Unofficial fan-made wiki

LumenTale items guide

Track consumables, crafting materials, cooking ingredients, reward items, and Animon support resources.

Fountain systems

Official materials describe the Fountain as a place where players can craft useful items and cook food that helps nurture Animon. This guide keeps crafting and cooking separate so recipes, ingredients, and effects can be verified cleanly.

Item categories to track first

  • Crafting materials: route sources, dungeon sources, and whether they reappear.
  • Cooking ingredients: recipe combinations, food effects, and Animon support use.
  • Battle recovery: healing, status, and preparation items for longer 4v4 fights.
  • Anispace furniture: customization rewards and early adopter bonus items.
  • Cards and collection items: trading notes, rarity, and event windows.

Item table format

Item typeTracksStatus
RecoveryEffect, source, cost, battle useTemplate ready
IngredientsRecipe use, region, respawn behavior, time of dayNeeds verification
Crafted itemsFountain recipe, required materials, unlock conditionNeeds verification
FoodEffect, duration, Animon target, best use caseNeeds testing
Cards and bonusesPack source, availability window, purposeSource check required

Early adopter bonus window

The official site lists an early adopter bonus for purchases from May 26 to June 25, 2026, including useful in-game items, Anispace furniture, and rare cards. Treat these as time-limited notes when comparing new player inventories.

How to read the LumenTale items guide

This LumenTale items guide is organized for players who need practical answers first. The final database should tell you what an item does, where it comes from, when it unlocks, whether it is consumed, and whether it belongs to crafting, cooking, recovery, Anispace, battle preparation, or collection. Until item names and effects are verified, the page uses category structure so new records can be added without rewriting the guide.

The most important early distinction is between resources that help exploration and resources that help battles. A route item might extend a trip by preventing a return to town. A battle item might prepare a party for a 1v1 duel or a longer 4v4 encounter. A cooking ingredient might support Animon care through the Fountain. A furniture reward might matter more for Anispace completion than combat. Separating these uses keeps the wiki searchable and prevents one giant inventory table from becoming unreadable.

Crafting and recipe notes

Crafting notes should always include the recipe source. If a recipe comes from a story unlock, a quest reward, a shop, a dungeon, a character, or a tutorial, that source should be recorded next to the item. Players often search for "how to craft" only after they already have some ingredients, so the guide should show required materials, missing material locations, and the earliest point the recipe can be used. This gives every crafted item a clear path from discovery to use.

Recipe pages should also keep a "do not waste" note where appropriate. If a material seems rare, event-limited, or tied to Anispace furniture, it should not be recommended casually until the source is repeatable. For early SEO, the useful phrases are simple: LumenTale crafting, LumenTale recipes, Fountain recipes, item sources, and cooking ingredients. Those phrases should appear naturally in helpful guidance instead of being stuffed into empty paragraphs.

Cooking and Animon support

Cooking belongs beside crafting because both are tied to the Fountain, but the player intent is different. Crafting usually asks "what do I make"; cooking asks "who does this help and when should I use it." Each food entry should track ingredient list, effect, target, duration if known, and best use case. If a meal helps recovery, bonding, training, exploration, or a battle setup, say that clearly.

Food can also connect the items page to Animon pages. Once a species profile is verified, it can link back to food that supports that Animon or its role. That creates a useful loop: the Animon list explains what a creature does, the items guide explains what supports it, and the beginner guide explains when a new player should care. This is the kind of internal linking that makes a wiki feel larger even before every database row is filled.

Reward and source tracking

Every item should have at least one source label: field pickup, dungeon reward, quest reward, shop purchase, Fountain craft, cooking result, trade, early adopter bonus, card reward, or Anispace unlock. If a source is not repeatable, mark it. If an item appears before the player understands its use, mark it as "save until verified." These small labels help avoid bad advice and create future pages like "best early items" and "where to find crafting materials."

The first item data pass should prioritize high-impact categories: recovery items, ingredients, core crafting materials, Anispace furniture, rare cards, and quest rewards. Cosmetic or flavor-only details can wait unless they unlock something. The goal is not to list every object immediately; it is to publish an item guide that can answer player problems as soon as verified data is available.