![]() ![]() If you keep your dinos in an enclosed part of your base, tear out some foundations and do your best to have the dino's egg laying offset be over an area where there's no foundation.īut anyways, I can assure you that eggs inside of containers makes no difference. I would never get eggs from my quetzals in my old farm, but had tons from going to 50, 50.Įggs can fall through ceilings and foundations. but someone else can stop by and see the eggs.Īt one point the best way to gather quetzal eggs was to go check the floating invisible box at 50, 50 and also right below it on the beach. Ī bug I've experienced a few times is dinos laying eggs, but they don't render in for you. For most, the eggs just fall through the terrain (you can verify this by having your dinos on high terrain and using k-mode, or ghosting underground to find floating eggs. Plus, my dinos are all on the ground, not on platforms or foundations. My other eggs are so sparese because of these issues in the first place that they wouldnt work to get me an ovi either. I've only had this work correctly in a few very specific areas, but it's extremely lucrative if it works for you. From what Ive read it also requires over 400 dodo eggs with up to 2 hours to get an overaptor which is unrealistic. Terrain type can make a difference - easiest way to spot this is if your dinos can lay eggs every 120 seconds via stasis / unstasis methods (use beds and watch the respawn timers). Bugs have been around for eggs off and on since tamed dinos started laying them: The rest comes collectively and is harder to verify for specific reasons. Mate boost doubles a dino's chance to lay an egg. So if you move too far away from your dinos, the timers reset.ĭodos and Penguin like to ignore most egg laying rules (mostly cause penguin is inherited from dodos and dodos are special). Unstasised interval timer (17 minutes unbuffed) resets when the dino enters stasis. 11m 20s compared to 17m (let them lay and compare spoil timers). Ovi's make your dinos lay eggs 33% faster while unstasised. Some can be proven by the use of ark science: By laying mass quantities of eggs, female Dodos can provide a constant source of food for players and tames like the. In the early release of Ark, Dodos would attack the attacking player in retaliation. a mate boosted female dinosaur in the vicinity of an oviraptor set on wander (egg icon) has the same chance to lay an egg every 11 minutes (same chance as a mate boosted) BUT ONLY if they are out of. a mate boosted female has double the chance to lay an egg every 17 minutes. Dodos will also occasionally get stuck on driftwood on beaches. every female dinosaur except the dodo has a chance to lay an egg. Max 6 eggs in an area for a single type of dino.ġ20 second interval between chances to lay eggs while leaving stasis. Even if the player takes an egg from a wild Dodo, it will not attack. Some information can be dug directly out of the devkit: To be fair there's always been a lot of misinformation in regards to egg laying. I understand you're trying to be helpfull and that's great, but spreading misinformation isn't going to help anyone. This is the forum you want, this is the forum you get. Which to you is definitive proof against it somehow.Īs convincing as ever. And that, alone, somehow refutes the idea that changing the first could change the second, which you're sure of because you haven't actually tried changing the first. It is my hope the devs will allow server admins to set their own rates.Originally posted by HawthornThistleberry:So your research basically comes down to that you have some number of eggs, and produce some number of eggs. Others, probably think that fast egg production, due to its implications for taming, is too OP. I am sure many think that dinos should be pumping out eggs faster than they produce feces. I don't think there is a laying rate that is going to please everyone. I've also tamed a mateboosted pair of parasaurs (hey,that's almost poetic), and they have produced exactly one egg in three days. Since the 'no male laying patch,' I have collected two eggs from my scorps in three days. ![]() In addition, my male trike layed two eggs within 20 minutes of each other (had to have been painful). ![]() After the patch in question, I collected over 2 dozen eggs in two days. Before the change in egg laying involving owner presence, I got very very few eggs (maybe one every three days). I have a male pulminoscorpious and three females parked in my dino yard for laying purposes. It seems to me the egg laying rates have gone down dramatically, after increasing dramatically with the change in whether or not the owner need to be present or not for laying to occur. Since the last patch where male egg laying was cut, and only mate-boosted females were supposed to lay eggs, I've seen raptors and trikes not mate boosted lay eggs. ![]()
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