Understanding Tamed Stat Planning
A creature is more than its level. Each stat has its own hidden point count. Health, stamina, oxygen, food, weight, melee damage, and speed can all grow at different rates. This calculator helps you test one stat at a time. It turns base values, wild points, taming changes, imprinting, and trained levels into one estimate.
Why The Calculator Helps
ARK values can be confusing after tame. A creature may look powerful, yet many points may sit in food or oxygen. Another creature may show a lower total level, but it may hold better melee or health. By entering the important details, you can compare two animals before breeding, boss fights, hauling, travel, or cave work. The tool also shows how mutation events change the likely point count.
How To Read The Result
The first number is the wild stat estimate after wild points and mutation points. The next value applies taming bonuses. Then the imprint adjustment is added. Finally, trained levels are applied. The final estimate is the practical stat you can expect after leveling. The rating label is only a guide. Use it with your server settings and species knowledge.
Better Breeding Decisions
Breeders often keep notes for every line. This calculator supports that habit. Save the result as a CSV file when you want a small spreadsheet record. Use the PDF button when you want a simple shared report for a tribe, trade post, or breeding plan. The example table gives sample inputs, so new users can see the expected format quickly.
Important Limits
ARK uses different stat tables for many creatures. Some creatures have special rules. Server mods may also change growth rates. Because of that, this calculator is a flexible estimator. It is not a replacement for official data or a trusted spyglass mod. Enter species-specific values when you know them. Default values are useful for testing, but accurate inputs give the best result.
Practical Use
Run the same stat for several tames. Compare final values and estimated point strength. Keep the best lines. Cull weak values when storage is tight. Repeat the process after new mutations or imprint plans. Small checks can prevent wasted food, saddles, time, and breeding slots.