Ready to team up and take on epic quests with your friends or family? The new Team Quest system lets you join forces to complete challenges together! Now when you accept a community quest, you can invite others to join your team — anyone on your team can complete the quest, and when it’s done, everyone earns rewards. No one gets left behind!
What Are Community Quests?
Community quests are household tasks that don’t belong to any one person — things like cleaning the bathroom, washing the walls, sweeping the garage, or tackling the yard. They sit on the shared Quest Board, open for anyone to pick up.
Before Team Quests, only one adventurer could accept a community quest at a time. Now, accepting one opens the door for the whole party to join in.
How Team Quests Work
1. Start a Team Quest Accept any community quest from the board and choose to invite others. Your acceptance creates a team — and sends out the call to adventure.
2. Invites Go Out Family members receive an invitation card showing the quest name, difficulty, and rewards on offer. They can see exactly what they’re signing up for before committing.
3. Join or Decline Each invited member can accept to join the quest party or decline if they’re busy. No pressure — there’s always another quest.
4. Complete the Quest Any member of the team can mark the quest complete once the work is done. One person doesn’t have to carry it all — the first team member to finish triggers the completion for everyone.
5. Celebrate Together Everyone gets notified when the quest is complete and rewards are distributed equally across the team. XP, coins, gems — split fairly, no squabbling required.
Why It Rocks
- Work together as a family or group — big jobs feel smaller when you tackle them as a team
- Keep your own progress — your XP, your level, your streak all advance individually
- Earn fair rewards — everyone on the team gets the full payout
- Flexible participation — jump in or out of teams whenever you like
A Note on Design
Team Quests are only available on community quests — tasks that belong to the household, not individual assignments. Personal quests assigned to a specific child remain solo.
This keeps things intentional: community quests are meant to model the kind of shared responsibility that holds a household together. A team of two kids cleaning the bathroom is exactly what we built this for.
Your next great adventure just got even better. Time to squad up!