The Grow a Garden Bizzy Bees Part 2 update dropped on May 16, 2026, and it brought a lot more than we expected. If you played through Part 1 and thought the event was winding down, think again. The developers layered an entirely new progression system on top of everything we already had, and the community is still figuring out the best ways to take advantage of it. We break down everything you need to know right here.
What Is the Bizzy Bees Part 2 Update?
Part 2 is a continuation of the Bizzy Bee Event 2026 in Grow a Garden, which originally launched on May 9, 2026. The key thing to understand is that nothing from Part 1 was removed. Honey Coins, the Honey Compressor, Bee Eggs, and the Empress Bee Upgrade Tree all remain fully active. Part 2 simply adds new content on top of what we already have.
The three big additions in this update are:
- Royal Jelly, a brand new event currency earned through Queen Bee quests
- Princess Anjelly, a new NPC who runs the Royal Jelly Shop behind the Egg Shop
- The Royal Jelly Incubator, a crafting machine that converts seeds into jelly variant seeds
This approach of layering rather than replacing is actually smart design. It means the time you put into Part 1 still counts, and players who stayed active going into Part 2 have a clear head start.

How to Get Royal Jelly
Royal Jelly is the new currency driving everything in Part 2. You earn it by completing quests from the Queen Bee, who now offers three quests at a time that refresh every hour. The quests come in three difficulty tiers, easy, medium, and hard, and each one pays out a different amount of jelly.

Easy quests ask you to do things like pollinate 25 plants, fill the honey compressor once, hatch a bee egg, or harvest 25 plants from your honey garden. These are very manageable and reward around 15 Royal Jelly each. Medium quests scale things up, asking for around 75 pollinations or more, and pay roughly 35 jelly. Hard quests, like pollinating 200 plants or achieving seven godly pollinations, pay 75 jelly each.
The honest reality is that grinding Royal Jelly takes time. If you want to craft a jelly variant seed using a high rarity seed, you will need a lot of it. A Romanesco seed, for example, costs around 1,800 Royal Jelly to convert. The rarer your seed, the higher the cost. Our advice is to start with cheaper seeds to understand how the machine works before you commit anything valuable.
The Royal Jelly Incubator Explained
The Incubator is the star mechanic of Part 2. You place any non-honey seed into the machine, spend Royal Jelly based on the seed’s rarity, and after a set crafting time you receive a jelly variant version of that seed. Honey seeds cannot be submitted, so stick to regular seeds.
When a jelly variant seed grows and produces fruit, those plants have an increased chance of gaining the Jelly Gem mutation. The Jelly Gem mutation gives a 25x value multiplier on top of your base crop value, which is genuinely strong. Think of it like the gold or rainbow variant mechanic, but tied specifically to this event.
One thing we want to point out that most guides skip over: do not rush this. If you blow your first 2,500 Royal Jelly on a pollen vine just to see what it does, you will be behind players who tested carefully and saved for a higher rarity seed. Test with something cheap first, understand the mutation rates, then decide what to convert.
New Seeds Added in Part 2
The Grow a Garden update added four new plants to the game, and we actually think a couple of them are worth your time even if you are not chasing max value.
Pollen Puffball is the easiest to get and sells for around 22,000 to 28,000 depending on size without any sprinkler help. It is a rare tier plant and a decent early option. Grape Droplet is a legendary seed that looks visually stunning, like a grape dipped in honey, and sells for roughly 45,000 to 81,000. Honey Hollow is a divine plant available through the old Honey Coin shop and sells quite well, ranging from 167,000 to over 320,000. If you are a newer player trying to build up your coin stash, this plant is genuinely worth growing.
The standout is Pohutukawa, a new prismatic seed available in the Royal Jelly Shop for 20,000 Royal Jelly, making it the most expensive item in the shop. It sells for 240,000 on the small end and close to 400,000 for larger versions without sprinklers. The tree design also looks excellent, similar in feel to the Candy Blossom but with its own identity.

New Pets: King Bee, Carpenter Bee, and Honey Badger
Part 2 brings three new pets, and understanding what each one actually does matters more than just buying whichever costs the most.
The King Bee is a divine pet purchased from the Royal Jelly Shop. Every 20 minutes, six random fruits in your garden receive the Pollinated mutation. Every 10 minutes, all pollinated fruits up to a maximum of 50 get a 15 percent chance to also receive the Honey Gem mutation, which carries a 33x value multiplier. On top of that, every fruit mutated grants 200 bonus XP to all pets and grows eight random plants by one minute and twenty seconds. King Bee works passively, which is exactly why it is worth prioritizing. You do not need to micromanage your garden to get value out of it.

The Carpenter Bee has a more niche use case. Every eight minutes, it converts a pollinated or honey glazed fruit into a bee castle themed cosmetic item. If you enjoy building and decorating your garden, this pet is a treasure. For pure farming efficiency, King Bee is the stronger pick.

The Honey Badger sits in the regular Honey Coin shop. Every eight minutes, it consumes a fruit with the Honey Glazed or Pollinated mutation and either spreads that effect to two other fruits or restores 16 percent hunger to another pet. It ignores favorited fruits, which is a nice quality-of-life feature.

Royal Jelly Pet Mutation Shard
We also got a new Grow a Garden Pet Mutation Shard in this update called the Pet Mutation Shard Royal Jelly. Applying it to a pet gives that pet an additional 7 XP per second for every Royal Jelly plant in your garden, up to a maximum of 50 plants. This is a great long-term investment for anyone who plans to fill their garden with jelly variant crops, since the XP scaling gets meaningful at higher plant counts.
New Cosmetics and the Royal Jelly Fountain
The Royal Jelly Fountain is a new cosmetic item that periodically applies the Jelly Gem mutation to crops in your garden. It is both decorative and functional, which makes it one of the better cosmetic pickups in any recent update.
The update also introduced a full set of Bee Castle cosmetics, including walls, stairs, a dome, a tower, and more. These are farmable through the Carpenter Bee, which means you do not need to buy them directly. There is also a new cosmetic placement system that gives you precise stud-by-stud control over where you place decorations, a small but genuinely welcome quality-of-life improvement for builders.
Our Take on the Update
Grow a Garden Bizzy Bees Part 2 is a resource management update more than anything else. The players who will get the most out of it are the ones who do not rush. Save your better seeds, do your Queen Bee quests consistently, and let your Royal Jelly stack up before committing to a conversion. The Jelly Gem mutation at 25x and the Honey Gem from King Bee at 33x are both strong enough to shift how competitive players approach late-event farming, and that is worth taking seriously.
If you are still grinding Honey Coins from Part 1, keep going. Both systems run in parallel, and you do not have to abandon one for the other. Focus on building your jelly stash steadily and use it on seeds that will give you the best return.
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I am Himanshu Cheeta, a gaming content writer. I come from a background in Law, but always wanted to do Engineering, but now writing gaming content 🙂 I have been an active gamer for 10 years, covering titles across Roblox, mobile, and PC platforms. My aim is to break down complex game mechanics in a way that’s easy for any player to understand. I focus on guides, news, and codes, and play the games I write about to make sure every article reflects real in-game experience.
