Life on the plains and river valleys around the Carpathian Basin was shaped by seasonality, craft specialization, and visible material rituals. Settlements like Rákóczifalva-Bivaly-Tó and Hencida-Csörszárak show clustered longhouses, storage pits and pottery assemblages used for cooking, feasting and exchange. Ceramic styles — cord-impressed and burnished wares in the Alföld and the later ornate Tisza vessels — map social identities, family groups, and regional networks.
Subsistence combined cereal agriculture, domesticated animals (sheep, cattle, pigs), and continued exploitation of wild resources: fishing, hunting and foraging remained important. Burials, when preserved, tell of variable mortuary treatment: isolated graves, clustered cemeteries, and occasional rich grave goods hinting at emerging social differentiation. Archaeobotanical and zooarchaeological data from comparable sites indicate mixed-field systems and seasonal mobility for pasturing.
Craftsmanship extended from bone and stone tools to increasingly sophisticated pottery production. Exchange of raw materials — obsidian, salt, and decorative items — connected lowland Tisza communities to broader networks across Central and Eastern Europe. Archaeological data indicates that cultural changes were often gradual and locally mediated rather than abrupt replacements.
Uncertainty: preservation biases and uneven excavation histories mean some social practices (e.g., house rituals, gendered labor) remain only partially visible.