What are the most profitable meals and elixirs I can cook?What is the best way to get rupees?How do I cook meals?Does salting your cooking change the effects/regen hearts of a recipe?What do the different monster parts do when making potions in Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild?Great Plateau Only RecipesHow do I make a high-level dish?How frequently can I expect to cook “special” meals?What are the requirements for unlocking Epona?How do the Attack Boost bonuses from Foods and Elixirs work?What Amiibos can be used and what are their effects?What are the possible 'Random Boss' encounters and is there a reliable way to trigger them?What are the cooldowns for the Divine Beasts' Abilities?What is the most effective way to grind for drops from the three spirit dragons?What are all possible effects, and how they function?What are the Horses' Temperaments, and what do they change?What are the best and easiest food/elixirs for stamina increase?
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What are the most profitable meals and elixirs I can cook?
What is the best way to get rupees?How do I cook meals?Does salting your cooking change the effects/regen hearts of a recipe?What do the different monster parts do when making potions in Legend of Zelda Breath of the Wild?Great Plateau Only RecipesHow do I make a high-level dish?How frequently can I expect to cook “special” meals?What are the requirements for unlocking Epona?How do the Attack Boost bonuses from Foods and Elixirs work?What Amiibos can be used and what are their effects?What are the possible 'Random Boss' encounters and is there a reliable way to trigger them?What are the cooldowns for the Divine Beasts' Abilities?What is the most effective way to grind for drops from the three spirit dragons?What are all possible effects, and how they function?What are the Horses' Temperaments, and what do they change?What are the best and easiest food/elixirs for stamina increase?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I know how to make delicious food and handy elixirs. I've also found that I have a ton of some ingredients, while others are more scarce. And most importantly, rupees seem extremely scarce this early on in the game.
I've also noticed that cooked food tends to sell for much more than the cost of the component ingredients. What recipes offer the best margins in this respect? I'm curious about recipes that offer high yield using commonly farmable ingredients like Bokoblin parts and butterflies and apples and bird legs, but also especially any that offer a high multiplier on the value of rupees spent purchasing component ingredients, if any.
zelda-breath-of-the-wild
add a comment |
I know how to make delicious food and handy elixirs. I've also found that I have a ton of some ingredients, while others are more scarce. And most importantly, rupees seem extremely scarce this early on in the game.
I've also noticed that cooked food tends to sell for much more than the cost of the component ingredients. What recipes offer the best margins in this respect? I'm curious about recipes that offer high yield using commonly farmable ingredients like Bokoblin parts and butterflies and apples and bird legs, but also especially any that offer a high multiplier on the value of rupees spent purchasing component ingredients, if any.
zelda-breath-of-the-wild
5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
4
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45
add a comment |
I know how to make delicious food and handy elixirs. I've also found that I have a ton of some ingredients, while others are more scarce. And most importantly, rupees seem extremely scarce this early on in the game.
I've also noticed that cooked food tends to sell for much more than the cost of the component ingredients. What recipes offer the best margins in this respect? I'm curious about recipes that offer high yield using commonly farmable ingredients like Bokoblin parts and butterflies and apples and bird legs, but also especially any that offer a high multiplier on the value of rupees spent purchasing component ingredients, if any.
zelda-breath-of-the-wild
I know how to make delicious food and handy elixirs. I've also found that I have a ton of some ingredients, while others are more scarce. And most importantly, rupees seem extremely scarce this early on in the game.
I've also noticed that cooked food tends to sell for much more than the cost of the component ingredients. What recipes offer the best margins in this respect? I'm curious about recipes that offer high yield using commonly farmable ingredients like Bokoblin parts and butterflies and apples and bird legs, but also especially any that offer a high multiplier on the value of rupees spent purchasing component ingredients, if any.
zelda-breath-of-the-wild
zelda-breath-of-the-wild
edited Apr 13 '17 at 12:09
Community♦
1
1
asked Mar 7 '17 at 17:39
LessPop_MoreFizzLessPop_MoreFizz
63.8k74320471
63.8k74320471
5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
4
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45
add a comment |
5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
4
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45
5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
4
4
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45
add a comment |
9 Answers
9
active
oldest
votes
The name, effects, and image of the food or elixir you produce is not important. The sell value of your cooking is entirely dependent on only two factors:
- The value of the ingredients you use
- How many ingredients you use
The price is determined by the following formula:
- Add the value of the ingredients together.
Multiply this by:
- 1.5 if you used one ingredient
- 1.75 if you used two
- 2.05 for three
- 2.4 for four
- 2.8 for five
Round the resulting number to the next ten. (101 -> 110, 87 -> 90, etc)
Here's an example:
You cook four Gourmet Meats. Each meat sells for 35 rupees. Add them together and you get 140. Multiply this by 2.4 because you use four ingredients. This gives you 336, so you need to round it up to the next ten, which is 340, the sale price.
So the most profitable meals and elixirs you can cook are simply the ones made with five of the most expensive ingredients you can find.
Just make sure they actually produce something edible, because if you end up with "Dubious Food" or "Rock-Hard Food", they will sell for next to nothing.
Source: GameFAQs
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
|
show 1 more comment
For meals, this reddit post describes a good way to make money. It describes getting lots of boar and deer meat, then making 5-meat skewers (use the same time of meat for each, if possible). Supposedly, the deer skewers sell for 210 and the boar meat ones sell for 120, and this is one of the get rich quick schemes the game offers.
From the post, here is a fast way to gather meat:
Near Hateno Village, there is farmer named Dantz up on the large hillside pitching hay under a horse stable who offers a mini-game to hunt deer that can be spammed and will reward you with 5 rupees or 20 rupees depending on the number of deer you kill in the time limit.
This by itself is not the money maker, though. All the meat you get from the animals you kill is. To ensure maximum meat gain, a three-spread-shot bow is the best choice. However, you can also get a Soldier's Bow on the crate of the east side of the Tabantha Bridge Stable, which will kill the animals in one shot.
It's recommended to either wear the full Sheikah set or get other stealth buffs (potions, etc) to make this easier.
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
add a comment |
I have found that creating elixirs using specific monster parts yields extremely expensive potions. I've experimented with several parts, but it seems like the monster guts are the most profitable. Combine 4 guts with 1 bug/frog/etc to create an elixir. The effect of the elixir doesn't matter, since your goal is to make money. (To maximize profits, the effect ingredient should be something worth more money, such as a hearty lizard or a tireless frog; however, you'll only be making an extra 50 or so rupees, so it's probably not worth using rare ingredients here - stick to darners and fireflies.)
You can use any guts you find, but in my opinion the most cost effective are Molduga and Lynel guts. When combining 4 guts with 1 elixir ingredient, the resulting potions will be worth about 1200 rupees (300 per gut) or 2400 (600 per gut) for Molduga or Lynel guts respectively.
Whatever you do, do not use star fragments or dragon pieces in your crafted food/elixirs if your goal is profit. Even though the base value of these items is very high, for some reason this value doesn't seem to get included in the price of the resulting food item.
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
add a comment |
I personally hunt for Raw Gourmet Meat and Raw Prime Meat mainly around the snowy north west fields of the map from wolves, moose and the fur rhinos using boomerangs on foot or halberds and spears on horse back (quick press of the X button to jump dismount and gather before they freeze in colder weather). I gather weapons from the Ice Lizalfos in the area (fire arrows ftw here, use dismount quick draw if riding your horse).
I cook a Meat Skewer from 4 Raw Gourmet and 1 Raw Prime Meat to get a 25+ Skewer worth 440. I look at it as 100 per each Gourmet and 40 for the Prime and I can cook it near Beedle and sell it as many times a day as I want, Cheers Beedle. Hope this helps, I haven't really looked too far into other recipes because this just worked well for me early on.
add a comment |
Tried and true:
- 2 x Raw Gourmet Meat
- 2 x Rock Salt
- 1 x Hearty Truffle
= 230 Rupees
I sold mine to the market lady on the south eastern beach but I've sold them elsewhere too. I feel like I ran across a higher price selling meal but can't remember the recipe...I think it was a fluke.
add a comment |
Get the Drillshaft from the quest in the Hot Springs in Goron City, then use it to break mineral deposits in one hit. Sell them to a shop to make a profit.
New contributor
add a comment |
5 raw gourmet meats cooked = full recovery meat skewer= $490 best ive found so far other than a $500 diamond
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
add a comment |
Five endura carrots cooked at blood moon sells for 420 rupees.
add a comment |
1 raw gourmet meat + 4 endura carrots = 440 rupees.
Video here.
add a comment |
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9 Answers
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9 Answers
9
active
oldest
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active
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The name, effects, and image of the food or elixir you produce is not important. The sell value of your cooking is entirely dependent on only two factors:
- The value of the ingredients you use
- How many ingredients you use
The price is determined by the following formula:
- Add the value of the ingredients together.
Multiply this by:
- 1.5 if you used one ingredient
- 1.75 if you used two
- 2.05 for three
- 2.4 for four
- 2.8 for five
Round the resulting number to the next ten. (101 -> 110, 87 -> 90, etc)
Here's an example:
You cook four Gourmet Meats. Each meat sells for 35 rupees. Add them together and you get 140. Multiply this by 2.4 because you use four ingredients. This gives you 336, so you need to round it up to the next ten, which is 340, the sale price.
So the most profitable meals and elixirs you can cook are simply the ones made with five of the most expensive ingredients you can find.
Just make sure they actually produce something edible, because if you end up with "Dubious Food" or "Rock-Hard Food", they will sell for next to nothing.
Source: GameFAQs
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
|
show 1 more comment
The name, effects, and image of the food or elixir you produce is not important. The sell value of your cooking is entirely dependent on only two factors:
- The value of the ingredients you use
- How many ingredients you use
The price is determined by the following formula:
- Add the value of the ingredients together.
Multiply this by:
- 1.5 if you used one ingredient
- 1.75 if you used two
- 2.05 for three
- 2.4 for four
- 2.8 for five
Round the resulting number to the next ten. (101 -> 110, 87 -> 90, etc)
Here's an example:
You cook four Gourmet Meats. Each meat sells for 35 rupees. Add them together and you get 140. Multiply this by 2.4 because you use four ingredients. This gives you 336, so you need to round it up to the next ten, which is 340, the sale price.
So the most profitable meals and elixirs you can cook are simply the ones made with five of the most expensive ingredients you can find.
Just make sure they actually produce something edible, because if you end up with "Dubious Food" or "Rock-Hard Food", they will sell for next to nothing.
Source: GameFAQs
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
|
show 1 more comment
The name, effects, and image of the food or elixir you produce is not important. The sell value of your cooking is entirely dependent on only two factors:
- The value of the ingredients you use
- How many ingredients you use
The price is determined by the following formula:
- Add the value of the ingredients together.
Multiply this by:
- 1.5 if you used one ingredient
- 1.75 if you used two
- 2.05 for three
- 2.4 for four
- 2.8 for five
Round the resulting number to the next ten. (101 -> 110, 87 -> 90, etc)
Here's an example:
You cook four Gourmet Meats. Each meat sells for 35 rupees. Add them together and you get 140. Multiply this by 2.4 because you use four ingredients. This gives you 336, so you need to round it up to the next ten, which is 340, the sale price.
So the most profitable meals and elixirs you can cook are simply the ones made with five of the most expensive ingredients you can find.
Just make sure they actually produce something edible, because if you end up with "Dubious Food" or "Rock-Hard Food", they will sell for next to nothing.
Source: GameFAQs
The name, effects, and image of the food or elixir you produce is not important. The sell value of your cooking is entirely dependent on only two factors:
- The value of the ingredients you use
- How many ingredients you use
The price is determined by the following formula:
- Add the value of the ingredients together.
Multiply this by:
- 1.5 if you used one ingredient
- 1.75 if you used two
- 2.05 for three
- 2.4 for four
- 2.8 for five
Round the resulting number to the next ten. (101 -> 110, 87 -> 90, etc)
Here's an example:
You cook four Gourmet Meats. Each meat sells for 35 rupees. Add them together and you get 140. Multiply this by 2.4 because you use four ingredients. This gives you 336, so you need to round it up to the next ten, which is 340, the sale price.
So the most profitable meals and elixirs you can cook are simply the ones made with five of the most expensive ingredients you can find.
Just make sure they actually produce something edible, because if you end up with "Dubious Food" or "Rock-Hard Food", they will sell for next to nothing.
Source: GameFAQs
edited Apr 10 '17 at 13:21
answered Mar 21 '17 at 13:30
PyritiePyritie
7,819104672
7,819104672
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
|
show 1 more comment
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
1
1
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
That's the formula I was looking for! (Though Gourmet Meat in particular is a bad idea then. There's a dude who buys those for much much more raw!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 21 '17 at 13:32
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
I'm trying to find a list of ingredients that also shows sell value, but none of the ones I've found have that information.
– Pyritie
Mar 21 '17 at 13:48
3
3
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
If this formula is correct, you could cook four 2-rupee items seperately and gain twice as much value as you'd get by cooking them all together. Cooking 1-rupee items seperately would be even more profitable, but I'm not sure if those exist (and it'd be rather time consuming).
– Andii
Mar 22 '17 at 11:10
1
1
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
Great info! But +1 to what @Andii said - while combining 5 ingredients generates the highest possible value for a single dish, the most profitable way to turn a fixed list of ingredients into money - the OPs goal - is actually to cook each one separately, I think?
– Jaydles
Mar 28 '17 at 15:19
2
2
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
It seems that dragon pieces and star fragments are exempt from this formula. Despite some of them being worth upwards of 300 rupees, including them in a dish doesn't seem to increase the dish's value by much, if at all.
– Mage Xy
May 10 '17 at 17:09
|
show 1 more comment
For meals, this reddit post describes a good way to make money. It describes getting lots of boar and deer meat, then making 5-meat skewers (use the same time of meat for each, if possible). Supposedly, the deer skewers sell for 210 and the boar meat ones sell for 120, and this is one of the get rich quick schemes the game offers.
From the post, here is a fast way to gather meat:
Near Hateno Village, there is farmer named Dantz up on the large hillside pitching hay under a horse stable who offers a mini-game to hunt deer that can be spammed and will reward you with 5 rupees or 20 rupees depending on the number of deer you kill in the time limit.
This by itself is not the money maker, though. All the meat you get from the animals you kill is. To ensure maximum meat gain, a three-spread-shot bow is the best choice. However, you can also get a Soldier's Bow on the crate of the east side of the Tabantha Bridge Stable, which will kill the animals in one shot.
It's recommended to either wear the full Sheikah set or get other stealth buffs (potions, etc) to make this easier.
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
add a comment |
For meals, this reddit post describes a good way to make money. It describes getting lots of boar and deer meat, then making 5-meat skewers (use the same time of meat for each, if possible). Supposedly, the deer skewers sell for 210 and the boar meat ones sell for 120, and this is one of the get rich quick schemes the game offers.
From the post, here is a fast way to gather meat:
Near Hateno Village, there is farmer named Dantz up on the large hillside pitching hay under a horse stable who offers a mini-game to hunt deer that can be spammed and will reward you with 5 rupees or 20 rupees depending on the number of deer you kill in the time limit.
This by itself is not the money maker, though. All the meat you get from the animals you kill is. To ensure maximum meat gain, a three-spread-shot bow is the best choice. However, you can also get a Soldier's Bow on the crate of the east side of the Tabantha Bridge Stable, which will kill the animals in one shot.
It's recommended to either wear the full Sheikah set or get other stealth buffs (potions, etc) to make this easier.
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
add a comment |
For meals, this reddit post describes a good way to make money. It describes getting lots of boar and deer meat, then making 5-meat skewers (use the same time of meat for each, if possible). Supposedly, the deer skewers sell for 210 and the boar meat ones sell for 120, and this is one of the get rich quick schemes the game offers.
From the post, here is a fast way to gather meat:
Near Hateno Village, there is farmer named Dantz up on the large hillside pitching hay under a horse stable who offers a mini-game to hunt deer that can be spammed and will reward you with 5 rupees or 20 rupees depending on the number of deer you kill in the time limit.
This by itself is not the money maker, though. All the meat you get from the animals you kill is. To ensure maximum meat gain, a three-spread-shot bow is the best choice. However, you can also get a Soldier's Bow on the crate of the east side of the Tabantha Bridge Stable, which will kill the animals in one shot.
It's recommended to either wear the full Sheikah set or get other stealth buffs (potions, etc) to make this easier.
For meals, this reddit post describes a good way to make money. It describes getting lots of boar and deer meat, then making 5-meat skewers (use the same time of meat for each, if possible). Supposedly, the deer skewers sell for 210 and the boar meat ones sell for 120, and this is one of the get rich quick schemes the game offers.
From the post, here is a fast way to gather meat:
Near Hateno Village, there is farmer named Dantz up on the large hillside pitching hay under a horse stable who offers a mini-game to hunt deer that can be spammed and will reward you with 5 rupees or 20 rupees depending on the number of deer you kill in the time limit.
This by itself is not the money maker, though. All the meat you get from the animals you kill is. To ensure maximum meat gain, a three-spread-shot bow is the best choice. However, you can also get a Soldier's Bow on the crate of the east side of the Tabantha Bridge Stable, which will kill the animals in one shot.
It's recommended to either wear the full Sheikah set or get other stealth buffs (potions, etc) to make this easier.
edited Mar 8 '17 at 19:38
answered Mar 8 '17 at 13:59
SeiyriaSeiyria
6,518154577
6,518154577
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
add a comment |
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
1
1
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
You actually can quote the Reddit post for more upvotes. Right now it is a bit too close to a link answer. Although the important bits are available, but a lot of very useful information are in the link.
– Nelson
Mar 8 '17 at 19:08
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
This is helpful relative to the end goal of "make lots of money", but neatly sidesteps my actual question of what's most profitable by simply pointing out what's abundant.
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 22:46
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
@LessPop_MoreFizz abundant is relative. Doing this minigame multiple times means that these particular items are abundant. Regardless of the minigame, all wild creatures drop one of 3 tiers of meat, I believe, so the answer is still the same, just slower, if you choose to kill animals outside of the minigame.
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:12
1
1
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
Sure. My point is that this sidesteps the question; what I'm curious about is what the most profitable transformation of that meat is. Does salting it make it more valuable, for example? (if all sale prices are simply a flat multiplier on base ingredient value, well, that leaves your answer as the best, but I've seen no evidence of that!)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 18 '17 at 23:14
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
@LessPop_MoreFizz I believe using raw ingredients is the way to go. AFAIK salt doesn't increase the cost, just the effect: gaming.stackexchange.com/questions/302879/…
– Seiyria
Mar 18 '17 at 23:17
add a comment |
I have found that creating elixirs using specific monster parts yields extremely expensive potions. I've experimented with several parts, but it seems like the monster guts are the most profitable. Combine 4 guts with 1 bug/frog/etc to create an elixir. The effect of the elixir doesn't matter, since your goal is to make money. (To maximize profits, the effect ingredient should be something worth more money, such as a hearty lizard or a tireless frog; however, you'll only be making an extra 50 or so rupees, so it's probably not worth using rare ingredients here - stick to darners and fireflies.)
You can use any guts you find, but in my opinion the most cost effective are Molduga and Lynel guts. When combining 4 guts with 1 elixir ingredient, the resulting potions will be worth about 1200 rupees (300 per gut) or 2400 (600 per gut) for Molduga or Lynel guts respectively.
Whatever you do, do not use star fragments or dragon pieces in your crafted food/elixirs if your goal is profit. Even though the base value of these items is very high, for some reason this value doesn't seem to get included in the price of the resulting food item.
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
add a comment |
I have found that creating elixirs using specific monster parts yields extremely expensive potions. I've experimented with several parts, but it seems like the monster guts are the most profitable. Combine 4 guts with 1 bug/frog/etc to create an elixir. The effect of the elixir doesn't matter, since your goal is to make money. (To maximize profits, the effect ingredient should be something worth more money, such as a hearty lizard or a tireless frog; however, you'll only be making an extra 50 or so rupees, so it's probably not worth using rare ingredients here - stick to darners and fireflies.)
You can use any guts you find, but in my opinion the most cost effective are Molduga and Lynel guts. When combining 4 guts with 1 elixir ingredient, the resulting potions will be worth about 1200 rupees (300 per gut) or 2400 (600 per gut) for Molduga or Lynel guts respectively.
Whatever you do, do not use star fragments or dragon pieces in your crafted food/elixirs if your goal is profit. Even though the base value of these items is very high, for some reason this value doesn't seem to get included in the price of the resulting food item.
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
add a comment |
I have found that creating elixirs using specific monster parts yields extremely expensive potions. I've experimented with several parts, but it seems like the monster guts are the most profitable. Combine 4 guts with 1 bug/frog/etc to create an elixir. The effect of the elixir doesn't matter, since your goal is to make money. (To maximize profits, the effect ingredient should be something worth more money, such as a hearty lizard or a tireless frog; however, you'll only be making an extra 50 or so rupees, so it's probably not worth using rare ingredients here - stick to darners and fireflies.)
You can use any guts you find, but in my opinion the most cost effective are Molduga and Lynel guts. When combining 4 guts with 1 elixir ingredient, the resulting potions will be worth about 1200 rupees (300 per gut) or 2400 (600 per gut) for Molduga or Lynel guts respectively.
Whatever you do, do not use star fragments or dragon pieces in your crafted food/elixirs if your goal is profit. Even though the base value of these items is very high, for some reason this value doesn't seem to get included in the price of the resulting food item.
I have found that creating elixirs using specific monster parts yields extremely expensive potions. I've experimented with several parts, but it seems like the monster guts are the most profitable. Combine 4 guts with 1 bug/frog/etc to create an elixir. The effect of the elixir doesn't matter, since your goal is to make money. (To maximize profits, the effect ingredient should be something worth more money, such as a hearty lizard or a tireless frog; however, you'll only be making an extra 50 or so rupees, so it's probably not worth using rare ingredients here - stick to darners and fireflies.)
You can use any guts you find, but in my opinion the most cost effective are Molduga and Lynel guts. When combining 4 guts with 1 elixir ingredient, the resulting potions will be worth about 1200 rupees (300 per gut) or 2400 (600 per gut) for Molduga or Lynel guts respectively.
Whatever you do, do not use star fragments or dragon pieces in your crafted food/elixirs if your goal is profit. Even though the base value of these items is very high, for some reason this value doesn't seem to get included in the price of the resulting food item.
answered May 10 '17 at 16:59
Mage XyMage Xy
14k25098
14k25098
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
add a comment |
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
Just want to add I tried using the Monster Extract in place of one gut and it wasn't worth doing either. Hinox Guts were far less valuable than Lynel but worth using them up if you have too.
– Ryan
Feb 24 '18 at 1:40
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
I've done additional testing and given the rarity of the items would suggest using only 1 Guts, 1 Elixir Item, and then 3 Lynel Hoofs or Horns. Much better optimization of the rarer guts.
– Ryan
Mar 3 '18 at 4:11
add a comment |
I personally hunt for Raw Gourmet Meat and Raw Prime Meat mainly around the snowy north west fields of the map from wolves, moose and the fur rhinos using boomerangs on foot or halberds and spears on horse back (quick press of the X button to jump dismount and gather before they freeze in colder weather). I gather weapons from the Ice Lizalfos in the area (fire arrows ftw here, use dismount quick draw if riding your horse).
I cook a Meat Skewer from 4 Raw Gourmet and 1 Raw Prime Meat to get a 25+ Skewer worth 440. I look at it as 100 per each Gourmet and 40 for the Prime and I can cook it near Beedle and sell it as many times a day as I want, Cheers Beedle. Hope this helps, I haven't really looked too far into other recipes because this just worked well for me early on.
add a comment |
I personally hunt for Raw Gourmet Meat and Raw Prime Meat mainly around the snowy north west fields of the map from wolves, moose and the fur rhinos using boomerangs on foot or halberds and spears on horse back (quick press of the X button to jump dismount and gather before they freeze in colder weather). I gather weapons from the Ice Lizalfos in the area (fire arrows ftw here, use dismount quick draw if riding your horse).
I cook a Meat Skewer from 4 Raw Gourmet and 1 Raw Prime Meat to get a 25+ Skewer worth 440. I look at it as 100 per each Gourmet and 40 for the Prime and I can cook it near Beedle and sell it as many times a day as I want, Cheers Beedle. Hope this helps, I haven't really looked too far into other recipes because this just worked well for me early on.
add a comment |
I personally hunt for Raw Gourmet Meat and Raw Prime Meat mainly around the snowy north west fields of the map from wolves, moose and the fur rhinos using boomerangs on foot or halberds and spears on horse back (quick press of the X button to jump dismount and gather before they freeze in colder weather). I gather weapons from the Ice Lizalfos in the area (fire arrows ftw here, use dismount quick draw if riding your horse).
I cook a Meat Skewer from 4 Raw Gourmet and 1 Raw Prime Meat to get a 25+ Skewer worth 440. I look at it as 100 per each Gourmet and 40 for the Prime and I can cook it near Beedle and sell it as many times a day as I want, Cheers Beedle. Hope this helps, I haven't really looked too far into other recipes because this just worked well for me early on.
I personally hunt for Raw Gourmet Meat and Raw Prime Meat mainly around the snowy north west fields of the map from wolves, moose and the fur rhinos using boomerangs on foot or halberds and spears on horse back (quick press of the X button to jump dismount and gather before they freeze in colder weather). I gather weapons from the Ice Lizalfos in the area (fire arrows ftw here, use dismount quick draw if riding your horse).
I cook a Meat Skewer from 4 Raw Gourmet and 1 Raw Prime Meat to get a 25+ Skewer worth 440. I look at it as 100 per each Gourmet and 40 for the Prime and I can cook it near Beedle and sell it as many times a day as I want, Cheers Beedle. Hope this helps, I haven't really looked too far into other recipes because this just worked well for me early on.
answered Apr 2 '17 at 21:06
JoshuaJoshua
211
211
add a comment |
add a comment |
Tried and true:
- 2 x Raw Gourmet Meat
- 2 x Rock Salt
- 1 x Hearty Truffle
= 230 Rupees
I sold mine to the market lady on the south eastern beach but I've sold them elsewhere too. I feel like I ran across a higher price selling meal but can't remember the recipe...I think it was a fluke.
add a comment |
Tried and true:
- 2 x Raw Gourmet Meat
- 2 x Rock Salt
- 1 x Hearty Truffle
= 230 Rupees
I sold mine to the market lady on the south eastern beach but I've sold them elsewhere too. I feel like I ran across a higher price selling meal but can't remember the recipe...I think it was a fluke.
add a comment |
Tried and true:
- 2 x Raw Gourmet Meat
- 2 x Rock Salt
- 1 x Hearty Truffle
= 230 Rupees
I sold mine to the market lady on the south eastern beach but I've sold them elsewhere too. I feel like I ran across a higher price selling meal but can't remember the recipe...I think it was a fluke.
Tried and true:
- 2 x Raw Gourmet Meat
- 2 x Rock Salt
- 1 x Hearty Truffle
= 230 Rupees
I sold mine to the market lady on the south eastern beach but I've sold them elsewhere too. I feel like I ran across a higher price selling meal but can't remember the recipe...I think it was a fluke.
edited Mar 20 '18 at 23:31
Memor-X
8,7403693190
8,7403693190
answered Mar 20 '18 at 23:16
BeninjaminBeninjamin
111
111
add a comment |
add a comment |
Get the Drillshaft from the quest in the Hot Springs in Goron City, then use it to break mineral deposits in one hit. Sell them to a shop to make a profit.
New contributor
add a comment |
Get the Drillshaft from the quest in the Hot Springs in Goron City, then use it to break mineral deposits in one hit. Sell them to a shop to make a profit.
New contributor
add a comment |
Get the Drillshaft from the quest in the Hot Springs in Goron City, then use it to break mineral deposits in one hit. Sell them to a shop to make a profit.
New contributor
Get the Drillshaft from the quest in the Hot Springs in Goron City, then use it to break mineral deposits in one hit. Sell them to a shop to make a profit.
New contributor
New contributor
answered 40 mins ago
LinkLink
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
5 raw gourmet meats cooked = full recovery meat skewer= $490 best ive found so far other than a $500 diamond
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
add a comment |
5 raw gourmet meats cooked = full recovery meat skewer= $490 best ive found so far other than a $500 diamond
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
add a comment |
5 raw gourmet meats cooked = full recovery meat skewer= $490 best ive found so far other than a $500 diamond
5 raw gourmet meats cooked = full recovery meat skewer= $490 best ive found so far other than a $500 diamond
answered Mar 27 '17 at 23:43
Jm5150Jm5150
91
91
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
add a comment |
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
It's not a big difference in value, but there's a dude at Outskirts Stables that will beat this - he offers 100/raw gourmet meat. (With a daily limit on how many he'll buy, sadly.)
– LessPop_MoreFizz
Mar 27 '17 at 23:53
add a comment |
Five endura carrots cooked at blood moon sells for 420 rupees.
add a comment |
Five endura carrots cooked at blood moon sells for 420 rupees.
add a comment |
Five endura carrots cooked at blood moon sells for 420 rupees.
Five endura carrots cooked at blood moon sells for 420 rupees.
answered Apr 16 '17 at 12:26
SASSAS
1
1
add a comment |
add a comment |
1 raw gourmet meat + 4 endura carrots = 440 rupees.
Video here.
add a comment |
1 raw gourmet meat + 4 endura carrots = 440 rupees.
Video here.
add a comment |
1 raw gourmet meat + 4 endura carrots = 440 rupees.
Video here.
1 raw gourmet meat + 4 endura carrots = 440 rupees.
Video here.
answered Oct 24 '17 at 18:24
fredrikfredrik
952
952
add a comment |
add a comment |
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5 raw prime meat as one meal IIRC sells for 200+. That's all I got. Mineral farming was primarily how I made my money.
– Seiyria
Mar 7 '17 at 18:15
4
Don't ever sell your minerals at shops or otherwise use them in elixirs. They're worth more when sold to Ramella at Goron City. IIRC, I got 10k rupees for selling her 10 diamonds. The only catch is you she'll only by in batches of 10.
– Jeff Mercado
Mar 29 '17 at 0:45