Task Bar Hero Stages Guide
Use the Task Bar Hero stages guide to read act, stage, level, difficulty, monster context, farming notes, and safe progression checks without inventing drop rates.
Stage records are best used as progression and farming context. Check act, stage number, level, difficulty, linked monsters, run mode, and your current bottleneck before deciding where to farm or push.
Related Task Bar Hero database pages
Featured database records for this guide
These entries come from the synced Task Bar Hero database, so guide decisions can connect back to real item, hero, rune, skill, stage, and material records.
How to read stage records
Start with act, stage number, level, and difficulty fields. These records help you place a run in progression context before comparing rewards or monsters.
A stage name alone does not tell you whether the route is best for your account. Your class, team, gear, run mode, and failure point matter too.
Pushing versus farming
Pushing means testing whether your setup can move forward. Farming means choosing repeatable progress with stable rewards, uptime, or material flow.
Do not judge a farming route from one short session. Track multiple runs and keep class, gear, and rune changes separate.
Stage and monster context
Stage records should be checked beside monster records, especially when a build fails at a specific enemy pattern or boss-like pressure point.
If a stage feels worse than its level suggests, the issue may be monster mix, team role coverage, or survival uptime rather than raw damage only.
Safe farming notes
For farming notes, track stage, run mode, class, team, duration, failure point, and what decision changed since the last run.
Avoid publishing fixed drop rates unless they are verified from a reliable source. This guide focuses on process and database lookup paths.
Task Bar Hero FAQ
Where can I browse Task Bar Hero stage records?
Use the Stages Database for synced act, stage, level, difficulty, and route records.
How should I choose a farming stage?
Choose a stage by stability, run duration, bottleneck, material needs, and whether your team can clear it consistently.
Do stage records prove drop rates?
No. Stage records are progression context and should not be treated as guaranteed drop-rate data.
Which pages should I read with stages?
Read Monsters, Offline vs AFK, Data Collection, Best Team, and the Stages Database together.