What to do
Start by chopping trees and selling the wood for cash. Buy only an upgrade whose benefit you can observe, keep a cash buffer, and check your wood before leaving so you can measure what your axes produce offline.
A first-session My Wood Farm guide for chopping trees, selling wood, choosing an axe upgrade, expanding the plot, and setting up offline progress.
Start by chopping trees and selling the wood for cash. Buy only an upgrade whose benefit you can observe, keep a cash buffer, and check your wood before leaving so you can measure what your axes produce offline.
Keep conditions comparable and use the values shown by your current farm.
Chop the trees available on your plot and watch the wood total increase. Sell a known amount of wood, then compare the cash before and after the sale. That simple check gives you a practical cash-per-wood value without relying on an unverified list.
Tip: Change one thing at a time. Selling and upgrading in the same observation makes the numbers harder to understand.
Record wood, farm for a fixed number of minutes, then record wood again. Divide the gain by minutes. This becomes your current active wood rate and gives every later axe or plot decision a useful baseline.
Before spending cash, note the upgrade cost and what the interface says it changes. After buying, repeat the same timed sample. A useful upgrade should improve the rate or solve a clear bottleneck; a higher price alone does not prove value.
Tip: Enter the current and candidate rates in the payback calculator to estimate how long the extra production takes to recover the cost.
Write down wood before leaving for a known amount of time. On return, record the increase before chopping or selling. The official description confirms offline axe farming, but it does not publish rates or a cap, so your own normal away interval is the best planning input.
If progress feels stalled, run one timed wood sample before spending again. Check whether chopping speed, tree access, selling, or available play time is the real limit, then change only that part and measure once more.
Confirm that you opened Roblox place 79267089300389, titled My Wood Farm, from creator Did I Axe. If that official page also will not launch, check Roblox service status and try again later; this fan site cannot repair Roblox sessions or accounts.
Keeping no buffer can leave you unable to take the next clearly useful upgrade or expansion.
An axe or plot area may look stronger without providing a better rate per cash spent. Measure first.
No code system was verified at launch. Do not plan early progress around random strings or promised rewards.
Chop trees, sell a known amount of wood, and record the cash gained. Then measure a short wood-per-minute sample before buying upgrades.
Choose the affordable upgrade with a measurable benefit and a reasonable payback for your play pattern. Exact axe stats were not publicly verified.
Expand when the current plot is a real bottleneck and the expected benefit beats a rate-improving axe upgrade. Costs and benefits should be checked in-game.
Yes. The official description says axes farm while you are offline, but the rate and cap are unknown, so measure a known away interval.