Beginner guide

100 Days At Sea beginner guide.

A first-session route for Roblox players that stays inside the official gameplay loop and public badge evidence.

Direct answer

The 100 Days At Sea beginner guide starts with the confirmed basics: gather resources, practice the harpoon, build and defend the raft, explore islands cautiously, find weapons before chasing fights, and use survival-day badges as your early progress markers.

100 Days At Sea beginner guide path

This 100 Days At Sea beginner guide is intentionally conservative because the official sources confirm the broad loop, not every optimized route. The safe first-session path is to learn the resource flow, understand how the harpoon interacts with objects, turn resources into a sturdier raft base, and avoid treating island or enemy encounters as solved until you have enough gear and context.

The official Roblox description gives the order that matters for new players: grab resources or hook them with the harpoon, build structures and defenses, explore the sea, visit islands, find weapons, and take on foes. Public badges then give progress signals such as first play, harpoon use, survival days, bonfire levels, cooking, chests, and crew-size clears.

First-session checklist

  1. Open the official Roblox page and confirm you are in the Stranded Devs experience.
  2. Spend the opening minutes learning how resources appear and how the harpoon feels.
  3. Prioritize raft structure and defense before treating the sea as a sightseeing route.
  4. Watch for early progress markers such as Out At Sea, Hooked!, and Just Getting Started.
  5. Treat islands and combat as risk decisions, not guaranteed reward paths.
  6. Use the badges page to understand broad milestones without assuming hidden requirements.

What beginners should not assume

This 100 Days At Sea beginner guide does not claim an exact best route, fastest day-100 method, complete island order, or best weapon list. The current source set supports first-session priorities, not solved high-level strategy.

If you see a social clip claiming a secret route, compare it against the source policy. A clip can be useful, but a guide page needs repeatable evidence before it tells every new player to follow that path.

Where to go after the beginner guide

After the 100 Days At Sea beginner guide, read the systems page if you want to understand how public mechanics and badges fit together. Read multiplayer if you are joining a crew, and read badges if you want named milestones to track during longer sessions.