Equipment
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In Hyrule, an adventurer relies on their weapons, armor, tools, and similar goods to succeed. Proper equipment can mean the difference between life and death in a dungeon or the wild. This section details the basics of items, equipment, and the currency used to buy them.
Rupees
Common currency comes in the form of uniformly-shaped gems called "rupees." Rupees are of different colors that denote their values. The most common green rupee is for example worth 1 rupee, while a less common yellow rupee is worth "10 rupees." Below is a list of the most abundant rupee denominations.
Green Rupee | 1 rp |
Blue Rupee | 5 rp |
Yellow Rupee | 10 rp |
Red Rupee | 20 rp |
Purple Rupee | 50 rp |
Silver Rupee | 100 rp |
Gold Rupee | 300 rp |
With 1 rupee, a character can buy unskilled labor for at least an hour, a humble meal, 10 torches, or one night's rest at a struggling inn.
With 10 rupees, a character can buy a bedroll, 50 feet of hemp rope, or a goat. A skilled artisan can earn 10 rupees or more in a day.
Rupees are the standard unit of measure for wealth. When merchants discuss deals that involve thousands of rupees, the transactions often don't involve the exchange of individual rupees. Rather, the rupee is the standard measure of value, and the actual exchange is made with more valuable gemstones like sapphires, letters of credit, or other valuable goods.
Rupees are used throughout the Light World and are not tied to a single government or continent. It is rare for an intelligent Light Worlder to not know of their value.
Selling Items
Opportunities abound to find treasure, equipment, weapons, armor, and more throughout ruins or monster camps. Normally, you can sell your treasures and trinkets when you return to a town or other settlement, provided that you can find interested buyers.
As a general rule, most equipment will fetch half its cost when sold in a market.
Exceptions include gemstones, art items, and trade goods. These items have inherent value and can always be bought or sold at their full price. Gemstones and ores are often used as currency in the same way rupees are. Art items like jewelry or sculptures have aesthetic value that retain full value when sold to the right buyer. Trade goods include commonly exchanged commodities like gold or wheat which can effectively be used as currency.
Carrying Capacity
Strength | Pounds |
---|---|
7 | 105 |
8 | 120 |
9 | 135 |
10 | 150 |
11 | 165 |
12 | 180 |
13 | 15 |
14 | 210 |
15 | 225 |
16 | 240 |
17 | 255 |
18 | 270 |
19 | 285 |
20 | 300 |
See Strength and Encumbrance (variant rule).
If you are a Medium or Small bipedal creature, your carrying capacity is your Strength score multiplied by 15. This is the weight in pounds that you can carry, which is high enough that most characters don’t usually have to worry about it.
Armor
Weapons
Adventuring Gear
Tools and Vehicles
Mounts and Animals
Other Goods and Services
Spoils
The text of this page is partly based on the the V5.1 Systems Reference Document (SRD). The text of both this page and the SRD are released under Creative Commons (“CC-BY-4.0”). [1]