and bid on one of the items you find. Before you
bid on someone's lot, I would recommend visiting their userlookup. If their
“last spotted” status is anything longer ago than “under a day ago,” I wouldn’t
bother bidding on their item.
- If you want to get a lot of these quests, play Neoquest II. Not only do you
get a nice amount of random events playing, but if you manage to finish the
game you’ll get a spiffy trophy, and some nice prizes (at least, on evil and
insane levels).
- If the Earth Faerie asks you for a healing potion, you can find these in
the Healing Springs as well as in the magic shop.
Well, that concludes my guide to quests. I hope you found it useful in some
way! I certainly learnt some interesting things while I was writing it, and
managed to answer some questions which had been lurking in the back of my mind
for a while. I have tried to make sure all my information is as accurate as
possible. Good luck with your quests, and thanks for reading!
Authors Note: I’d like to say a big thank-you to all those people on the
Quest and Battledome message boards, who gave me all those opinions and told
me their experiences with such things as Illusen’s quests. Also, thanks to the
In Depth Battlepedia, who have all that useful weapons information, such as
how many icons Illusens staff does, and Nothing But Neopets, who have the prizes
for Jhudora’s Quests listed :-) Thanks to the Writers chat for explaining where
the apostrophe goes, and to the nice people in my guild who offered opinions
^^ :-P
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