Shinobi Life Online

Shinobi Life Online Testing Category => Technical Support => Topic started by: luissuraez798 on June 25, 2026, 10:34:49

Title: Arc Raiders Mushroom Farming Guide by U4GM
Post by: luissuraez798 on June 25, 2026, 10:34:49
Mushrooms in Arc Raiders look like a tiny side item until Scrappy starts asking for them, and then everyone suddenly cares where the little white things actually grow. They're part of the wider loop of ARC Raiders Items (https://www.u4gm.com/arc-raiders/items) that quietly push your account forward, because feeding and upgrading Scrappy means more passive materials coming back while you're topside. Chemicals, fabric, metal parts, rubber parts - it all adds up. So, no, mushrooms aren't just odd food clutter. They're worth grabbing whenever a route lines up, especially if you're still building out Scrappy or saving extras for later project requirements.

Where mushroom farming actually feels worth your time.

If there's no event running, Dam Battlegrounds is still the map I'd pick first. The swamp, Hydroponic Dome Complex, Water Treatment corridors, and nearby damp spots give you the best spread of natural spawns. You're usually looking around trees, wet ground, pipes, basements, and hydroponic areas rather than random loot piles. The visual tell is easy once you've seen it: a dead or strange-looking tree with fake-looking mushrooms on the bark, then the harvestable mushroom sitting near the base. Hydroponic Dome can pay well, but it's not quiet. People know that place. If you don't want a fight every two minutes, Water Treatment feels cleaner, especially when you can loot and cut toward the elevator without dragging the raid out.

Spaceport is good, but only if you spawn right.

Spaceport has one spot that players keep coming back to: the wooded corner south of Little Hangar, close to the Raider Hatch. That tree is the big one. It's consistent, easy to recognise, and often the whole reason to load into Spaceport for mushrooms at all. If you spawn nearby, go there fast. If you spawn miles away, don't turn the match into a sightseeing trip. Someone else will probably get there first, or you'll waste ten minutes for one pickup. There's another weaker plant-area route near the northern side, around the trench west of East Container Yard and south of Little Hangar, but it doesn't feel nearly as dependable. Blue Gate is more of a backup, mostly useful when events are helping, and Buried City is best treated as an event map for this specific farm.

Lush Bloom changes the whole plan.

When Lush Bloom is active, forget your normal map loyalty for a while. Wicker baskets become the real prize because they can show up across maps and can hold several mushrooms at once. That's faster than poking around every damp tree and pipe corner hoping the spawn is live. The best rhythm is simple: load in, check the nearest basket-heavy area, scoop what you can, then leave. Don't overstay. Mushrooms don't respawn during the same raid, so once your local route is dry, hanging around is just risk with no real upside. Some players use safe-pocket runs to speed this up, grabbing the first mushroom stack and re-queuing quickly, though exact stack behaviour and surrender handling can shift or be misreported, so don't build your whole plan around one unverified trick.

The biggest mistake is treating mushroom farming like a full-map scavenger hunt. It's not. Spawn position matters more than bravery, and short raids usually beat long, messy ones. If you land near Dam's swamp, Water Treatment, or the Spaceport tree, great - move with purpose and get out. If you don't, reset your expectations and chase something else that match. Keep mushrooms when you can, because Scrappy isn't the only sink anymore, and future project needs can catch you short. While planning upgrades, routes, and even side purchases like cheap ARC Raiders BluePrints (https://www.u4gm.com/arc-raiders/items), it helps to think of mushrooms as small progress insurance rather than a one-and-done collectible.