Are You Playing RAID: Shadow Legends? Then Activate The Lootday Quests!

When it comes to mobile games with long-term progression, RAID: Shadow Legends is almost impossible to ignore.

Raid Lootday
You can earn additional rewards on Lootday for playing RAID: Shadow Legends! | © Plarium

Over the years, RAID: Shadow Legends has become one of the best-known mobile RPGs out there, mainly thanks to its deep progression systems, daily objectives, and long-term milestones.

That’s exactly why RAID is also a great example of how we think Lootday should work long term. Not as a traditional “make money fast” platform, but more like a quest system that complements games people are already playing anyway.

Why RAID fits the Lootday idea so well

Anyone who has played RAID for a while already knows the loop: grinding champions, leveling your account, completing daily objectives, and slowly working your way toward bigger milestones.

And that’s exactly the type of game that works perfectly with Lootday.

Instead of creating completely artificial tasks, the idea is often simply to connect additional rewards to progression goals you’re already working toward anyway.

So if you’re already investing time into RAID, why not get rewarded for some of that progress at the same time?

Desktop and Android: the RAID quests are different

Right now, RAID: Shadow Legends is available on Lootday as both a desktop and Android offer. One important thing to know: the quests and rewards differ quite a bit between the two versions.

The desktop version is more focused on long-term progression. Tasks include things like:

  • account levels
  • arena rankings
  • opening specific shards
  • long-term progression over multiple days or weeks

Some milestones go as far as reaching Level 70 or climbing into Gold Arena ranks. There are also additional rewards tied to certain purchases or rarer shard openings.

The Android version is more compact and focused on shorter milestones instead. Hero upgrades and early-game progression play a much bigger role there.

Because of that, both versions can appeal to different types of players depending on how you like to play RAID.

Which version makes more sense for you?

If you enjoy long-term progression systems, Arena grinding, and optimizing your account over time, the desktop version will probably fit the Lootday concept better for you.

The Android version, on the other hand, is more suitable for players who prefer shorter goals or mainly play RAID on mobile.

In general, it’s always worth carefully checking the individual milestones before starting. Some quests can be completed fairly casually, while others require much more active grinding and time investment.

And that’s really the core idea behind Lootday: you decide which quests and progression goals are actually worth it for you.

Tracking matters

Especially in games with multiple milestones, proper tracking is extremely important.

That’s why you should:

  • always launch and download RAID directly through the Lootday link
  • carefully read the requirements for each step
  • avoid switching between different sources during the process

Doing this helps ensure that your progress is tracked correctly and rewards are properly credited.

These are exactly the kinds of integrations we want to expand

RAID is just one example of the types of games that fit naturally with Lootday.

Long term, we want Lootday to feel more like a gaming companion: if you’re already playing, you should be able to activate relevant quests and earn rewards alongside your normal progression.

Not as intrusive advertising, but as a natural extension of games you’re already investing time into.

That’s also why community feedback matters so much to us. The better we understand which games, genres, and quest systems people actually enjoy, the better we can continue building Lootday in the future.

If you already play RAID – or simply enjoy games with long-term grinding, daily quests, and clear progression milestones – then Lootday quests can feel like a very natural addition to that experience.

Florian Frick

Flo is studying Sports-journalism and combining his passion for writing and esports at EarlyGame. He is kind of addicted to CS. To say he can get emotional whilst watching his favorite teams would be an understatement....