I have been playing this game a long time and this is always something that has bothered me because I could never understand the reason for it. I came across this again today. A tamer in training was taming spawn, giving the tamed animal a different name and releasing it. Then continuing the process as soon as another animal spawned.
Why perform this process instead of killing the released animal? Does it somehow benefit the tamer? I don't see how, as they will not get a gain on retaming the same creature. Does it benefit the next tamer to come along? I don't really see how since if I want to train on polar bears, I really don't want pretames that are harder to tame. If I want harder creatures to tame I will just go to a different level of spawn.
Is there something I have been missing all these years? Is it laziness, or the inability to kill what you have just tamed? If you have just tamed a creature and another spawns, you can use the new spawn to kill the one you tamed. Someone enlighten me, please. Thanks!
Why perform this process instead of killing the released animal? Does it somehow benefit the tamer? I don't see how, as they will not get a gain on retaming the same creature. Does it benefit the next tamer to come along? I don't really see how since if I want to train on polar bears, I really don't want pretames that are harder to tame. If I want harder creatures to tame I will just go to a different level of spawn.
Is there something I have been missing all these years? Is it laziness, or the inability to kill what you have just tamed? If you have just tamed a creature and another spawns, you can use the new spawn to kill the one you tamed. Someone enlighten me, please. Thanks!