Digimon Story Beginner's Guide - Tips & Tricks
Getting Started
Digimon Story is a beloved JRPG franchise that blends creature collection, monster raising, and classic turn-based combat. Whether you are playing Digimon Story: Cyber Sleuth, its sequel Hacker's Memory, or the more recent Digimon World: Next Order, the franchise follows a distinct rhythm that can feel overwhelming to newcomers. Unlike other monster-collecting games, Digimon demands that you understand its unique evolutionary paths and team-building mechanics from the very beginning.
When you first boot up a Digimon Story game, you will be greeted with a narrative-heavy prologue. Pay attention to this, as the story establishes the digital world's rules and introduces you to your first partner Digimon. Your first major decision usually involves selecting a starter Digimon from a limited pool. Unlike games where your starter defines your entire playthrough, Digimon Story games are designed so that your starter is temporary. Do not stress over this choice. Within the first few hours, you will have the ability to digivolve this starter into something entirely different, or simply de-digivolve it to raise a new species. Pick the one that looks the coolest to you and focus on learning the UI.
Character creation, where applicable (such as naming your protagonist and setting up your online avatar in the Cyber Sleuth series), is purely cosmetic. Your stats are dictated entirely by your Digimon lineup, not your human character. Spend a few moments customizing your avatar, but quickly move past this screen to get into the field. The real "creation" in Digimon Story happens in the Digi-Lab, which serves as your monster management hub. Familiarize yourself with the lab's location on your map immediately, as you will be returning to it constantly to heal, evolve, and train your team.

Core Mechanics
The Digivolution Tree
The defining feature of the Digimon Story series is the Digivolution system. Every Digimon belongs to an evolutionary tree, typically progressing from In-Training to Rookie, Champion, Ultimate, and finally Mega. However, this is not a linear path. A single Rookie Digimon might have the potential to branch into five different Champion forms depending on the stats you feed it and its inherent elemental type. When a Digimon digivolves, it keeps a portion of its learned skills and carries over its base stats, adjusted for the new form's parameters. This means a highly trained Champion will yield a significantly stronger Ultimate than a neglected one.
De-Digivolution (Degeneration)
If digivolution is how you climb the tree, de-digivolution is how you strengthen its roots. De-digivolving is the most important mechanic in the entire game. When you revert a Mega-level Digimon back to a Rookie, it retains a massive percentage of its stats. You can then level that Rookie back up to Mega again, netting a huge permanent stat increase. This cycle, known as "ABI farming" (Ability farming), is the core of end-game team building. Every time you de-digivolve and re-digivolve, the Digimon's ABI (potential) increases, unlocking higher evolutionary branches that were previously locked.
Type Advantages and Attributes
Combat in Digimon Story relies heavily on a rock-paper-scissors attribute system. There are five main attributes: Vaccine, Virus, Data, Free, and Unknown. Generally, Vaccine beats Virus, Virus beats Data, and Data beats Vaccine. Free and Unknown are neutral to this triangle. Furthermore, every attack has an elemental typing (Fire, Water, Electric, Earth, Wind, Dark, Light). You must check both the attribute of the Digimon you are facing and the elemental typing of their attacks to effectively build a team that resists enemy strikes while exploiting their weaknesses.
Support Conversations
In the overworld, you will frequently encounter floating text bubbles containing questions or statements from your Digimon (e.g., "I want to eat meat!" or "Let's train hard!"). Stopping to talk to them and selecting the correct positive response grants CAM (Camera) points. High CAM grants combat bonuses, such as extra turns, protective shields, or automatic healing at the start of battle. Neglecting these bubbles leaves free stats on the table.

Early Game Tips
The first few hours of any Digimon Story game are a grind, but you can streamline the process significantly by focusing on the right priorities.
- Fill your party ASAP: You are allowed up to three Digimon in your active battle party, and up to eleven more in your backup Digi-Bank. Your immediate goal is to capture and raise a full party of three. Do not try to solo the game with one over-leveled Digimon; the SP (Skill Points) cost of abilities will drain them dry in two turns against tougher enemies.
- Focus on getting a healer: Look at the digivolution trees of your starting Digimon and plot a path to a Digimon that learns healing or revival spells. Having a dedicated support Digimon with Heal or Party Heal will save you immense amounts of Yen (in-game currency) on restorative items early on.
- Grind ABI early and often: As soon as you get your first Ultimate-level Digimon, de-digivolve it back to a Champion or Rookie. Yes, it feels counterintuitive to make your strongest monster weak again. Do it anyway. The stat baseline you build in the first ten hours dictates how strong your Megas will be in the fiftieth hour.
- Max out the Field Guide: Capturing a Digimon you have already registered in your field guide grants bonus experience. If you need to grind levels, hunt down low-level Digimon in the starting areas. The first capture gives base XP, but subsequent captures give an XP multiplier, making early grinding incredibly fast.
- Invest in the Digi-Farm: You will unlock the ability to set up a Digi-Farm early on. Place your unused Digimon here and assign them to development programs (like SPD training or INT training). Even when they aren't fighting, they are passively gaining stats, making them viable when you eventually rotate them into your active party.

Common Mistakes to Avoid
New players often bring habits from other RPGs into Digimon Story, which usually results in a painfully difficult mid-game. Avoid these top pitfalls:
- Ignoring De-Digivolution: As stated, this is the cardinal sin of Digimon Story. If you reach the endgame and your Digimon have an ABI stat of 0-5 because you never de-digivolved them, you will be massively underpowered. De-digivolve every time you hit a new evolution tier, at least once or twice.
- Hoarding Consumable Items: The game throws thousands of HP recovery disks, MP recovery disks, and status cure items at you. Use them aggressively during boss fights. There is no reason to enter a boss fight with full pockets if your Digimon are struggling in random encounters. Items are renewable and relatively cheap to buy or farm later.
- Overwriting Signature Moves: Digimon have a limited move pool capacity (usually 3 to 4 active skills depending on the game). As they level up, they will learn new moves. Be very careful not to overwrite a highly damaging, rare elemental attack for a generic physical strike just because it is "new." Check the move's power, SP cost, and element before confirming the overwrite.
- Sleeping on Status Effects: In many JRPGs, status ailments like Sleep, Paralysis, and Confusion are useless against bosses. In Digimon Story, they are incredibly potent. Inflicting Sleep on a boss can completely skip their turn, while Paralysis has a chance to interrupt their powerful charged attacks. Build a Digimon that specializes in inflicting these statuses for difficult fights.
- Rushing the Story Without Side Quests: The main story bosses feature sudden, sharp difficulty spikes. If you find yourself struggling to deal even 1% damage to a story boss, it means you have under-leveled. Stop, backtrack, and complete optional Side Quests (Cases in Cyber Sleuth). They offer massive XP rewards and unique items that make the main campaign a breeze.
- Mismanaging SP in Combat: Do not spam your strongest, most expensive skills in random encounters. Use basic, low-cost attacks to clear out trash mobs, and save your heavy-hitting SP abilities for boss fights. Running out of SP in a dungeon before a boss room is a death sentence.
- Ignoring the Tactician USB: In the Cyber Sleuth games, you unlock a Tactician USB ability that lets you swap Digimon mid-battle without sacrificing a turn. Forgetting to equip this is a massive mistake, as it removes the punishment for rotating a weakened Digimon out for a fresh one.

Essential Controls & Settings
Getting comfortable with the control scheme and tweaking the default settings will vastly improve your experience. While button layouts differ slightly between PlayStation, PC, and Nintendo Switch ports, the general logic remains the same.
Recommended Settings
- Battle Speed: Set this to Fast or Highest immediately. Digimon Story games suffer from sluggish, unskippable attack animations. Turning the speed up cuts down on the tediousness of the grind without affecting the strategic elements of the game.
- Camera Speed: Max this out in the overworld. The default camera rotation is sluggish and makes navigating the maze-like digital dungeons feel clunky.
- Auto-Save: Turn this on. While you should still manually save before every boss, the auto-save feature is a lifesaver if you accidentally step into a high-level zone and get one-shot by a roaming enemy.
- Skip Battle Animations: If the game offers a setting to skip animations entirely once you have seen them, enable it. You will be seeing the same attacks thousands of times; there is no need to watch a thirty-second cutscene for a basic fireball at hour forty.
Key Bindings to Memorize
- Interact/Confirm: Used for talking to NPCs, selecting menu options, and advancing text. Mastering the rhythm of this button lets you speed-read through dialogue.
- Cancel/Back: Used to back out of menus. In battle, this is crucial for accidentally targeting the wrong enemy.
- Digi-Map Toggle: Brings up the mini-map to full screen. Use this constantly. The digital worlds are designed like looping mazes, and wandering aimlessly drains your time and resources.
- Scan/Investigate: This key is used to scan the environment for hidden items, invisible pathways, and stealthy enemy Digimon. Train yourself to tap this button every time you enter a new room or corner.
- Digi-Commands Shortcut: Memorize the shortcut to open the Digi-Commands menu (where you access healing items and field skills) without opening the main pause menu. This is vital for mid-dungeon healing.
Progression System
Understanding progression in Digimon Story requires a mental shift from traditional RPGs. Your human character does not have a standard level-up system. Your progression is 100% tied to your Digimon.
Leveling and Stat Inheritance
Digimon gain experience from battles and level up individually. Upon leveling up, their base stats (HP, SP, ATK, DEF, INT, SPD) increase based on their species. When a Digimon digivolves, its new form's base stats are added to its current stats, multiplied by an inheritance rate (usually around 50% to 80%). This is why de-digivolving is critical: if a Champion has 200 INT, and digivolves into an Ultimate with a base INT of 150, it will retain a huge chunk of that 200 INT, resulting in an Ultimate with 350 INT instead of just 150.
ABI (Ability) and Evolution Requirements
Every Digimon has an ABI stat, starting at 0. ABI acts as a gatekeeper for high-tier evolutions. To digivolve a Digimon into its most powerful Mega form, it might require an ABI of 20, plus specific stat thresholds (e.g., 500 INT, 400 SPD). The only way to raise ABI is through the cycle of digivolving and de-digivolving. Each cycle usually grants 1 to 4 ABI points. High-ABI Digimon also receive stat bonuses when leveling up, making the grind incredibly rewarding.
Personality and Traits
As you raise Digimon in the Digi-Farm, they develop personalities (like Hardheaded, Gentle, or Moody) based on the farm goods you use. These personalities grant passive combat traits. A "Hardheaded" Digimon might take less damage from physical attacks, while a "Brainy" Digimon might gain extra SP per turn. You can manipulate these personalities by feeding specific farm items, allowing you to fine-tune your team's passive abilities to suit your strategy.
Equipment and Plugins
Your human avatar equips "Plugins" that provide global party buffs. These can range from increasing the drop rate of items, boosting the experience gained after battle, or adding a passive evasion chance against physical attacks. As you progress through the story, upgrade your plugin capacity and prioritize plugins that boost Experience or Yen gain. This accelerates the entire progression loop, giving you more time to focus on ABI farming rather than mindless grinding.
Resources & Where to Find Help
The Digimon Story series features hundreds of Digimon, intricate evolution paths, and obscure side quests that rarely explain what you need to do or where you need to go. You will inevitably need to look things up. Here are the best resources to bookmark.
Community Wikis
- Digimon Wiki (Wikimon): The most comprehensive database for Digimon lore, but it also features incredibly detailed tables for every Digimon's learnable moves, stat yields, and evolutionary relatives. Use this when you want to plan out a theoretical team build.
- Digimon Story Cyber Sleuth Wiki (Fandom): If you are playing the Cyber Sleuth games, this is your bible. It features specific guides for every Case, exact spawn locations for every Digimon in every zone, and printable digivolution flowcharts. When the game asks you to "find a suspicious person in Kowloon," this wiki will tell you exactly which block and which corner they are standing in.
Interactive Tools
- Digivolution Calculators: There are several fan-made web tools (search for "Digimon Cyber Sleuth Evolution Calculator") where you can input a Digimon's current stats, level, and ABI. The calculator will instantly highlight every possible digivolution and de-digivolution path available to you, completely removing the guesswork from the Digi-Lab menu.
Video Communities
- YouTube (Guides and Boss Strategies): If you are stuck on a particularly brutal boss, YouTube is the fastest remedy. Search the boss's name and the game title. Content creators often upload showcases of high-level Digimon melting the boss, which will give you a clear idea of the elemental weaknesses you need to exploit or the status ailments you need to inflict.
- Reddit (r/digimon): The primary English-speaking hub for the franchise. The community is incredibly welcoming to newcomers. If you have a question about team composition, you can post your current Digimon lineup and ask for advice. Users are quick to point out efficient ABI farming routes or suggest specific Digimon that synergize well together.
Discord Servers
- Digimon Discord Servers: For real-time help, joining a large Digimon Discord server is highly recommended. They typically have dedicated channels for specific games, FAQ channels that debunk common myths (like "Does de-digivolving reset my moves?"), and mentorship programs where veteran players help newbies build their first end-game team.
Mastering Digimon Story is a marathon, not a sprint. The first few hours might feel restrictive as you wait for your Rookies to become Champions, but once the evolution system clicks, the game transforms into a deeply rewarding monster-raising simulator. Focus on your ABI, respect the type chart, and never be afraid to hit that de-digivolve button.





