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Level 1: Newborn Nurturing Discover a lone bear cub whimpering in a moss-lined den. Keep it alive by gathering fresh water using hollowed bark, then warm goat’s milk over a small fire to feed it every few hours. Craft a nest from dried ferns and monitor its temperature—too cold, and its health dips. Soothe it by gently stroking its fur with rhythmic taps until it drifts to sleep. Success stabilizes its condition, unlocking faint purrs and clumsy attempts to crawl toward your voice. Level 2: Playful Development The cub grows energetic, wobbling on sturdy legs. Introduce solid food by scavenging berry bushes and honeycombs, avoiding aggressive bees. Engage in bonding rituals: toss pinecones for fetch, guide it through shallow streams to build swimming stamina, or distract it during thunderstorms to prevent panic. Each interaction boosts trust, reflected in tail wags and affectionate nuzzles. Fail to socialize it adequately, and it becomes skittish, hiding when strangers approach camp. Level 3: Wilderness Training Adolescence brings sharper claws and curiosity. Teach foraging by identifying edible roots versus toxic mushrooms during woodland hikes. Set traps for rabbits while discouraging aggression—redirect attacks on critters to fallen logs using vocal commands. Defend the bear from predators like wolves by lighting torches or creating noise barriers. Survival XP accumulates as it learns to climb trees for bird eggs and dig winter burrows, though hunger or injuries require emergency poultices crafted from yarrow. Level 4: Bittersweet Independence The now-mature bear outgrows reliance on you. Final tests involve simulated hunts: track deer herds together, but let it strike the final blow. Reduce hand-feeding, pushing it to raid beehives solo. A loyalty meter determines if it revisits camp post-release or vanishes forever. Achieve perfect care, and witness a heartfelt sendoff—the bear pauses at the forest’s edge, roaring once before disappearing into the pines. Neglect its training, and it lingers nearby, malnourished and hostile, a permanent shadow of what it could’ve been.
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