There’s a good chance Dragon’s Dogma 2 has taken up your entire weekend, but that’s okay, we don’t blame you. Well, assuming you’re not put off by performance issues or microtransactions. If it’s the latter, then the new mod is definitely worth checking out.
Even if the outrage against them is arguably a little overblown, considering a lot of the affected stuff can be found in considerable amounts just by playing the game, you can understand why people wouldn’t like the idea of potentially being tempted to pay for stuff. Thankfully, there’s now a mod that can help you avoid feeling any stress of this nature altogether.
This mod is “Crazy’s Shop” developed by XxCrazyPotatoxX, and its name comes directly from the 2009 Call of Duty deathmatch. What does it do? Well, you know some useful stuff like Rift Crystals, Walking Stones, Awakening Stones, and Camping Kits – those things make up a lot of optional purchases, and it adds more to Wayneworth’s vendor inventory than you actually need. Lots of stuff.
If you go shopping the next time you visit the town after installing the mod, you’ll find that shops like Phillbert’s Sundries and Bjorn’s Armory now randomly stock 255 useful items. In addition to the stuff mentioned above, include tokens, beetles, dyes, spells, ores and some armor fragments just in case you don’t have enough and throw them in your cart.
These supplies even replenish 255 each day in the game, which is useful if you find yourself in need of 1,000 Triumphal Rings to pay off a massive gambling debt, or 500 court tunics to give to the poor. As compensation for bullying them. Now, there’s a catch, but don’t worry, it looks more like a measure designed to save yourself.
You shouldn’t buy more than 99 items of any item at once, writes XxCrazyPotatoxX, and the consequences are some kind of “poof.” I’m assuming they’re referring to all the items you just purchased disappearing or the game crashing, because it rightfully wonders how you managed to get that many books at once.
So, trying to limit your spending and using Synthlight’s “Item Adjustment – Cost 1 Gold – No Weight – x10 Sale Price” to make each item very cheap – as suggested by XxCrazyPotatoxX – should help. Before installing the mod with the help of FluffyQuack’s “Fluffy Mod Manager”, you should also save in front of the store you want to use.
You know, just in case.
Plus, if you need more help mastering Dragon’s Dogma 2, be sure to check out our range of helpful guides, covering everything from quests to crafting, and even key choices like whether to head to Fernworth on your own.