The Legend Of Zelda: Tears Of The Kingdom is a big game set on a huge open world, and its codebase must be straining at all times to keep track of everything thatâs going on. Which probably explains why it doesnât matter how many times Nintendo patches the game to remove a resource glitch, people just keep on finding new ones.
The latestâwhich has been confirmed to work on every existing version of the game, from those still clinging by their fingertips to 1.0 to those running the latest updateârevolves around the idea that you can trick the game into giving you loads of valuable resources by turning big hunks of meat into a weapon, then taking that weapon with you to the snow.
Thatâs the concise version of what you need to do, of course. The full process is a bit more involved than that, as you can see in this nine-minute video by Austin John Plays below:
Or, for a much quicker version, hereâs the text. Essentially, you need to make two meat weapons by attaching raw produce to sticksâideally gourmet meat given its valueâthen glue two of those weapons together using ultrahand. Once youâve done that, you can use autobuild to ctrl+c, ctrl+v until youâve built 21 meat clubs (the most the game can remember and place at any one time) and fused them all together.
Once youâve built that 21-meat salute, itâll be stored in your autobuild. You then need to equip another meat club as your primary weapon, travel somewhere cold and wait/sleep at a fire until your weather forecast is all snow. Once it is, you need to watch your equipped meat club; if after walking away from the fire it freezes and drops off, then youâre good to go.

Simply start the process of rebuilding the meat slab from your autobuild, but donât actually build it, just keep it hovering inside the purple circle; after a second or two all the meat will freeze and drop off onto the ground, and at 40 rupees a pop, the faster you can half-build-freeze-gather, the more money youâll be able to collect. As Austin says, a full stack will sell for 39960 rupees in as quick as eight minutes, so if youâre short on cash itâs definitely worth your time.
Given Nintendoâs previous urgency in patching this kinda stuff out of anâŠoffline singleplayer game, you might want to get on this sooner rather than later!