Adopt Me is one of Roblox's longest-running and most visited experiences. Developed by Uplift Games (formerly DreamCraft, founded by NewFissy and Bethink), it launched in July 2017 as a family roleplay game where players adopted children or played as babies. The June 2019 Pets Update shifted the entire focus to hatching, raising, and trading virtual pets, and that pivot turned Adopt Me into a record-breaking phenomenon that still receives weekly content drops.
The Adopt Me Wiki on Fandom is the community's primary encyclopedia for every collectible, mechanic, and event in the game. With thousands of articles and tens of thousands of image files, it is one of the largest and most actively maintained Roblox game wikis on the platform.
About the game
Adopt Me runs on Adoption Island, a colorful hub where players care for pets, customize homes, drive vehicles, and trade with others. The core loop is simple: earn Bucks, hatch eggs, complete pet tasks to age them up, and trade duplicates toward dream pets. Beneath that loop sits a deep collectible economy where limited event pets, retired eggs, and neon variants can hold enormous community value.
Major milestones in the game's history include:
- July 2017: Launch as a parent-and-baby roleplay experience
- June 15, 2019: Pets Update adds hatching, aging, and pet care; concurrent players briefly exceeded 439,000
- July 2019: Neon pets introduced via the Neon Cave under the main bridge
- April 2020: Mega Neon pets added, cycling rainbow glow effects
- November 2020: Trading Update expands trade slots and adds the Trade License safety test
- May 2021: DreamCraft rebrands to Uplift Games
- May 2023: Trade slots increase from 9 to 18 with live trade chat notifications
The game still ships meaningful updates on a weekly cadence, with larger seasonal events for Halloween, winter holidays, Lunar New Year, Easter, and summer festivals.
What the wiki documents
The wiki is organized around item types, locations, events, and systems. These are the sections players search most often and where the wiki goes deepest.
Pets
The Pets hub is the wiki's centerpiece. Every pet has its own article with rarity, obtain method, appearance notes, and neon or mega neon visuals where applicable.
Rarity tiers: Common, Uncommon, Rare, Ultra-Rare, and Legendary. A separate Event rarity covers temporary pets that were removed from inventories after their window closed (for example, early Scoob or Pumpkin pets).
How pets are obtained:
- Hatching from permanent shop eggs (Cracked, Pet, Royal) or limited Gumball Machine eggs
- Seasonal event shops and quest rewards
- Robux purchases (many retired and trade-only today)
- Star Rewards (Golden Egg, Diamond Egg)
- Trading with other players
Pet aging: Pets progress through regular stages (Newborn, Junior, Pre-Teen, Teen, Post-Teen, Full Grown) by completing care tasks like eating, drinking, sleeping, and going to the playground. Higher rarities require more tasks per stage. Age-Up Potions skip 30 tasks at a time. Aging up grants random rewards such as Bucks, food, potions, gifts, or rare bonus items.
Fly and Ride: Fly-A-Pet and Ride-A-Pet potions (or permanent gamepasses) add aerial movement or riding. When crafting neon or mega neon pets, only one of the four source pets needs the ability for the result to inherit it.
Limited egg pets: The wiki tracks every retired Gumball Machine egg pool separately, including Safari, Jungle, Farm, Aussie, Fossil, Ocean, Mythic, Woodland, Japan, Southeast Asia, Danger, Urban, Desert, Garden, Moon, Aztec, and Endangered eggs. Once an egg leaves rotation, its pets become trade-only, which is why individual egg articles matter for value research.
Eggs
The Eggs article explains permanent versus limited eggs, hatch task requirements, and the Hatch Now gamepass. Limited eggs appear in the Gumball Machine for a few months, then retire to the trading economy only.
Permanent shop eggs at a glance:
| Egg | Cost | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Cracked Egg | 350 Bucks | Highest common odds; 3% legendary chance |
| Pet Egg | 600 Bucks | Better rare odds; 3% legendary chance |
| Royal Egg | 1,450 Bucks | 8% legendary chance |
Event eggs (Halloween, Christmas, Lunar New Year, and others) each have dedicated wiki pages listing every pet in the pool, release dates, and whether the egg can still be hatched or is trade-only.
Neon and Mega Neon pets
These systems are documented across Neon Pets and Mega Neons.
Neon crafting: Place four Full Grown pets of the same species on the Neon Cave platform beneath the main bridge. They merge into one neon pet with a colored glow on specific body parts. Glow color varies by species.
Mega Neon crafting: Place four Luminous neon pets of the same species in the same cave. The result cycles through rainbow colors on its glow points (some pets use custom color cycles instead). Making a mega neon effectively requires 16 base pets if you start from scratch.
Neon age stages: Reborn, Twinkle, Sparkle, Flare, Sunshine, Luminous.
Exceptions: Pet Rock, Scoob, Pumpkin, and Burtaur cannot become neon or mega neon.
Mega Neon Pet Paints in the Salon can alter mega glow colors on supported pets.
Trading
The Trade System article covers mechanics, limits, and scam prevention.
- Players can trade up to 18 items per side (increased from 4, then 9, over past updates)
- Trade License required for ultra-rare and legendary trades, obtained by passing a three-question safety quiz at the Safety Hub behind the Farm Shop
- The Trade Book at the Safety Hub stores trade history and supports scam reports
- Community value is not official; the wiki documents items and rarity, while demand is tracked by traders on Discord, Reddit, and third-party value lists
High-value legacy pets frequently referenced in trades include Shadow Dragon, Bat Dragon, Frost Dragon, Giraffe, and Owl. The wiki's individual pet pages note which event or egg each came from, which is essential context when comparing offers.
Vehicles
Vehicles covers cars, strollers, skateboards, snowboards, and multi-seat rides. Sources include:
- Vehicle Dealership purchases with Bucks
- Weekly gift rotation (legendary vehicles like Celestial Carrier, Bee Shuttle, Motorized Sofa cycle in and out)
- Event currencies and limited-time shops
- Trading
Many older vehicles and skateboards are retired from gifts and trade-only today. Vehicle articles note seat count, speed, and whether the item satisfies pet "ride" tasks for bonus Bucks and XP.
Houses, furniture, and customization
Houses documents every home shell, Bucks pricing, gamepass bundles, and event-exclusive layouts like the Lunar New Year VIP house or Toyshop House. Players customize interiors with wallpapers, flooring, and furniture.
Related wiki categories include:
- Furniture for interactive and decorative items
- Toys for pet play items and collectibles
- Pet Wear for accessories
- Stickers and sticker packs from aging rewards
House articles explain lock behavior, selling rules, and which furniture pieces support pet needs (toilets, litter boxes, beds).
Potions, gifts, and boxes
The wiki catalogs consumables that shape progression and trading:
- Age-Up Potions, Tiny Age Potions, Super Age-Up Potions, and Sugar Skull Potions
- Fly-A-Pet and Ride-A-Pet potions
- Gifts (Small, Big, Massive) and chests with rotating loot pools
- Boxes such as Monkey Box, Honey, Golden Goldfish, and seasonal premium boxes with weighted pet odds
Each item page lists rarity, source, retirement status, and whether it remains tradable.
Star Rewards and daily login
Daily Reward and Star Rewards explain the login streak system. Players can claim a reward every 15 hours. Every fifth day grants bonus Bucks and stars; day 30 grants 500 Bucks and 20 stars.
Stars unlock a rotating reward track of toys, vehicles, pets, and eggs. The first track ends with the Golden Egg at 660 stars; after claiming it, stars reset and the track advances toward the Diamond Egg. Losing a login streak does not remove accumulated stars.
Events and update history
Seasonal events receive full wiki coverage: quest steps, NPC locations, currency types, shop inventories, and limited pets. Major recurring events include:
- Halloween (Shadow Dragon, Evil Unicorn, Lava Dragon, and many others across years)
- Winter holidays (Frost Dragon, Frost Fury, seasonal reindeer and penguin pets)
- Lunar New Year (Dancing Dragon, Winged Tiger, Midnight Dragon)
- Easter, Summer Festival, April Fools, and Pride events
Each event page links to every pet, vehicle, egg, and toy released during that window. For collectors, these pages are the authoritative record of what existed and when.
Gameplay, locations, and NPCs
Gameplay covers pet needs, the Guide achievement system (introduced December 2025), Bucks earning, and roleplay features that remain from the original adopt-a-child design. Location articles document the Nursery, Supermarket, Pizza Place, Camping Store, Sky Castle potion shop, and event maps.
Who the wiki helps
New players use pet and egg articles to learn rarity language, where to hatch, and how aging works before spending Bucks or Robux.
Traders cross-reference pet source pages to judge whether an offer is fair. The wiki confirms if a pet is legacy, event-limited, or still hatchable, which matters more than raw rarity.
Collectors track retired eggs, completed mega neon sets, and event exclusives through category pages and year-specific event hubs.
Parents and creators read event summaries to understand seasonal content, trading safety, and what children might ask for during limited-time sales.
Wiki scale and community
The Adopt Me Wiki is maintained by volunteer editors, wiki moderators, and an administration team under Fandom's community policies. As of recent counts, the project includes roughly 4,000 articles, 28,000+ files, and hundreds of thousands of edits. Active editors update pages within days of each game patch.
Official game announcements appear on the wiki home page and through the @PlayAdoptMe social feed, which editors often mirror into event articles.
How to research effectively
- Start with the item type hub (Pets, Eggs, Vehicles) rather than searching blindly. Category pages group retired versus active content.
- Open the individual pet or egg page for obtain method, retirement date, and neon images.
- Check the latest event article if you are researching something from the current season.
- Read the edit date at the top of the page. Adopt Me changes weekly; stale articles may list old gift rotations or pre-rebalance trade slot counts.
- Cross-check trade values outside the wiki. Fandom documents what exists, not what the community will pay today. Use recent trade data from active communities when spending high-tier pets.
- Use the Trade License test guide on the Safety Hub page before your first legendary trade.
Scam awareness
The wiki's trading section aligns with in-game safety tools:
- Only trade through the official trade window, never "trust trades" or middleman deals suggested in chat
- Verify pet age (Full Grown versus Reborn neon) and fly/ride status before accepting
- Ultra-rare and legendary trades require the Trade License; if a player pressures you to trade without it, decline
- Report suspicious completed trades through the Trade Book
The Safety Hub quiz uses real scam scenarios. Passing it unlocks legendary trading and teaches the patterns scammers reuse every update.
Staying current
Adopt Me is one of the fastest-updated games on Roblox. Uplift Games publishes weekly changes, and major seasonal events overhaul shops and maps several times per year. Treat recently edited wiki pages as your baseline, especially for gift rotations, Gumball Machine eggs, and event currencies.
When a pet or egg just released, the wiki may lag by a few days while editors upload stats and images. For same-day patch details, check official social channels first, then return to the wiki for structured lists and historical context.