Gyldenblod & Farming (Economy)
Last updated: 2026-06-15Pre-launch / subject to change at July 29, 2026 launch.
Gyldenblod & Farming (Economy)
- System
- Gyldenblod & Farming
- Category
- Economy
- Key terms
- Gyldenblod, Gylden Jar, Pool, Forging
What It Is
Gyldenblod is the game’s basic currency — its “gold.” It’s used for pretty much everything: trading, camp upgrades, and item forging and upgrades (often alongside rare materials). If you want better gear and a stronger camp, you need a steady flow of it, which makes farming Gyldenblod one of the core out-of-raid loops in Mistfall Hunter.
The twist that separates it from ordinary gold is how you bank it. Gyldenblod you collect during a raid isn’t safe until you extract — and there’s a cap on how much you can hold mid-raid.
How It Works
The Gylden Jar — your in-raid wallet. All Gyldenblod you gather during a raid goes into the Gylden Jar. The Jar has a default cap of around 200. Once it’s full, you can’t collect any more until you extract — the Jar has to be emptied by getting home first. This turns every rich raid into a pressure cooker: hit the cap and the only way to keep earning is to risk the trip out.
The Gyldenblod Pool — raise your ceiling. The Jar’s limit isn’t fixed. The Gyldenblod Pool, a camp upgrade, increases how much Gyldenblod you can extract by expanding your Jar limit. It also unlocks Spirit Infusion, which lets you level up alternate characters by spending Gyldenblod. Investing in the Pool directly raises how much wealth you can pull out of a single run.
How you farm it. Gyldenblod comes from across the raid:
- PvE monster hunts — clearing corrupted creatures.
- Elite encounters — tougher mobs for better returns.
- PvP clashes — taking down rival hunters.
- Boss runs — the Corroded and Mist Lords guard the most valuable loot, the high-risk/high-reward path. (See Bosses & Mist Lords.)
What you spend it on. Back at The Camp, Gyldenblod fuels the economy: trading, camp upgrades, and the Spirit Blacksmith’s forging system, where the forge unlocks rare accessories and weapons (often consuming rare materials alongside the gold). Camp services like the Shop & Warehouse also expand gear storage and shop rarity as you invest.
Comparison: Gylden Jar vs. Gyldenblod Pool
| Gylden Jar | Gyldenblod Pool | |
|---|---|---|
| What it is | Your in-raid Gyldenblod wallet | Camp upgrade that expands the Jar |
| Effect | Caps mid-raid collection (~200 default) | Raises the cap; unlocks Spirit Infusion |
| When it matters | Mid-raid, when you hit the limit | Long-term, to extract more per run |
Tips / Optimization
- Watch the ~200 cap. Once the Jar fills, extra Gyldenblod is wasted until you extract. If you’re capped, prioritize getting home over grinding more.
- Upgrade the Gyldenblod Pool early. A bigger Jar limit means more banked wealth per run and access to Spirit Infusion for leveling alts.
- Mix your farming sources. PvE hunts, elites, PvP, and boss runs all feed the Jar — boss runs pay the most but carry the most risk.
- Plan extraction around your Jar. A full Jar is only worth something if you actually make it out. Don’t hoard to the cap and then die. (See Extraction Loop.)
Common Mistakes
- Farming past a full Jar. Hitting the ~200 cap and continuing to grind earns nothing until you extract — you’re just burning risk for zero gold.
- Neglecting the Gyldenblod Pool. Without Pool upgrades your extraction ceiling stays low, capping how fast you can fund forging and camp upgrades.
- Dying rich. All that in-raid Gyldenblod rides on a successful extraction. A greedy run that ends in death banks nothing.