The Legend of Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom is a big game set in a massive open world, and its codebase has to be exhausting to keep track of everything that’s going on at all times. Which probably explains Why doesn’t matter how often Nintendo is patching the game to fix a resource bugpeople just keep finding new ones.
The latest version, which has been confirmed to work with every existing version of the game from those still clinging to version 1.0 to those running the latest update, is all about the idea that you can game to provide tons of valuable resources by turning large chunks of meat into a weapon and then taking that weapon with you into the snow.
That, of course, is the short version of what you need to do. The whole process is a bit more complicated, as you can see in this nine-minute video by Austin John plays under:
Or, for a much faster version, here’s the text. Essentially you have to craft two meat weapons by attaching raw produce to sticks – ideally gourmet meat given its value – and then using Ultrahand to glue two of those weapons together. Once you’ve done that you can use Autobuild with Ctrl+C, Ctrl+V until you’ve built 21 meatballs (the most the game can remember and place at a time) and put them all together.
Once you create this 21-piece meat salute, it will be saved to your autobuild. You then have to equip another leg of meat as your main weapon, travel to a cold place and wait/sleep by the fire until the weather forecast says only snow prevails. Once that’s the case, you’ll need to watch out for your equipped meat club. When it freezes and falls off after walking away from the fire, you’re good to go.
Just start the process of rebuilding the meatplate from your autobuild, but don’t do it Strictly speaking Build it, just levitate it inside the purple circle; After a second or two, all of the meat will freeze and fall to the ground. At 40 rupees each, the quicker you can assemble, freeze and collect half, the more money you can collect. As Austin says, a full batch sells for Rs 39960 in just eight minutes, so if you’re on a tight budget It’s definitely worth your time.
given Nintendo’s previous urgency to patch this stuff out of one…offline single player game, you might want to start sooner rather than later!