16

I needed to get the cold resistance clothes to start the Vah Medoh quest, and now I'm low on rupees. I like to keep some on hand in case I need it spontaneously, but I don't want to sell anything that could be valuable later. What is the easiest way to get a lot of rupees?

2
  • 1
    FWIW, you may not need the Rito armor set to do that quest. I bought it after I'd finished it. I think I only used the warm doublet (only 80 rupees, if I recall). It's possible I also had a fire weapon equipped, but I don't think so. The Rito Armor is overkill for the temp in the beast.
    – Jaydles
    Commented May 11, 2017 at 21:22
  • @Jaydles You definitely need a fire weapon, unless you damage boost. Vah Medoh has Cold 2.
    – Egor Hans
    Commented Mar 4, 2021 at 12:47

6 Answers 6

18

Cooking is the fastest and most efficient way of making money. Using the right ingredients, you can create dishes and elixirs worth 2400 rupees, or more. See this question for examples, as well as the specific formula used to determine the value of the resulting dish/elixir. I suggest farming Moldugas/Lynels and using their guts to make elixirs.

Another way to make money is by playing some of the many minigames available. There's a gambling minigame in the beachside town in the southeastern part of the world which costs 20 rupees to play, and which will give you 100 rupees if you win (33% chance). By save scumming (saving before the minigame, playing, then reloading if you lose), you can earn money basically for free. It's a very tedious though. There's also the flying minigame, the horseback riding minigame, sand seal racing, and others which offer similar profits.

Finally, a method that I've used is to farm dragon parts. The three dragons spawn in certain spots very reliably, often several times per night. See this question for details on where to find the best place be when farming them. Try to always get the horn shards - they sell for the most money of all the possible parts, plus they are used in several quests and equipment upgrades.

If you're really strapped for cash, you can also sell your armor sets to some shops for a couple thousand rupees. However, I strongly advise against this - the various armor sets in the game offer powerful bonuses, and they are pretty much one-of-a-kind. If you ever do sell your armor, it's kind of like taking out a loan - you'll get the money you need right now, but if you ever want the armor back, you'll have to buy it again from a special NPC in Tarrey Town - and they are very expensive.

7
  • 1
    As a side note, I found Gut Check mountain climbing challenge (Northeast behind Death Mountain) to be the most effective rupee farming spot. After you beat it the first time you gain access to Super Gut Check Challenge. It costs 100 rupees per try but you have the potential to get ~800 rupees and an endura shroom fairly reliably. Once you get into the swing of things it works out to about 700 rupees per min or two. The challenge is made easier with climbers set bonus and eating the cooked endura shroom to refill your stamina.
    – Malco
    Commented May 11, 2017 at 16:52
  • Don't the armor pieces that you buy in shops just respawn again in those same shops? I assume you're specifically referring to Tarrey Town for the armor that you receive from chests/quests.
    – spacetyper
    Commented May 12, 2017 at 16:33
  • @spacetyper Right, I'm talking about sets like the climbing gear or the barbarian set. Those are typically worth a lot more than the store sets since they are unique.
    – Mage Xy
    Commented May 12, 2017 at 16:49
  • Another way to get rupees relatively easily--Sell baked apples to Juney in Rito Village. If you sell her 100 baked apples at a time, she'll pay you 1200 rupees total (12 rupees/apple). Baking apples is a little tedious, but if you drop 5, drop 5 more, then take a swing with a flameblade, it goes fast. Since apples are easy to come by, this is another option. See zelda.recipes/baked-apple-money-zelda-apple-eye for more info.
    – spacetyper
    Commented May 12, 2017 at 17:08
  • 1
    @Exa Yes, there is a merchant in Tarrey town once you complete it who sells them. Commented May 14, 2017 at 21:49
7

I played through the entire game, collecting gem stones (Ruby, Diamond, Sapphire etc.) as I went, and never found any particularly useful purpose for them beyond the very occasional item crafting and upgrading purposes. I kept expecting them to be useful someday, but they really weren't. Certainly no need for a huge pile of them anyway.

Sell off all but 10 (just in case) of every gem type you have and never look back.

There's a Gerudo woman in Goron City who buys gems at better than market price, if you're interested in maximizing the profits, but she only buys one type at a time.

1
  • 1
    Plus, gems can easily be farmed from Taluses.
    – Egor Hans
    Commented Mar 4, 2021 at 12:48
4

I'm finding that pretty much everything has some use somewhere down the line. Plants and fruits seem to be the most abundant and least useful but you don't get an awful lot for them.

However the advice you are (frequently) given in game has worked the best for me; sell gemstones. Luminous Stone sells for 70 Rupees and is very easy to find. Just grab a hammer and climb a mountain at night. Midway through the game (having not sold any) I found myself with about 50. They do have various in game uses but they are reasonably easy to come by so I wouldn't worry too much.

Rubies, Sapphires and Topaz are even better. They sell for a lot (180 - 240 if I remember right) so you don't need a lot to make money. You can tell which ore deposits have gems in (they are shiny and gold) so mark them on your map and come back frequently to see if they've respawned. Or hunt Talus, once you get the knack of killing them (and particularly if you have access to the Goron special weapon) they are pretty easy and give you loads of gems and ores. The gems do also have various uses in the game, but I've found they're more useful to sell then any other potential use so far. Amber and Opal are needed for various armour upgrades but you can find quite a lot of them so they are good for selling too.

Monster parts are tempting, as some can fetch quite a lot, but you need them in abundance for upgrading armour so I only tend to sell things i have loads of (100+) and even then I save them for Kilton...

So far I've not really had to wait long for anything money related and haven't found anything where I've thought "Damn, wish I hadn't sold that!" by mostly just selling gems.

4

Farming Farosh Horn Shards! Go to the cave just north of Riola spring equipped with

  1. lots of arrows and a decent bow
  2. wood
  3. some sort of flame weapon

You want to be inside the cave when you set up your campfire so that when it rains it doesn't put your fire out. Set up your campfire, then sit and wait until morning. Farosh will spawn right after you wake up, at which point you use the paraglider to lift yourself up a bit (he'll create an updraft) and then fire an arrow at his horn! You don't need to go grab the shard right away either because it won't disappear as you pass time. So then you basically use your flame weapon to re-light your campfire. Rinse/repeat until you feel like collecting your shards, which will sell for 300 rupees each. Even if you miss the horn, his scales sell for 150. I've been doing this since I found out about it and now I have 47,000 rupees :)

1
  • I recommended Golden Bows (can be found in the Gerudo barracks) for farming dragon parts, since they zoom in more and also shoot the arrow farther.
    – Mage Xy
    Commented May 17, 2017 at 15:45
2

This is a debated method. Some say cooking is the best, but I think that the effort it takes to find ingredients combined with the cost of losing weapons and the time it takes makes cooking a slower method of obtaining rupees. From googling things, you will find that there are 2 major suggestions

  1. Spam mini games and exploit the winnings
  2. Sell food

For me the snowball bowling mini game was the best way to get rupees in Breath of the Wild. Once you get the hang of it, you can easily afford the ancient armor set in a few hours. Keep throwing the snowball the correct way over and over and it is an easy 200 rupees every single time. No wear and tear on your gear, no enemies and no travelling. You also don't need to worry about your inventory filling up etc.

1

Each blood moon kill all the Lynels, Hinoii, Talus and Moldugas. Then farm Mt. Satori specifically for Endura Carrots but get everything you can. For Talus focus on the fire ones in Death Mountain, they're really easy to beat and drop higher level gems.

  • 4 Lynel Guts + 1 Insect made into Elixir will net you something like 2400g
  • 4 Molduga Guts + 1 Insect made into Elixir will net around 1400g if I remember right
  • 4 Hinox Guts + 1 Insect made into Elixir will net around 900g
  • 5 Endura Carrots dropped made into a meal will net 440g

At early levels I'd focus on Mount Satori for your financial needs.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.