![]() ![]() Next is the effect of Sugar Baking: 1% for every unspent sugar lump, capped at 100.There are 12 common eggs which each carry a 1% multiplicative bonus, and the Century egg is variable from 0% to 10% (see its page for details). Cyclius: fluctuating ☑5% CpS bonus with effect cycling over 3/12/24 hours. ![]() ![]() Next are the following Pantheon effects:.Next is the Dragon upgrade Dragon scale (3%).Next are the Fortune upgrades: Fortune #100 (1%), Fortune #101 (7%).All of these are multiplied independently. Next are the Santa upgrades: Increased merriness (15%), Improved jolliness (15%), A lump of coal (1%), An itchy sweater (1%), Santa's dominion (20%), and Santa's legacy, which is worth 3% per Santa level, maxing out at 45%.Next are the Grandmapocalypse upgrades: Specialized chocolate chips (1%), Designer cocoa beans (2%), Underworld ovens (3%), Exotic nuts (4%), and Arcane sugar (5%), multiplied independently.Pantheon God Selebrak makes Valentine's cookies 30%/20%/10% more powerful.The Starlove heavenly upgrade increases Valentine's cookies from 2% to 3%.Each cookie multiplies independently, so with 5 cookies at 2% each, the multiplier is 1.02 5. Next Heralds gives +1% CpS for each patreon supporter.Next are the Minigame effects from the Garden and the Grimoire.Pantheon god Dotjeiss multiplies the bonus by 0.7/0.8/0.9.Lucky digit, Lucky number, and Lucky payout heavenly upgrades multiply the bonus by 1.01 each.The Dragon God aura multiplies this bonus by an extra 1.05 Reality Bending adds 0.005 to this multiplier.Each Prestige level is worth 1% once Prestige has been fully unlocked. The base CpS is then multiplied by several multipliers, one after the other: ![]() If you have the "egg" upgrade, add 9 to this total. To calculate the total CpS, first add together the CpS values for all buildings (see the Buildings article for details) and multiply it by the Pantheon building multipliers. The more CpS you have, the quicker you can buy upgrades and buildings. CpS is one of the most important values in Cookie Clicker. As part of the strike, workers asked the public to boycott Nabisco products, and some, like one Kotaku writer, chose to honor that request, rare cookies be damned.CpS is short for cookies per second, and represents the number of cookies earned for every second of game play. Employees for Nabisco, the company that makes Oreos, went on strike in five states last month to protest unfair demands. Some fans stayed away to support striking workersīut not all Pokemon fans immediately joined in on the cookie craze. Some who have been diligent collectors have profited considerably: there are Pokemon cards that have sold for more than $45,000, according to the gaming site Kotaku. Pokemon card collection became the hot new hobby for kids and many adults in the '90s, and it's a subculture that's still going strong today. "So you've got some characters that are really hard to capture, and the scarcity is what really drives up the prices." "The thing about Pokemon, it was designed for people to just go collector crazy," Dennis Lee, a staff writer with The Takeout told Weekend Edition. While collectable cookies may sound like an outlandish (and not very sustainable) idea, it's par for the course for the Pokemon franchise, whose products have encouraged devotion sometimes verging on mass hysteria for decades now. The cookies are the latest in a long line of Pokemon crazes ![]()
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