Ooblets Wiki
Advertisement
For the creatures the game is named after, see Ooblets
Ooblets
Ooblets logo 2
Developer(s)
Glumberland
Publisher(s)
Glumberland
Platform(s)
PC (Epic Games Store and Steam), Xbox One, Xbox Series X, Xbox Series S, Nintendo Switch
Release date(s)
July 15, 2020 (early access)
September 1, 2022 (full release)

Ooblets is a creature-collection and farming sim game developed by Glumberland, who describe Ooblets as "a pretty weird game about farming, creature collection, and dancing."[1] It was released in early access on July 15, 2020 on the Epic Games Store (PC) and Xbox.[2] The game exited early access on September 1, 2022, with its version 1.0 releasing on the existing platforms as well as on the Nintendo Switch.[3] It subsequently released on Steam on October 5, 2023.[4] The game is available in English, French, Spanish (LatAm) and German.[5]

Description[ | ]

"New friends are plentiful in Ooblets! Spend your days renovating your farm, raising weird little pals, participating in card-based dance-offs, designing your house, and helping the mayor save Badgetown!"[6]

Features[ | ]

In Ooblets, "you farm, you grow pals on your farm, you have those pals do dance battles, you live in a town, normal stuff."[7] Some features:

  • Live a simple life working the land (and collecting magical creatures)
  • Customize your character's style with a variety of unique outfits and accessories
  • Grow otherworldly crops on your farm, craft treats, and sell them in town
  • Build your own team of ooblets to participate in card-based dance battles, level up, and unlock new moves
  • Daily challenges, dance tournaments, townsfolk quests, and badges will keep you very busy
  • Join an Ooblet club. Feel wanted and appreciated. Distrust other clubs' members.
  • Take part in a bustling little town full of characters
  • Give gifts and make friends with the kinda-odd residents of Badgetown
  • Turn a rundown shack and into a beautiful home with tons of decor and furniture
  • Run your own shop in town selling items you’ve crafted and collected
  • Play a plethora of pleasant pminigames (the p is silent)
  • Help the mayor save the town, and unlock the secrets of Oob along the way
  • Explore a bunch of weird regions that have unique ooblets and other stuff
  • (and you can pet the ooblets)

Glossary[ | ]

Ooblets has a lot of words and things you might want to know![8]

Basic stuff[ | ]

  • Ooblet - A creature that grows out of the ground and has a face
  • Ooblets - The plural of ooblet and also the name of this game
  • Oob - The land of ooblets and other assorted things
  • Oobish - The language of Oob
  • Followbabies - Your team of active ooblets that follow you as you walk around
  • Treabies - Delicious foods
  • Grumboire - A semi-magical book-like thingydoodle that keeps track of stuff for you
  • Nurnies - Random doohickeys that are integral to machine creation and maintenance
  • Beanjuice - A drink made out of squished beans that gives you energy and bad breath
  • Spressy - Like beanjuice but fancier
  • Oobnet - The telecomputing network spanning parts of Oob
  • Puter - A machine that lets you buy things you don't need
  • Gummies - The currency of Oob
  • Gleamies - Super fancy special looking ooblets
  • Oobcoop - A little house for ooblets

Ooblet Clubs[ | ]

  • Frunbuns - The club of cute. Makers of treabies and lovers of sparkles.
  • Peaksnubs - The elite club of leaders and future leaders. Makers of fertilizer.
  • Mossprouts - The outdoorsy adventurer club. They handle ooblet questing.
  • Mimpins - The tech-focused awkwardista club. They make machines.

Phrases[ | ]

  • Howdo - A common Oobish greeting
  • Dailyo - Another common Oobish greeting
  • Goshzookie - A common Oobish exclamation
  • My squishin' heart - An Oobish exclamation of endearment

Places[ | ]

Other junk[ | ]

  • Kibbon - A mythical creature (not an ooblet) that's a mixture of a kitten and a gibbon

Translations[ | ]


As of version 1.1 of the game, players can now experience the game in English, French, Spanish (LatAm), and German.

External Links[ | ]

References[ | ]

Advertisement