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How Natures Work in Evomon Roblox and How to Reroll Them

Learn how Natures work in Evomon Roblox, what each stat trade-off means, and how to reroll them wisely without wasting Nature Reroll Potions.

Learn how Natures work in Evomon Roblox, what each stat trade-off means, and how to reroll them wisely without wasting Nature Reroll Potions.

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In Evomon Roblox, the best Nature is the one that boosts the stat your Evomon actually uses, and you can only change it by spending a Nature Reroll Potion for another random roll.

Every Evomon you catch comes with a Nature, a permanent stat modifier that quietly decides how strong that monster really is in battle. Two copies of the same Evomon can end up feeling completely different because each one rolled its own Nature. Here is exactly what Natures do, how to change one, and how to decide which Nature is worth chasing for a given monster.

What a Nature does to your Evomon’s stats

A Nature is assigned randomly the moment you catch an Evomon, and you cannot pick it at capture. That randomness is the whole point of the system: catch the same monster three times and you can walk away with three different stat profiles.

Every Nature raises one stat by 10% and lowers another by 10%, and both effects are always active. That constant push-and-pull is why Natures matter so much — a 10% swing on the stat your monster leans on can be the difference between a good Evomon and a great one. The stats a Nature can touch are HP, Attack, Special Attack, Defense, Special Defense, and Speed. There are close to 30 Natures in total, each a different combination of one buff and one penalty.

Rerolling a Nature with a Nature Reroll Potion

If you do not like the Nature your monster rolled, a Nature Reroll Potion gives it a fresh, completely random Nature. There is no way to aim for a specific result — each potion is another dice roll — so treat rerolling as something you repeat until the roll fits.

STEP 1/4

 

Get a Nature Reroll Potion

Get a Nature Reroll Potion
Get a Nature Reroll Potion | Roblox Guides/YouTube

Earn or collect at least one Nature Reroll Potion before you start.

STEP 2/4

 

Open the Evomon Team menu

Open the Evomon Team menu
Open the Evomon Team menu | Roblox Guides/YouTube

Select the Evomon you want to change from your team.

STEP 3/4

 

Use the potion on that Evomon

Use the potion on that Evomon
Use the potion on that Evomon | Roblox Guides/YouTube

The game assigns a brand-new Nature at random, replacing the old one.

STEP 4/4

 

Check the new Nature

Check the new Nature
Check the new Nature | Roblox Guides/YouTube

Click the question mark above the nature box to see exactly which stat went up and which went down.

QUICK WIN

Check both the stat spread and the Evomon’s skills before you reroll — a Nature that is perfect on one monster can be a wasted roll on another, even within the same element.


Video help

Where Nature Reroll Potions come from

Nature Reroll Potions drop from a handful of normal gameplay sources rather than a single shop. You earn them by defeating NPC trainers, progressing through the battle pass, redeeming codes, and picking up various other in-game rewards as you play.

Beyond those, a few extra routes show up in the game’s wider economy: climbing the tower in the Main City for Nature, trait, and talent reroll rewards, and farming bosses in the Summoner Ruins to earn currencies you can spend on reroll items. Players with VIP can also buy Nature Reroll Potions with gems from an in-game shop, though the exact gem and Robux prices aren’t consistently listed and may change. Codes are the most volatile source — one recent code, 30K-LIKES, granted 2x Nature Reroll Potions, but active codes rotate quickly, so whether any single code still works is worth checking in-game.

You may also see third-party marketplaces advertising bulk potion bundles. Those are unofficial listings, not real in-game pricing, so don’t use them as a benchmark for what a potion “should” cost.

Picking the best Nature for a monster’s role

Evomon role Nature target
Physical attacker +Attack (drop Special Attack)
Special attacker +Special Attack (drop Attack)
Speed-focused attacker +Speed (drop a defensive stat)
Tank / wall +HP or +Defense (drop an offensive stat)
Bulky special tank +Special Defense (drop an unused stat)

KEY!There is no single best Nature in Evomon. Because every Nature both helps and hurts, the right pick depends entirely on how a monster fights. The trick is to boost the stat it leans on and shed a stat it barely uses.

A physical attacker wants extra Attack and can happily lose Special Attack it never touches. A special damage dealer flips that: pump Special Attack and dump physical Attack. Fast cleaners often want more Speed so they strike first, while walls and tanks would rather stack HP, Defense, or Special Defense and sacrifice offense they don’t rely on. Before you spend a potion, look at the monster’s move set and stat spread together — the same Nature that makes one Evomon shine can hold another back.

Example Natures and their stat trade-offs

Nature Stat change
Adamant +10% Attack, −10% Special Attack
Modest +10% Special Attack, −10% Attack
Jolly +10% Speed, −10% Special Attack
Brave +10% Attack, −10% Speed
Hardy +10% Attack, −10% HP
Quiet +10% Special Attack, −10% Speed
Naughty +10% Attack, −10% Special Defense
Relaxed +10% Defense, −10% Speed
Serious +10% HP, −10% Special Defense

Here are some Natures that turn up in the current list, with the stat each one boosts and the stat it cuts. This is a sample to show how the trade-offs read, not the full roster of nearly 30.

Read a few of these and the logic clicks: Adamant is a clean win on a physical attacker, Modest is its special-damage mirror, and Jolly is what a fast physical monster wants — as long as it isn’t leaning on Special Attack anyway. Brave trades away Speed for a bigger hit, which suits a slow, heavy-hitting bruiser more than a glass cannon. Every entry comes with a downside, so the question is never “is this Nature good” but “does this monster actually use the stat it drops?”

Reroll mistakes that waste potions

The most common slip is over-rerolling early-game filler — burning rare potions on a monster you’ll bench in an hour. Save them for Evomons you expect to keep long term. Right behind that is ignoring the negative half of a Nature: a Speed penalty on something that needs to move first, or an HP cut on a monster meant to soak hits, can cost you more than the buff gives.

Don’t reroll before you know a monster’s moves and role, either, and don’t expect a potion to hand you a specific Nature — the result is always random. Finally, keep your reroll items straight: Nature Reroll Potions, Trait Reroll Potions, and Talent Vector are three separate things that change three different systems, and mixing them up is an easy way to spend the wrong item on the wrong fix.

Sheckles have nothing to do with Evomon rerolls

You may run into claims that Nature rerolls cost Sheckles. Sheckles are a currency from Grow a Garden 2, not Evomon, so any Sheckles-based price for an Evomon reroll is cross-wiring between two different games and shouldn’t be taken as a real cost.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can you choose a Nature when you catch an Evomon?

No. Every Evomon is assigned a Nature at random the instant you catch it, and you can’t influence which one it gets. The only way to change it afterward is a Nature Reroll Potion.

Can a Nature Reroll Potion target a specific Nature?

No. Each potion gives a completely random new Nature, so there’s no in-game way to aim for one you want. If you need a particular Nature, you reroll until it appears.

What is the best Nature for a physical attacker?

Look for a Nature that raises Attack while cutting a stat the monster doesn’t use, such as Special Attack. Adamant (+10% Attack, −10% Special Attack) is a textbook fit.

What is the best Nature for a special attacker?

You want more Special Attack and can afford to lose physical Attack. Modest (+10% Special Attack, −10% Attack) is the natural pick for special damage dealers.

Should beginners spend rerolls right away?

Usually not. Early-game monsters are often filler you’ll replace, so it’s better to hold potions until you have an Evomon worth keeping and you know its moves and role.

More questions
Are Nature, Trait, and Talent rerolls the same thing?

No. Nature Reroll Potions, Trait Reroll Potions, and Talent Vector are separate items that adjust separate systems. Using one expecting another’s effect just wastes the item.

 

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