QUICK ANSWER
Use the in-game quest panel as the source of record. Record names, requirements, rewards, world, date and repeatability before treating any quest list as complete.
A source-watch page for quest demand that keeps unverified objective and reward tables out of the guide.
QUICK ANSWER
Use the in-game quest panel as the source of record. Record names, requirements, rewards, world, date and repeatability before treating any quest list as complete.
Use the in-game UI, not a reposted list, so the name and requirement are tied to the current version.
Capture the number, enemy, world, wave, item, or action exactly as written. Partial screenshots often lose the condition that matters.
Only list a reward after it appears in the quest panel or after completion. Do not infer Keys, chests or weapons from the quest name.
Jungle is the current official title signal, but a quest may belong to a different world or starter loop. Keep that context with the record.
Quest objectives can change after patches. Recheck old notes when Roblox metadata or public update sources move.
Require a visible game panel, creator note, or dated repeatable evidence.
Leave the reward unknown until a source shows it.
Label the world or route where the quest appears.
Exploit/script routes are not safe sources for gameplay objectives.
Public competitor pages target quest-guide intent, but the July 17 run did not capture a creator-owned complete quest table.
Players are searching for quest help and competitors have exact routes. This page explains the current evidence boundary and what to record in game.
No. Rewards, requirements and completion paths need visible in-game text or creator-owned notes before publication.
A screenshot or transcript with quest name, requirement, reward, world, date, and whether it repeats.