Pokemon Quest Soup: Complete Guide

July 05, 2018
Other than the element of training your Pokemon to get to the higher levels, catching Pokemon is also important. In this game, we use a very child-friendly method of luring Pokemon with soup (instead of throwing all sorts of Pokeballs at random Pokemon).

Firstly, pots.

There are 4 pots and they give you various levels of Pokemon. They can be uncovered at various parts of the game.

1. Iron Pot (3 Ingredients)
Given at the tutorial
Attracts Pokemon up to level 15

2. Bronze Pot (10 Ingredients)
Given after completing round 3
Attracts Pokemon from level 16 to level 40

3. Silver Pot (15 Ingredients)
Given after completing round 6
Attracts Pokemon from level 41 to level 70

4. Gold Pot (20 Ingredients)
Given after completing round 10 (final round)
Attracts Pokemon from level 71 onwards
I personally like the bronze pot best because it helps me to get Pokemon of the right level to breed. When Pokemon are of higher levels, they take a longer time to level up and evolve. 


Secondly, quality of soup.

Other than the pots, the ingredients also make the quality of soup higher, which will attract rarer Pokemon. I won't be going through the ingredients because you can read it all from the game and is very self explanatory.

Quality of soups
1. Basic: 1-5 points
2. Good: 6-7 points
3. Very Good: 7-8 points
4: Special: 10+ points

The higher quality the soup, the more turns it takes to produce it (so the more turns, the better!)

Points are derived from the ingredients in the soup
Small ingredients: 1 point
Precious ingredients: 2 points
Very precious ingredients: 3 points
Mystical ingredients: 4 points
Rainbow Matter: 3 points, but it is somewhat like a joker card and does not add any value to the soup's requirements. This means that some soups cannot be enhanced with this and you have to find all the ingredients to make it.


Now the recipes

Note that these are the general recipes of ingredients required. Better quality ingredients (precious, very precious, etc.) will induce attraction to better Pokemon

1. Mulligan Stew à la Cube
5 of any Ingredient
Favorite food of some Pokémon on Tumblecube Island

2. Red Stew à la Cube
4 red ingredients, 1 anything
Favorite food of reddish Pokémon

3. Blue Soda à la Cube
4 blue ingredients, 1 anything
Favorite food of bluish Pokémon

4. Yellow Curry à la Cube
4 yellow ingredients, 1 anything
Favorite food of yellowish Pokémon

5. Gray Porridge à la Cube
4 grey ingredients, 1 anything
Favorite food of greyish Pokémon

6. Mouth Watering Dip à la Cube
4 soft ingredients, 1 blue ingredient
Favorite food of Water-type Pokémon

7. Plain Crepe à la Cube
3 sweet ingredients, 2 grey ingredients
Favorite food of Normal-type Pokémon

8. Sludge Soup à la Cube
4 mushrooms, 1 soft ingredient
Favorite food of Poison-type Pokémon

9. Mud Pie à la Cube
2 minerals, 3 soft ingredients
Favorite food of Ground-type Pokémon

10. Veggie Smoothie à la Cube
4 plants, 1 soft ingredient
Favorite food of Grass-type Pokémon

11. Honey Nectar à la Cube
4 sweet ingredients, 1 yellow ingredient
Favorite food of Bug-type Pokémon

12. Brain Food à la Cube
3 sweet ingredients, 2 hard ingredients
Favorite food of Psychic-type Pokémon

13. Stone Soup à la Cube
1 mineral, 4 hard ingredients
Favorite food of Rock-type Pokémon

14. Light-as-Air Casserole à la Cube
2 plants, 3 minerals
Favorite food of Flying-type Pokémon

15. Hot Pot à la Cube
3 mushrooms, 2 red ingredients
Favorite food of Fire-type Pokémon

16. Watt a Risotto à la Cube
4 soft ingredients, 1 yellow ingredient
Favorite food of Electric-type Pokémon

17. Get Swole Syrup à la Cube
2 mushrooms, 3 sweet ingredients
Favorite food of Fighting-type Pokémon

18. Ambrosia of Legends à la Cube
4 mystical ingredients, 1 anything
Favorite food of Extremely Rare Pokémon

For more advanced soup recipes (to know what exactly to put), stay tuned!
Pokemon Quest Soup: Complete Guide Pokemon Quest Soup: Complete Guide Reviewed by someone on July 05, 2018 Rating: 5

Pokemon Quest General: Complete Guide

July 04, 2018
Apologies for the hiatus - work has been crazy and I've been playing 2 games: Pokemon Quest and Fishercat! I love both games for various reasons but let's talk about Pokemon Quest first.

Pokemon Quest is a new addition to The Pokemon Company's mobile games after Pokemon Go. Well I kind of enjoyed Pokemon Go for 3 days then I got bored of it, but I think Pokemon Quest is more interesting because it gives you an interesting storyline as well as a chance to catch 'em all (150 in the first generation). The major draw is the nostalgic value and that everything is in cubes which is so cute!! 

You can download it from the play store and apple store, or get it on your Nintendo Switch. 


Currently I am only at island 7 - it gets exponentially tougher to level up and complete the higher levels, so I usually change my goal and evolve Pokemon instead. 




Currently I have 46/150 and as a Pokenerd, I have the 3 starting Pokemon as my dream team. I started with Squirtle and got Bulbasaur and Charmander by using the pot. 



The pot is where you can mix ingredients that you have gathered during the expeditions to make soups to attract Pokemon. There are different permutations to make various soups i.e. some soups require more blue ingredients, some with soft ingredients, etc. According to the game, 2 or more of the same ingredient is considered as "a whole lot" of the ingredient. The various soups attract different kinds of Pokemon as well - red soups attract 'reddish' Pokemon, some soups attract electric types, etc. 

So far I have the normal metal pot (that requires 3 of the same ingredient), a bronze pot (that requires 10 of the same ingredient) that is uncovered after level 3, and a silver pot (that requires 15 of the same ingredient) that is uncovered after level 6. The bronze pot can attract up to level 30 Pokemon and the silver pot can attract Pokemon of levels 50+ (personally I don't use the silver pot much unless I want to use those Pokemon to train others for easy levelling up and evolutions).


You can sacrifice some Pokemon to raise the EXP of your chosen Pokemon or to teach some some skills. Pokemon can learn new skills when they evolve - I managed to teach my Gyarados Hyper Beam and it was awesome! Tip: while raising EXP of Pokemon, make it such that it is just before the Pokemon reaches the next level of evolution, so that you can bring the Pokemon for an expedition and have it to level up and evolve quickly (Pokemon cannot level up during training).


Pokemon types matter as well. When a Pokemon is of an advantageous type, it raises the team's score. The team's score does not have to be higher than the level's score to win, but it is a rough gauge of whether you should try your luck at the level.


The type of move does not affect the strength and effectiveness of the move - a normal and water type move have about the same amount of the damage in the game, whether it is versus a type that is weak to water or not.

I like to play the game because I feel that the Pokemon use the skills faster when I'm controlling it, and that I can flee whenever needed (like when Mr Mime draws out some dummy Pokemon which is distracting and allows it to kill my team).


Alternatively you can also use the auto button so that the Pokemon can fight on their own. This is extremely useful for me when at work or going other errands - my Pokemon can still battle when I'm not with them! Only thing is to note that the team's score should be higher or similar to the level's score because it is automated.

I hope this general walkthrough helps! Let me know if you need more information and I will include them in this site! 
Pokemon Quest General: Complete Guide Pokemon Quest General: Complete Guide Reviewed by someone on July 04, 2018 Rating: 5
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