How to Beat Feiopars in Lethal Company: Tips & Strategies

How to Beat Feiopars in Lethal Company: Tips & Strategies

The trees went quiet, and my headset hummed with nothing but breath and leaves. You freeze because the growl arrives from behind your right shoulder—slow, patient, impossible to miss. In that pause you learn the Feiopar stalks people who stop paying attention.

Where to find Feiopars in Lethal Company

On Adamance I passed three ruined supply crates and still heard nothing—then a pair of glowing eyes answered from the pines.

Feiopar approaching player head-on
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

Feiopars are a forest-moon problem. They spawn only on Adamance, March, and Vow, preferring dense canopy where their movement is hidden and their growl carries. You won’t see them as often as Tulip Snakes or Giant Sapsuckers—their spawn rate is low—so encounters feel rarer and sharper.

Most forest moons in v80 sit at threat level B or C, so if you’re collecting salvage you’ll usually meet a lone Feiopar rather than a full menagerie of Eyeless Dogs and Forest Keepers. That makes them more predictable, if you know what to listen for.

Where do Feiopars spawn in Lethal Company?

Short answer: forest moons only. If you’re hunting Adamance, March, or Vow, expect a stealth predator; elsewhere you probably won’t. Community discussion on Steam and Discord often confirms the same three locations when players post clips or organize testing sessions.

Feiopar behavior

I learned to trust the audio cue after I moved through a clearing and the noise shifted from distant to inside my headphones.

Feiopar approaching player in a circle
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

The Feiopar is a stalking entity with one brutal goal: close the gap and pounce. It growls as it moves, using tree trunks and underbrush to break line of sight. If you lose focus, it inches closer; if you keep watching, it hesitates. Its single attack is a claw-lunge that can dispatch a player faster than a Sapsucker’s prolonged drain.

When threatened—if you run at it, shine a light, or swing your shovel—the Feiopar will climb. It vanishes into the canopy and hops from tree to tree, retreating until you lose sight of it. It threads the trunks like silk through a loom, resurfacing only when it thinks you’ve stopped paying attention.

Feiopar leaping from tree to tree
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

If you haven’t heard it, watch for thin motion at treeline and its glowing green eyes. It will drop on anyone standing beneath its perch. Audio gear matters here: a decent headset—Logitech or SteelSeries—lets you place the growl before the sightline betrays it.

Solutions to dealing with the Feiopar in Lethal Company

One night on Vow, I forced a Feiopar into the trees by charging it with my flashlight on; the silence that followed felt almost triumphant.

Close up of Feipar's glowing eyes
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

Feiopars attack oblivious or isolated players. Your job is to deny that profile. Keep them in sight; don’t turn your back while you loot. If you approach confidently—torch on, walking forward—the Feiopar usually retreats into the canopy rather than risk an exposed fight.

Be aggressive in posture: charge, shine a light directly, or sprint at it. The flashlight appears to scare it away from the ship interior, and it will avoid entering the ship. That makes the flashlight your most reliable deterrent; treat your beam as a lighthouse for a small boat.

How do you stop a Feiopar?

Force it up a tree and then refuse to be bait. Run toward it, hit it three times with a Shovel while it still moves on the ground, or keep the light on until it climbs away. If it escapes to the canopy, don’t stand under likely perches—circle wide and approach from the opposite direction to buy a safe corridor between ship and entrance.

Feiopar at bottom of hill, looking up at player
Screenshot by Moyens I/O

Play in groups when you can; Feiopars prefer isolated targets. Share audio clips on Steam or the Lethal Company Discord if you find a weird pattern—Reddit threads and Moyens I/O write-ups often catch novel behaviors faster than patch notes. If you’re testing behaviors, record with OBS and upload clips for the community to analyze.

Finally, don’t camp the ship’s roof. That spot makes the creature hyper-aggressive in many recorded encounters and increases the odds of a fast, fatal leap. Walk confidently, carry your light, and treat every rustle as a deadline—you want to appear as dangerous as the forest thinks you are, not the other way around.

So when you hear that low growl under the pines, will you stare it down or run?