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- Early on, try to draft creatures whose habitat requirements mesh with each others' (for example: hedgehogs and wild boars, squirrels and ducks, alpacas and eagles).
- As the game progresses, your selection of creatures should cover as many habitat types as possible. This ensures you always have options when choosing tokens.
- Avoid multiple animal cards with the same habitat category (water, fields, trees, mountains, buildings) in your hand at the same time. Habitat category is denoted on animal cards by the color of right edge and symbol of lower right hand corner.
- In multiplayer games, it is best to vary the height of habitats you build, as you are unlikely to complete numerous 3 high habitats if the other player is taking mostly cards requiring 1 and 2 high habitats.
- In single player games, focus on taking animal cards which require 3 high habitats, as these will help score the most habitat points. You have full control over when the game ends, unless you run out of tokens!
- The highest scores are gained through a combination of a well designed habitat and completing animal cards. It is easy to just focus on placing cubes, however this is unlikely to help you win in higher scoring games.
- In general, prioritising completing already started animal cards is more beneficial than beginning new ones, as the points do not increase linearly.