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[quote="Chunzliu"]Path of Exile players have always been creative when it comes to squeezing currency out of Wraeclast. Some farm bosses. Some min-max maps. Some run heist all league long. But every so often, a new trend comes around-not because it's mathematically optimal, but because it's so ridiculous, so explosive, and so catastrophically entertaining that players flock to it anyway. Welcome to the world of Mirror of the Calendar farming-a chaotic blend of Scarabs, landmines, delirious gambling, streamer misfortune, and back-to-back jackpot drops that feels less like an economy strategy and more like an ongoing sitcom [url=https://www.mmoexp.com/Path-of-exile/Currency.html]POE currency[/url]. This is an article about what happens when you combine POE loot boxes, streamer degeneracy, lucky hits, unlucky hits, dubious financial decisions, and a surprising amount of ethics surrounding landmining. If you think you've seen it all in Path of Exile… buckle up. "Guys, I'm broke and scared. What do I farm?" It all begins with a familiar scene: a player staring at their empty stash tab, asking the eternal question: "Guys… what do I farm? I'm broke and scared." The answer, apparently, is boxes. Strongboxes. Jeweler boxes. Divination card boxes. The dangerous, addictive, RNG-fueled rabbit hole of PoE loot crates. One bad hit and you feel like a clown. One good hit and you convince yourself you're a genius. And in this case, the boxes were cracked. The Apothecary High It didn't take long: Roll a strongbox. Get "8 additional items." Click. The screen lights up. Two Apothecaries. Then it happens again. A "14 additional items" box drops a Nurse. A "7 additional currency" box drops multiple divines. A random Harbinger chest starts spewing pure profit. The Landmine Arc: When Ethics Leave the Room And then the real chaos begins. Enter the landmine saga, the strange and morally questionable but undeniably hilarious method of exploiting multiple listings on trade by undercutting yourself and causing a "landmine" chain reaction. Landmine = listing something too cheap. Someone buys it instantly. Then you adjust the price. Then someone buys the next one. And the next. And the next. Players who weren't even trying to buy your item get chain-exploded by their own filtered searches. One streamer went viral after detonating four landmines in a row, blowing up: his listings his profits his dignity and several metaphorical limbs As absurd as it sounds, the profits start rolling in. A player sells a random boot for chaos. Crafts a helmet and sells it for divs. Accidentally lists an armor for 20c, sells instantly, then raises it to 45c-and it sells again. Someone hits a massive jackpot: Double Foul Barrack Spite A massive double corrupt hit Then… MAGEBLOOD. Gameplay Chaos: Death, Lag, and KB With Shroud Walker Of course, no POE session is complete without gameplay suffering. Players die reading chat. Players die because the pulse radius was "way bigger than expected." Another tries to show off their HC skills and nearly dies mid-sentence. Crafting Disaster: The Enull Incident The item has: Burning damage Trap & mine damage A useless INT rollThe Essence of PoE: Chaos, Comedy, Profit What makes Mirror of the Calendar farming-and really, the entire PoE community-so entertaining is that it embodies everything Path of Exile is: RNG that alternates between kind and cruel Profits that come from unexpected sources Players who create their own meta Ridiculous drops at the weirdest times Crafting disasters that feel scripted Community drama that's half-serious, half-performance And enough chaos to fill a season of television It's why people love this game. One minute you're broke. The next minute you hit an Apothecary. The next minute your entire crafting project bricks and you consider uninstalling. The next minute you drop a Mageblood and ascend into the clouds. Path of Exile is unpredictable. Unstable. Unfair. And completely unforgettable. Final Thoughts Mirror of the Calendar farming isn't really about efficiency. It isn't even necessarily about profit-though you can make obscene amounts of currency doing it. It's about the journey: The landmine disasters The jackpot drops The crafting heartbreak [url=https://www.mmoexp.com/Path-of-exile/Currency.html]POE divine orbs[/url] The streamer meltdowns The league-saved celebrations The absolute chaos that only Path of Exile can deliver If you want a farming strategy that's stable, controlled, and methodical-look elsewhere.[/quote]
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Topic review
Author
Message
Chunzliu
Posted: Fri Nov 14, 2025 6:37 am
Post subject: MMOexp-POE: The Most Entertainingly Terrible Farming Method
Path of Exile players have always been creative when it comes to squeezing currency out of Wraeclast. Some farm bosses. Some min-max maps. Some run heist all league long. But every so often, a new trend comes around-not because it's mathematically optimal, but because it's so ridiculous, so explosive, and so catastrophically entertaining that players flock to it anyway.
Welcome to the world of Mirror of the Calendar farming-a chaotic blend of Scarabs, landmines, delirious gambling, streamer misfortune, and back-to-back jackpot drops that feels less like an economy strategy and more like an ongoing sitcom
POE currency
.
This is an article about what happens when you combine POE loot boxes, streamer degeneracy, lucky hits, unlucky hits, dubious financial decisions, and a surprising amount of ethics surrounding landmining. If you think you've seen it all in Path of Exile… buckle up.
"Guys, I'm broke and scared. What do I farm?"
It all begins with a familiar scene: a player staring at their empty stash tab, asking the eternal question:
"Guys… what do I farm? I'm broke and scared."
The answer, apparently, is boxes.
Strongboxes. Jeweler boxes. Divination card boxes. The dangerous, addictive, RNG-fueled rabbit hole of PoE loot crates. One bad hit and you feel like a clown. One good hit and you convince yourself you're a genius.
And in this case, the boxes were cracked.
The Apothecary High
It didn't take long:
Roll a strongbox.
Get "8 additional items."
Click.
The screen lights up.
Two Apothecaries.
Then it happens again.
A "14 additional items" box drops a Nurse.
A "7 additional currency" box drops multiple divines.
A random Harbinger chest starts spewing pure profit.
The Landmine Arc: When Ethics Leave the Room
And then the real chaos begins.
Enter the landmine saga, the strange and morally questionable but undeniably hilarious method of exploiting multiple listings on trade by undercutting yourself and causing a "landmine" chain reaction.
Landmine = listing something too cheap.
Someone buys it instantly.
Then you adjust the price.
Then someone buys the next one.
And the next.
And the next.
Players who weren't even trying to buy your item get chain-exploded by their own filtered searches.
One streamer went viral after detonating four landmines in a row, blowing up:
his listings
his profits
his dignity
and several metaphorical limbs
As absurd as it sounds, the profits start rolling in.
A player sells a random boot for chaos.
Crafts a helmet and sells it for divs.
Accidentally lists an armor for 20c, sells instantly, then raises it to 45c-and it sells again.
Someone hits a massive jackpot:
Double Foul Barrack Spite
A massive double corrupt hit
Then…
MAGEBLOOD.
Gameplay Chaos: Death, Lag, and KB With Shroud Walker
Of course, no POE session is complete without gameplay suffering.
Players die reading chat.
Players die because the pulse radius was "way bigger than expected."
Another tries to show off their HC skills and nearly dies mid-sentence.
Crafting Disaster: The Enull Incident
The item has:
Burning damage
Trap & mine damage
A useless INT rollThe Essence of PoE: Chaos, Comedy, Profit
What makes Mirror of the Calendar farming-and really, the entire PoE community-so entertaining is that it embodies everything Path of Exile is:
RNG that alternates between kind and cruel
Profits that come from unexpected sources
Players who create their own meta
Ridiculous drops at the weirdest times
Crafting disasters that feel scripted
Community drama that's half-serious, half-performance
And enough chaos to fill a season of television
It's why people love this game.
One minute you're broke.
The next minute you hit an Apothecary.
The next minute your entire crafting project bricks and you consider uninstalling.
The next minute you drop a Mageblood and ascend into the clouds.
Path of Exile is unpredictable.
Unstable.
Unfair.
And completely unforgettable.
Final Thoughts
Mirror of the Calendar farming isn't really about efficiency. It isn't even necessarily about profit-though you can make obscene amounts of currency doing it.
It's about the journey:
The landmine disasters
The jackpot drops
The crafting heartbreak
POE divine orbs
The streamer meltdowns
The league-saved celebrations
The absolute chaos that only Path of Exile can deliver
If you want a farming strategy that's stable, controlled, and methodical-look elsewhere.