Potion Permit V1.4.1 Apr 2026

If you’ve been grinding away in Moonbury for the past year, you know the rhythm by heart: Diagnose the ailment, grab your trusty cauldron, mash some herbs, and cure the patient. But let’s be honest—by the time you hit your 50th hour, even the most charming pixel art starts to feel a little repetitive.

Your dog now actually helps you sniff out hidden digging spots without you having to walk directly on top of them. More importantly, the "Pet" command is no longer finicky. You can now scratch those pixel ears on the first try. This is a buff to morale, not stats, and we love it. The diagnosis mini-game was a point of contention for many players. You’d poke a patient, see a vague cough, and guess between "Cold" or "Lung Rot." v1.4.1 tweaks the symptom severity indicators . Potion Permit v1.4.1

If you already have a post-game save, v1.4.1 is a wonderful reason to finish those last few romance quests. But if you dropped the game six months ago because the grinding felt tedious, this update removes just enough friction to make the healer life enjoyable again. If you’ve been grinding away in Moonbury for

Symptoms now have clearer visual cues on the diagnostic screen (subtle color shifts and icon changes). This reduces the trial-and-error gameplay loop that forced you to waste expensive potions. Now, a seasoned healer actually feels like they know what they’re doing. Let’s be real: Potion Permit chugged hard in the forest areas on handheld devices. v1.4.1 includes specific memory optimization patches . The frame rate drops when it rains? Mostly gone. The long pause when opening the world map? Reduced to a blink. More importantly, the "Pet" command is no longer finicky

Here is why you should fire up your cauldron again this weekend. The biggest silent hero of v1.4.1 is the material tagging system . Previously, you’d run back to your lab, realize you forgot one Sulfur Slime, and have to trudge all the way back to the Glaze Iceberg.

Now? The update introduces smarter material tracking. When you pin a recipe, the game highlights missing ingredients directly in the foraging zones. It sounds small, but it saves you roughly ten minutes of "Did I grab that root? No, that’s a mushroom" per quest. Let’s talk about the four-legged companion. In previous patches, your dog was essentially a cute piece of scenery that followed you. In 1.4.1, the devs have tweaked the companion pathfinding and interaction radius .