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Litter Specialty and Item Drops
April 10, 2026 at 03:12 PM
Remove irrelevant image: Habitat building images
The Litter specialty is one of the Pokemon specialties in Pokemon Pokopia. Pokemon with this specialty passively generate materials over time, dropping items on the ground near their habitat without requiring any input from the player. Each Litter Pokemon drops a specific type of material depending on its species. There are 31 Pokemon with the Litter specialty, making it one of the most common specialties in the game.
Litter is a key resource farming mechanic. Instead of manually gathering materials through exploration and moves, players can station Litter Pokemon in habitats and collect the dropped items periodically. When combined with Gather-specialty Pokemon and Community Boxes, Litter creates fully automated resource pipelines that run in the background while you focus on other tasks.
Mechanic | Details |
|---|---|
Passive generation | Litter Pokemon periodically drop items on the ground near their habitat. No player interaction is needed to trigger the drop. |
Continuous operation | Items continue to drop even when the Pokemon is not currently visible in the biome. As long as the Pokemon is befriended and has a habitat, it produces materials. |
Variable quantity | The number of items dropped each time is random. Sometimes a Pokemon drops one item, other times it drops two or four. |
Ground pickup | Dropped items appear on the ground near the Pokemon's home. Walk over them to pick them up, or let a Gather-specialty Pokemon collect them automatically. |
Follower drops | Litter Pokemon that are following Ditto also drop resources as they walk, letting you passively collect materials while exploring. |
The higher a Pokemon's Comfort Level, the more items it drops over time. A Litter Pokemon living in a well-furnished house with all its environmental preferences met (brightness, humidity, temperature) will produce significantly more materials than one in a bare habitat with low comfort.
The five Comfy Level tiers from lowest to highest are: Iffy, Average, Nice, Great, and Awesome. To maximize Litter output, aim for Great or Awesome comfort on your most important resource-producing Pokemon. You can raise comfort by:
Placing the Pokemon in a house with at least three pieces of furniture
Adding furniture items the Pokemon specifically likes (check its Pokedex entry under "Specialties & Likes")
Feeding it its favorite foods
Meeting its environmental preferences (bright vs. dark, humid vs. dry, warm vs. cool)
Completing its personal requests
The following table lists every Litter Pokemon, the material it drops, and where it can be found.
Vine Rope is a crafting material used for building structures, furniture, and Building Kit projects like the Leaf House. It is also needed for the Team Initiation Challenge (Party Poppers require Vine Rope).
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various | |
Various | |
Various |
Fluff is used in crafting soft furniture, bedding, and plush items. It is required for the Team Initiation Challenge Part 3 (5 Fluff). Fluff can also be found on Dream Islands.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Honey is a valuable cooking ingredient used in recipes and to lure Pokemon out of hiding. It is needed in bulk for the "Time to Party!" Important Request in Rocky Ridges. Vespiquen also produces Honey through its separate Gather Honey specialty.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Twine is used in building structures, rope fences, and various furniture recipes. It is also a required material for several Building Kits including the Windmill.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Squishy Clay is processed into Bricks by Pokemon with the Burn specialty. Bricks are essential for construction, especially for the Team Initiation Challenge Part 4 (40 Bricks).
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Iron Ore is smelted into Iron Ingots at a Smelting Furnace. Iron Ingots are one of the most important late-game materials, used across dozens of recipes. Glimmet and Glimmora are popular choices for automated Iron Ore farms.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Nonburnable Garbage is converted into Iron Ore by Pokemon with the Recycle specialty (Trubbish, Garbodor, Porygon). This creates a secondary Iron Ore pipeline when combined with Litter Pokemon that drop garbage.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various | |
Various | |
Various |
Stone is one of the most universally used building materials. It is used in blocks, pathways, and many Building Kit recipes.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various | |
Various | |
Various | |
Various | |
Various |
Leaf is used for Leaf-style building kits and various nature-themed furniture recipes.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various | |
Various |
Small Logs are processed into Lumber by Pokemon with the Chop specialty. Lumber is used extensively in construction.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various |
Sturdy Sticks are a basic crafting material used for early-game items and simple furniture.
Pokemon | Region |
|---|---|
Various |
The most efficient way to use Litter Pokemon is to pair them with Gather-specialty Pokemon and a Community Box. This creates a fully automated pipeline where resources are produced, collected, and stored without any manual effort.
Build a habitat for a Litter Pokemon (e.g., Glimmet for Iron Ore) and make sure it is befriended and comfortable.
Craft a Community Box and place it near the Litter Pokemon's habitat.
Build a habitat for a Gather-specialty Pokemon (e.g., Minccino, Machop, or Mr. Mime) nearby.
The Gather Pokemon will periodically sweep the area, pick up dropped items, and deposit them in the Community Box.
Check the Community Box whenever convenient to collect stockpiled materials.
Resource Goal | Litter Pokemon | Gather Pokemon | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
Iron Ore farm | Station a Recycle Pokemon (Trubbish) nearby to convert Nonburnable Garbage from Grimer/Muk into additional Iron Ore. | ||
Fluff farm | Group all Fluff producers together for maximum output. | ||
Vine Rope farm | Any nearby Gather Pokemon | Vine Rope is needed for Leaf Houses and Party Poppers. | |
Brick pipeline | Pair with a Burn-specialty Pokemon at a Smelting Furnace to convert Squishy Clay to Bricks automatically. |
Getting the most out of your Litter Pokemon requires attention to several factors beyond just placing them in a habitat. The combination of Comfort Level, environmental preferences, and strategic placement all contribute to higher production rates.
Every Pokemon has preferences for three environmental conditions: brightness (bright vs. dark), humidity (humid vs. dry), and temperature (warm vs. cool). Check each Pokemon's Pokedex entry under the "Specialties & Likes" section to see its preferences. Matching all three conditions along with providing liked furniture items pushes the Pokemon toward Awesome comfort, which yields the highest Litter drop rate.
Litter Pokemon that are following Ditto (or you directly as a follower) also drop resources as they walk. This means you can passively collect materials while exploring, without needing to return to the habitat. Keeping a Litter Pokemon like Combee or Bellsprout as a follower while traveling gives you free Honey or Vine Rope along the way.
Several Litter drops are raw materials that need processing before they become useful in crafting. Setting up processing stations near your Litter farms saves time.
Raw Material | Processed Into | Processing Method |
|---|---|---|
Bricks | Burn specialty at a Smelting Furnace | |
Iron Ingots | Smelting Furnace | |
Chop specialty |
Planning your resource farms by region helps minimize travel time. Here is a breakdown of which Litter Pokemon are available in each area.
Region | Litter Pokemon | Materials Available |
|---|---|---|
Mareep, Flaaffy, Spinarak, Ariados, Paldean Wooper, Clodsire | ||
Various (multiple regions) | Grimer, Muk, Garbodor, Tangela, Servine, Serperior, Haxorus, Cacturne, Blissey, Rampardos, Bastiodon, Tyrantrum, Aurorus, Venusaur, Vileplume | Nonburnable Garbage, Vine Rope, Small Log, Sturdy Stick, Stone, Leaf |
When starting out, focus on befriending Litter Pokemon that produce the materials you need most. Here is a recommended priority order:
Pokemon | Why They Matter |
|---|---|
(Vine Rope): Available early in the Withered Wasteland. Vine Rope is needed for Leaf-style building kits and Party Poppers for the Team Initiation Challenge. | |
(Fluff): Found in Bleak Beach. Fluff is required for the Team Initiation Challenge Part 3 (5 Fluff) and soft furniture recipes. | |
(Squishy Clay): Also in Bleak Beach. Squishy Clay is processed into Bricks, which are essential for the Team Initiation Challenge Part 4 (40 Bricks). | |
(Iron Ore): Found in Rocky Ridges. Iron Ore is the biggest bottleneck for late-game crafting since Iron Ingots are used in dozens of recipes. | |
(Honey): Found in the Withered Wasteland and Bleak Beach. Honey is useful for trading furniture with Vespiquen and for luring Pokemon back to their habitats. |
Keep Bellsprout or Combee as a follower while exploring. They drop Vine Rope and Honey respectively as they walk with you, giving you free materials during regular gameplay.
Glimmet and Glimmora are the only Litter Pokemon that drop Iron Ore, making them extremely valuable for late-game crafting where Iron Ingots are the biggest bottleneck.
Raise your Litter Pokemon's Comfy Level to Great or Awesome for maximum drop rates. The difference between Iffy and Awesome is significant.
You can advance the system clock on the Nintendo Switch 2 to fast-forward item drops. Disable internet time synchronization in Settings, set the clock ahead, and collect the accumulated items.
Place multiple Litter Pokemon that drop the same material near one Community Box for higher throughput. Three Vine Rope producers near one Gather Pokemon yields much more than one.
Litter and Gather work across all five regions. Set up dedicated resource farms in each area near your Workbench and Storage Box clusters for convenient crafting.
Garbodor drops Nonburnable Garbage, which Trubbish and Garbodor (via the Recycle specialty) can convert into Iron Ore. This means Garbodor feeds its own recycling pipeline if it has both Litter and Recycle specialties.