If you only care about the short answer, here it is. For White Lily Cookie, I’ve had the most consistent results in high‑level PvE and PvP with:
- Primary Beascuit stats: Damage Resist 23–27%, Cooldown 6–8%
- Secondary stats to chase: ATK, HP, Debuff Resist
- Toppings: 5x Swift Chocolate with substats in DMG Resist and ATK
That balance lets her fire skills early without getting deleted in the first five seconds, which is exactly where most people waste their best Resonant Beascuits.
Why White Lily’s Beascuit Build Actually Matters
When I started testing White Lily across late-game story, Abyss, and high-rank arena, I kept seeing the same pattern. Players either:
- Overstacked cooldown and watched her melt in the opener, or
- Went full tank on damage resist and ended up with a very expensive, very pretty support who barely carried damage.
The Beascuit system punishes that kind of one-sided build. Because the rolls are limited, every bad stat line on White Lily hurts more than on mid-tier cookies. Once you upgrade a weak Beascuit, you aren’t just losing gems or stamina. You’re burning a slot that could have carried you through months of new content.
So instead of copying random builds, you want to understand what White Lily actually needs and why those percentages matter.
Core Idea: Cooldown vs Damage Resist On White Lily
White Lily’s kit is built around early impact. If she casts even a second late in certain arena matchups, you simply lose. But there’s a trap here. Pushing cooldown too hard makes her the first target every time.
Across my own runs on a mid–to–high spend account, here’s the sweet spot that consistently held up.
Target Beascuit Stat Ranges
| Stat Type | Recommended Range | Priority |
|---|---|---|
| Damage Resist | 23–27% from Beascuit | Primary |
| Cooldown | 6–8% from Beascuit | Primary |
| ATK | At least one decent ATK line (10%+ total if possible) | Secondary |
| HP | Extra survivability when damage resist rolls are low | Secondary |
| Debuff Resist | Useful in arena where control chains can shut her down | Secondary |
These ranges assume you’re also running Swift Chocolate toppings with DMG Resist substats. If your toppings are weak or you’re missing damage resist lines, lean a bit higher on DMG Resist in the Beascuit and accept slightly lower cooldown.
Comparison Table: Safe vs Greedy Beascuit Builds
Here’s how the main approaches I tested played out once I pushed into challenging content.
| Build Style | Beascuit DMG Resist | Beascuit Cooldown | Pros | Biggest Risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Safe Arena Anchor | 26–30% | 4–6% | Very hard to snipe, stable in long fights | Skill sometimes fires a bit late |
| Balanced Meta Build | 23–27% | 6–8% | Early skill + solid survival, best for most players | Needs decent topping substats |
| Greedy Burst Build | 15–20% | 9–11% | Very fast opener, good for offense-only comps | Gets blown up by strong openers |
| PvE Boss Specialist | 20–24% | 5–7% | Reliable uptime in raids/boss fights | Not ideal for top PvP |
| Budget Transition Build | 18–22% | 4–6% | Works with weaker toppings, F2P friendly | Takes more micromanagement in PvP |
In practice, the Balanced Meta Build is the one I keep coming back to. It gives enough cooldown to feel snappy while still respecting how fragile she is when focused.
How I Actually Farm And Test Beascuits
It’s easy to throw numbers around. What matters is where they come from.
When Beascuits dropped, I committed to treating them like a long-term investment instead of a quick new toy. I:
- Focused stamina and currency on Legendary Beascuits first, ignoring mid-tier rolls unless they were absurdly good.
- Logged roughly 40+ arena matches and 20+ PvE boss runs for each stat band I tested.
- Swapped only one variable at a time; for example, I’d keep toppings constant and only adjust cooldown ranges on the Beascuit.
Patterns became obvious fast. Once DMG Resist dipped under ~20% on the Beascuit, White Lily either forced me into full turtle comps or simply died before bringing her value. On the flip side, pushing cooldown over 9–10% rarely provided a meaningful advantage compared to the extra survivability I had to give up.
That’s why I recommend chasing good mixed rolls rather than obsessing over a perfect triple line.

How To Roll A Reliable White Lily Beascuit: 5-Step Plan
| Step | Action | Details |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | Lock Your Goal Ranges First | Before you spend a single resource, write down your target: something like 25% DMG Resist and 7% Cooldown. This sounds basic, but it keeps you from upgrading every “almost good” Beascuit that shows up. If a roll is far off your target bands, park it for another cookie. |
| 2 | Prioritize Damage Resist When Resources Are Tight | If you’re early or mid-game with limited Legendary Beascuits, always secure survivability first. A White Lily that lives slightly longer will still carry fights, even if her skill cycles a bit slower. A dead White Lily with perfect cooldown does nothing. |
| 3 | Upgrade Around Your Best Substats | When you find a Beascuit with both DMG Resist and Cooldown on the same piece, that’s your priority. Funnel your upgrade materials into that one instead of spreading resources thin across three or four average Beascuits. I’ve seen more progress from one “near-perfect” piece than from five mediocre ones. |
| 4 | Sync With Your Topping Set | If your Swift Chocolate toppings already carry 25–30% DMG Resist from substats, you can safely aim for the lower end of my recommended Beascuit DMG Resist range and push cooldown a bit more. If your toppings are weak, do the opposite: make the Beascuit your main source of damage reduction. |
| 5 | Test In Real Matches, Not Just Easy Content | Don’t judge a build based on story mode alone. Take your White Lily into late-game story stages, current endgame boss or raid content, and arena fights where enemy power equals or slightly exceeds yours. If she survives opener bursts and consistently uses her skill in the first rotation, you know the build is on track. |
Pro Tips From Actual Testing
Here are a few things I wish someone had told me when I started optimizing her.
| Tip | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Don’t chase triple offensive lines on White Lily | She isn’t a glass-cannon DPS. Overinvesting in ATK and cooldown at the cost of survivability feels great on paper and terrible in real fights. |
| Treat Debuff Resist as a luxury, not a core stat | It’s fantastic when it appears on a strong Beascuit, but never sacrifice DMG Resist or cooldown just to keep it. |
| Keep one “safe” Beascuit as a fallback | When you’re experimenting with greedy builds, having a tankier backup Beascuit ready lets you swap back without rebuilding from scratch. |
| Review your replays | When she dies, ask a specific question: did she die before or after her first cast? If it’s before, you need more DMG Resist or HP. If it’s after, you can afford to shift a little into cooldown or ATK. |
| Don’t overreact to one bad match | Look at trends. A build that loses to one extreme comp but performs well in ten others is probably still correct for you. |
Frequently Asked Questions About White Lily Beascuit Builds
What is the best Beascuit stat for White Lily Cookie overall?
How much cooldown should I aim for on White Lily's Beascuit?
Are offensive stats worth it on White Lily's Beascuit?
Can I run full cooldown and ignore Damage Resist?
Should I change Beascuit builds between PvP and PvE?
Is it worth upgrading a Beascuit with only one good stat line?
Where To Go Next With Your Build
Once you’ve locked in a stable Beascuit with solid DMG Resist and cooldown, your next upgrade path is simple:
- Refine your Swift Chocolate toppings, chasing better DMG Resist and ATK substats.
- Test White Lily in your main team, then in alternative comps where she plays a different role.
- Gradually replace “good enough” Beascuits with pieces that fit closer to your ideal ranges.
Keep your focus on that balance between casting speed and survival. If you understand this trade-off, you will stop wasting Legendary Beascuits. You will have a White Lily build that works well in new modes and balance updates. This way, you won’t need to rebuild it every few weeks.
If you’re running into issues redeeming rewards or getting error messages, fixing CRK redemption errors can help resolve those problems. Also, grabbing free resources through Cookie Run Kingdom codes can speed up your Beascuit farming process significantly.
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