Mounts and Pets in Aion 2
Aion 2 blurs the classic MMO line between “pet” and “mount.” Instead of treating them as separate systems, the game leans into a collection-driven approach where you acquire many creatures over time, and some of them can be used for movement.
That matters for progression because it means mounts and pets are not a one-time purchase choice. They are an account journey:
- You collect more creatures.
- You improve their progression levels.
- You unlock stronger passive benefits and better “hidden power” over time.
- You build a stable daily loop that keeps you growing even when gear drops are unlucky.
If you’re trying to progress efficiently, the goal isn’t to find a single “best mount.” The goal is to build the best pet-and-mount portfolio for your playstyle.

What Actually Helps Progression Most
When players say “pets help progression,” they usually mean one of three things. If you can identify which one you need right now, you’ll stop wasting resources.
Movement progression (finish more content per hour)
This is the #1 impact for most players early on:
- Faster travel between objectives
- Faster repositioning while farming
- Cleaner routes for dailies and zone completion
- Even small gains in movement efficiency add up massively across a week.
Combat progression (win more fights with the same gear)
This matters once story bosses, elite packs, and instanced content start pushing you:
- Passive stat boosts
- Better consistency (less missing, fewer “dead pulls”)
- Smoother damage or survivability curve
Economy progression (more Kinah per hour, less waste)
This is the “quiet advantage” that eventually becomes huge:
- Better farming efficiency
- More consistent daily completion
- Fewer wipes and fewer consumable burns
- Smarter timing on upgrades because you’re not broke
The best part: you can build toward all three, but the priority changes by phase of the game.
Progression Priorities by Phase
Here’s a simple way to decide what to do next with your pets and mounts—without needing perfect knowledge of every creature.
Phase 1: Early leveling and zone progression
Your priority is movement and reliability, because finishing content faster gives you more everything:
- Prioritize any upgrades that improve travel speed and reduce downtime
- Build habits that let you farm pet resources while doing your normal route
Phase 2: Midgame (first serious dungeon routine)
Your priority shifts to combat consistency:
- Passive stat growth starts to matter more than a tiny speed bump
- You want smoother clears and less risk of deaths that waste time
Phase 3: Endgame (repeatable content, ranking pressure, min-max)
Your priority becomes account value and optimization:
- Collection completion matters more
- Your “hidden power” systems become a real chunk of overall strength
- You tune stats toward your build instead of using generic bonuses
If you follow this structure, you avoid the most common trap: investing like an endgame player at level 15, then running out of resources before the system even matters.
Pets That Can Be Mounts
Some pets can carry you as mounts. For progression, this is more important than it sounds, because it changes your movement toolkit:
- You don’t rely only on flying for travel efficiency
- You can save flight resources for when they matter most (vertical gain, emergency repositioning, risky areas)
- You can keep consistent ground speed while farming and route stacking
A smart movement strategy usually uses both:
- mounts/pet-riding for short-to-mid ground travel
- flight/glide for terrain skipping and long lines
If you only do one, you lose efficiency.
The Core Loop: Collecting Souls and Building Your Pet Library
One of the clearest “progression truths” in Aion 2 is that pet growth is tied to steady acquisition and repeated farming patterns.
A common structure discussed in guides and databases is:
- You hunt specific mobs to earn their pet-related drops (often called souls or similar collection items).
- After collecting enough, you unlock that creature as a pet.
- You continue collecting to improve progression levels and related bonuses.
The key progression idea is simple:
You don’t want to farm pets “instead of” progressing. You want to farm pets “while” progressing.
That means choosing targets that match your leveling route, your dungeon prep, or your Kinah goals.
Pet Understanding and Possession Effects
Aion 2 treats pets as more than companions; leveling or improving them increases a possession-style effect (a passive benefit that contributes to your power over time).
For progression, the biggest mistake is ignoring this early because “the stats feel small.”
Small stats aren’t small when they:
- apply all the time,
- stack across systems,
- and reduce the friction of every fight and every route.
The correct early mindset is:
- start building pet progression early,
- but spend resources carefully (you’re building a base, not chasing perfection).
Race Understanding and the Hidden Stat Engine
Aion 2 also links pet collection to a broader “understanding” system that improves your character through additional options unlocked at certain milestones.
The reason this matters for progression is that it rewards consistent effort:
- collect more pets
- convert pet-related materials into the next layer of progression
- unlock stronger option tiers at higher understanding levels
This system is where pets stop being “cute helpers” and become a real endgame power source.
The Two Pet Stat Paths That Matter Most
For most progression-focused players, two stat directions show up again and again in pet-focused systems:
A path that improves hit consistency and ground movement efficiency
This is the “leveling and farming” path. When your hits land reliably and your routes move faster, your whole day improves.
A path that improves raw durability and offensive scaling
This is the “dungeon and boss” path. It helps you survive mistakes, reduces wipe risk, and makes hard content feel smoother.
You don’t need to memorize everything. You need to know which path you need right now:
- If your leveling feels slow → prioritize movement and consistency
- If bosses feel punishing → prioritize survivability and scaling
What to Prioritize First for Fast Progression
If you want the shortest path to real results, prioritize in this order:
1) Movement efficiency you can feel immediately
- Anything that makes you finish zones faster
- Anything that reduces downtime between fights
2) Hit consistency
Missing or failing to connect cleanly is one of the biggest hidden time-loss problems in MMOs. When your character becomes more consistent, everything speeds up.
3) Survivability that prevents “time-wasting deaths”
Deaths are not just a durability issue; they are a progression issue because they:
- waste travel time,
- waste consumables,
- and often break your route rhythm.
4) Long-term stat optimization
This comes later. You earn it once your routine is stable and your resource income is consistent.
Mount Selection: What Matters More Than Looks
A “good progression mount” is not the fanciest or rarest. It’s the one that makes your day smoother.
Here’s the practical checklist:
Stable movement feel
- You want a mount that feels easy to control and doesn’t fight your camera.
- Comfort matters because you’ll use it for hours.
Route compatibility
- Some zones reward tight turns and short bursts.
- Some zones reward straight-line speed and clean terrain crossing.
- Pick mounts that fit your routine, not your screenshots.
Low friction during farming
- If mounting and dismounting interrupts you constantly, you lose time.
- A progression mount should support fast farming loops.
Consistency under pressure
- If you ride in risky areas or contested routes, you want reliability—not complicated movement.
A 7-Day Pet and Mount Progression Plan
If you want a simple plan that works for almost everyone, do this:
Day 1: Build your “pet route stacking” habit
- Pick one farming loop that overlaps with your quests
- Commit to collecting pet materials without detouring hard
Day 2: Identify 2–3 pet targets that match your needs
- One target for movement/consistency
- One target for survivability/dungeon prep
- One “bonus target” you’ll naturally farm while leveling
Day 3: Create a daily minimum
- Set a small daily goal you’ll actually keep:
- a fixed number of minutes, or
- a fixed number of route loops
- Consistency beats intensity.
Day 4: Upgrade only when it won’t break your budget
- Don’t invest so hard that you can’t enhance gear or buy basics.
- Keep your economy stable.
Day 5: Improve your movement routine
- Combine mount travel with gliding/flying for optimal routes.
- Stop doing “one objective per trip.”
Day 6: Convert progress into combat smoothness
- Use your new passives to push harder content:
- faster clears,
- fewer deaths,
- less downtime.
Day 7: Lock the routine
- Your goal is not “max pets.”
- Your goal is “repeatable progress with low stress.”
If you do this, you’ll feel stronger every week without turning pet progression into a grind nightmare.
How to Farm Pet Souls Without Burning Out
Farming pets can become exhausting if you do it like a chore. The faster approach is a structured loop.
The smart farming method
- Farm while you’re already doing something else:
- leveling,
- zone completion,
- daily dungeon prep,
- Kinah loops.
- Avoid “stand still and grind for hours” unless you’re specifically doing a short focused session.
Pick targets that pay you twice
The best pet farming targets also give:
- useful materials
- sellable drops
- good XP (if you’re still leveling)
If a target gives only pet progress and nothing else, it’s usually inefficient unless you’re in full endgame optimization mode.
Time-box your grind
Instead of “until it drops,” use:
- 15-minute blocks for quick progress
- 30-minute blocks for meaningful progress
- 60-minute blocks only when you’re in a focused farming mood
This keeps the system from becoming frustrating.
How Shared Pets Change Progression Strategy
When pets are shared across characters on the same server (account-level sharing), pet progression becomes dramatically more valuable:
- Every minute invested helps every character you play.
- Alts stop feeling like “starting over” for pet power.
- Resources feel less wasted because your account keeps the benefits.
If your version includes pet-sharing updates, the best strategy becomes:
- invest steadily on your main,
- and let that progression empower everything else you play.
That also means your pet investments are less risky long-term.
Avoiding Common Mount and Pet Mistakes
Most progression failures come from a few predictable mistakes:
Chasing rare-looking pets too early
Early progression is about function, not flex.
Over-investing before your income supports it
If pet spending makes you poor, you’ll progress slower overall.
Farming in the wrong location
If you farm pet progress in a low-value area, you lose time and money.
Ignoring movement optimization
Mounts and pets help most when they shorten travel time and smooth routines.
Treating the system as “optional” until endgame
Pets scale as a compounding advantage. Starting earlier is stronger.
Best “Progression Pet” Profiles by Playstyle
Instead of naming one “best pet,” use these profiles to choose what helps you most.
The Leveling Sprinter
Best for players who want to finish zones fast and hit milestones quickly.
- Prioritize movement efficiency
- Prioritize hit consistency
- Farm pets that overlap with your quest route
The Dungeon Grinder
Best for players who spend most time in instanced content.
- Prioritize survivability and consistency
- Prioritize passives that smooth boss fights
- Focus on reliable daily routine and resource conversion
The Economy Builder
Best for players who want to stay rich while progressing.
- Farm targets that drop sellables plus pet progress
- Avoid spending spikes
- Invest steadily so your income stays positive
The PvP Traveler
Best for players who move through risky areas often.
- Prioritize reliability and escape-friendly movement habits
- Keep your movement toolset flexible
- Avoid stamina-empty movement patterns that leave you vulnerable
Pick the profile that matches how you actually play. That’s how you build a pet system that feels rewarding instead of annoying.
A Daily Routine That Builds Pet Progress Fast
If you want a minimal routine that still grows your pet power, use this simple 20–30 minute framework:
Step 1: One route loop (10–15 minutes)
- Farm a target that overlaps with your current zone or daily route
- Prioritize “double reward” targets (pet progress + value)
Step 2: One short conversion step (2–5 minutes)
- Convert what you earned into pet progression where appropriate
- Don’t overthink optimization—just keep the system moving forward
Step 3: One content push (8–12 minutes)
- Use your new power where it matters:
- a daily dungeon
- a quest chain
- a farming route for Kinah
This routine keeps pet progression in your life without taking over your life.
Practical Rules
- Invest for your phase: movement early, consistency midgame, optimization late.
- Farm pets while progressing, not instead of progressing.
- Prioritize anything that reduces travel time and downtime.
- Time-box pet farming to avoid burnout.
- Keep your economy stable; never let pet spending break your upgrades.
- Build a routine you can repeat, because repetition is how pet systems become powerful.
- If pets are shared account-wide on your server, steady investment becomes even more valuable.
BoostRoom
If you want faster progression without wasting weeks on trial-and-error, BoostRoom can help you build a pet-and-mount plan that matches your goals. That includes efficient farming routes that stack pet progress with Kinah and materials, priority guidance on which progression layers to level first, and a clean daily/weekly routine that keeps your character growing even when gear RNG is unfriendly.
FAQ
Do pets really matter for progression in Aion 2, or is it mostly cosmetic?
Pets matter because they contribute passive benefits and long-term progression layers. Even small bonuses become meaningful when they apply constantly and stack over time.
What should I prioritize first: pets or gear?
Gear usually gives the biggest immediate power spikes, but pets improve your efficiency and consistency. The best approach is balanced: steady pet progress without sabotaging your
upgrade budget.
How do I pick the right pet path for fast leveling?
Choose bonuses that improve movement efficiency and hit consistency first. Faster travel and reliable damage output shorten every route and every fight.
Are mounts always faster than flying?
No. Mounts are often best for short-to-mid ground travel and routine farming. Flying/gliding is best for terrain skipping and long travel lines. Mixing both is usually optimal.
What’s the best way to farm pet souls without wasting hours?
Farm on targets that overlap with your quests, daily routes, and materials. Time-box your sessions and avoid grinding a low-value target that gives only pet progress.
Should I chase rare pets early?
Usually not. Early progression is about building a functional baseline. Rare collection chasing becomes more valuable when your income is stable and your routine is set.
If pets are shared across characters, does that change my strategy?
Yes—shared pets make every investment more valuable because it benefits your entire account on that server. Steady progress becomes the best long-term play.
Can pet progression improve my Kinah income?
Yes. Better efficiency means more content completed per hour, smoother farming routes, fewer deaths, and fewer wasted consumables—all of which increases net Kinah over time.
How often should I work on pets?
Daily consistency beats long sessions. Even 20–30 minutes of focused, stacked pet progress can outperform random multi-hour grinding.
What’s the biggest mistake players make with mounts and pets?
Investing randomly without a plan—either overspending early, farming inefficient targets, or ignoring movement optimization that would save hours every week.



