Palworld Wing Pack Guide: How to Get, Use & Craft Wing Cells
- The Wing Pack is Palworld 1.0’s endgame glider that gives you on-demand powered flight without a flying Pal — so all five party slots stay free for combat Pals. It runs on Wing Cell fuel.
- It unlocks at Technology Level 80 for 9 Ancient Technology Points — the single most expensive ancient-tech unlock. The Wing Cell fuel recipe is a separate Level-80 unlock, but it costs only ~5 of the abundant regular Technology Points, so the pack itself is your only real ancient-tech expense.
- Craft the Wing Pack at the Ancient Workbench from 30 Paldium Fragment, 6 Paloxite Ingot, 20 AI Core, 20 Thermal Core and 10 Ancient Civilization Core — which means you need the endgame World Tree and Sunreach for the materials. Wing Cells are cheap by comparison: 10 Mythical Wood + 20 Crude Oil each.
- In use, hold Boost (Shift / LT / L2) to burn a Wing Cell for true powered flight — you can climb, dive and turn at speed. With no fuel it’s just a normal glider (you only descend). It costs no stamina, and running out doesn’t drop you — it reverts to a glider so you coast down and reload.

The Wing Pack is the closest Palworld 1.0 gets to a personal jetpack: a glider you equip in your glider slot that, with fuel, gives you real powered flight — climbing, diving and boosting through the air without a single flying Pal in your party. The catch is that it’s an endgame unlock and it runs on Wing Cells. Here’s how to get it, how to fuel it, and how to fly it.
What the Wing Pack does
The datamine describes it simply: a portable glider that enables flight, consuming Wing Cells to propel you through the skies. Two things make it worth chasing:
- It frees your party. Because it’s gear in your glider slot — not a party member — you no longer have to carry a flying Pal for traversal. All five Pal slots stay open for fighters or workers.
- It’s on-demand. There’s no summon step. Deploy it like any glider (jump, then open it mid-air) and, with fuel, it becomes powered flight you can trigger instantly — great for reacting mid-fall or hopping between Sunreach’s floating islands.
How to get the Wing Pack
The Wing Pack sits at the very top of the tech tree, in the Ancient Technology column:
| Detail | |
|---|---|
| Unlocks at | Technology Level 80 (final tier) |
| Cost | 9 Ancient Technology Points — the most expensive single ancient-tech unlock |
| Fuel unlock | The Wing Cell recipe is a separate Level-80 tech — but ~5 regular Technology Points (not Ancient) |
| Crafted at | Ancient Workbench |
Ancient Technology Points are the boss-earned currency (from Alpha bosses, Tower Bosses and some dungeon chests) — not the regular Technology Points you get from levelling. You need the pack and its fuel recipe, but only the pack costs Ancient Technology Points (9); the Wing Cell recipe is ~5 of the abundant regular Technology Points. So your ancient-tech bill here is just the 9 — you can’t fly without the fuel tech, but it barely dents your boss-earned points.
Wing Pack recipe (Ancient Workbench):
| Material | Qty |
|---|---|
| Paldium Fragment | 30 |
| Paloxite Ingot | 6 |
| AI Core | 20 |
| Thermal Core | 20 |
| Ancient Civilization Core | 10 |
That recipe quietly requires the endgame regions: Paloxite Ingots come from Paloxite ore at the World Tree (smelted with Soralite from Sunreach and World Tree Holy Water at an Ancient Furnace), and the cores are late-game materials. In other words, the Wing Pack is a genuine endgame reward — you’ll have cleared most of the game before you can build it.
How to craft Wing Cells (the fuel)
Wing Cells are cheap compared to the pack itself. At the Ancient Workbench:
- Recipe: 10 Mythical Wood + 20 Crude Oil per Wing Cell.
- Where the materials come from: Mythical Wood is chopped from trees in the World Tree endgame zone (a higher-tier axe yields more). Crude Oil is the easy one — run a Crude Oil Extractor (it needs power rather than Pals) and you can mass-produce it; it also drops occasionally from Syndicate Thugs.
- They stack to 9,999 and weigh almost nothing (0.025 each), so once your oil pipeline is running you can carry a huge reserve. Crafting is the only way to get them — no merchant or drop source is documented, so keep a stock crafted.
How to use it: controls & flight
Slot the Wing Pack into your glider slot (it replaces any other glider), then deploy it like a normal glider — jump, then press jump again in the air to open it. From there:
| Action | Keyboard | Controller (Xbox / PS) |
|---|---|---|
| Rise / angle up | Hold Space | Hold A / ✕ |
| Descend | Hold Ctrl | Hold B / ○ |
| Steer left / right | A / D | Left stick |
| Boost (burns a Wing Cell) | Shift | LT / L2 |
The key mechanic is the Boost:
- With fuel, boosting is true powered flight — you rocket in the direction you’re facing and can climb, dive and change direction at speed. This is the first Palworld glider that lets you actually gain altitude.
- With no fuel, it’s just a glider — you can angle up all you like, but you’ll only ever descend. Pointing skyward on an empty tank gets you nowhere.
- Fuel drains while you boost, not per-use — the longer you hold boost, the faster a cell burns, so short boosts with gliding in between stretch each cell much further.
- It costs no stamina at all, so you can stay airborne until the fuel runs out.
- Running out doesn’t drop you. When a cell is spent, the Wing Pack simply reverts to a normal glider, so you coast safely down to land and pop in another cell.
Wing Pack vs a flying Pal
It’s not a straight upgrade — it’s a trade-off:
- The Wing Pack wins when you want your five party slots free for combat Pals, need instant flight with no summon, want stamina-free airtime, or are threading between the Sunreach sky islands where quick vertical hops matter.
- A flying Pal wins for long, sustained travel — a mount flies indefinitely, while the Wing Pack is fuel-limited and asks you to keep crafting Wing Cells. If you’d rather not manage fuel and materials, a good flying mount is still the low-maintenance option.
Is it worth it?
For endgame players, yes — freeing all five Pal slots and getting on-demand flight is a real quality-of-life and combat-loadout win, especially around the Sky Islands. Just go in clear-eyed: it’s the priciest ancient-tech unlock, the fuel is a second unlock, and you’ll be farming Mythical Wood and Crude Oil to keep flying. It’s a convenience-and-loadout upgrade, not an infinite-travel replacement for flying Pals. If you’re still mid-game, there’s nothing to do here yet — it’s a Level-80 reward.
Frequently asked questions
How do you get the Wing Pack in Palworld?
Unlock it in the Technology tree at Level 80 for 9 Ancient Technology Points, then craft it at the Ancient Workbench from 30 Paldium Fragment, 6 Paloxite Ingot, 20 AI Core, 20 Thermal Core and 10 Ancient Civilization Core. You also need to unlock the Wing Cell recipe (~5 regular Technology Points) to have fuel.
How do you craft Wing Cells?
At the Ancient Workbench, from 10 Mythical Wood + 20 Crude Oil each. Mythical Wood comes from the World Tree; Crude Oil is easily mass-produced with a Crude Oil Extractor. Craft a big stack — it’s the only way to get them.
Can the Wing Pack fly upward, or just glide?
Both, depending on fuel. With Wing Cells, boosting is powered flight and you can climb. With no fuel, it’s a normal glider and you can only descend.
Does the Wing Pack use stamina?
No — flight costs no stamina. Your only limit is Wing Cell fuel, and running out just turns it back into a glider (you won’t fall).
Is the Wing Pack worth it?
For endgame players, yes: it frees all five Pal slots and gives instant flight. But it’s the most expensive ancient-tech unlock, needs a separate fuel unlock, and requires ongoing material farming — so it’s a convenience upgrade, not a replacement for a flying mount’s unlimited range.
The bottom line
The Wing Pack is a proper endgame toy: pay the Ancient Technology Points, build it and its Wing Cell fuel, and you get personal powered flight that keeps your whole party free for fighting. Feather the boost to make each cell last, keep a Crude-Oil-and-Mythical-Wood pipeline running, and remember that an empty tank still glides — so you’ll always make it back to the ground in one piece.
More Palworld 1.0, explained: the full 1.0 patch notes, the tower boss guide (where you earn Ancient Technology Points), the new weapons guide, and the best base locations.