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EZNPC ARC Raiders What to Keep in Your Stash

Posted: Tue Apr 14, 2026 9:44 am
by FireflyStar
Most ARC Raiders stash problems start with habits, not bad luck. People keep “maybe later” gear, stacks of meds, and random parts they don't even touch. Then the locker fills up and every raid feels slower than it should. If you want breathing room without wasting resources, the fix is simple: keep less, keep smarter, and only purchase Arc Raiders items when it actually solves a gap in your loadout instead of adding more clutter.



Stop storing things you can make later
A lot of players burn space on augments, ammo, healing, and cheap deployables. That's usually the first mistake. If you've already unlocked the blueprint, there's no real reason to let crafted items sit there for days. Make them when you need them. Augments are the big one. Don't repair them early either. A nearly broken augment still does its job unless you get fully dropped, so repairing at one percent just throws materials away. Barricades and common meds are the same story. Nice to have, sure, but not worth half a page in your stash.



Be harsher with weapons and shields
This is where most of the space disappears. If a weapon isn't part of your regular rotation, ask one question: am I honestly taking this into a raid soon? If not, scrap it. Lower-level guns usually aren't worth babying, while Level 4 weapons are worth keeping because repair costs make sense there. Also, don't leave mods floating loose. Attach them to stored guns so they stop eating extra slots by themselves. And if a mod is below green rarity, it's usually just dead weight. Shields need a different approach now. The old habit was to dump them when durability got low. That doesn't really hold up anymore. Repairing around the twenty-five to thirty percent range gives much better value and usually brings them back close to full strength.



Raw loot often beats processed materials
This one catches people out all the time. Raw components can stack in a way that's far more efficient than breaking everything down on sight. A Broken Handheld Radio carrying sensors is a good example, and the same goes for items that contain advanced mechanical parts. If you dismantle too early, you can actually lose storage efficiency. So don't auto-process every pickup the second you get back. Hold onto high-value raw items when they save slots, but keep a healthy base of universal materials as well. Metal parts, chemicals, batteries, and arc circuits still matter too much to ignore, especially once repairs and crafting start stacking up after a rough run.



Use steady supply loops instead of panic hoarding
If your stash is always jammed, it usually means you don't trust your farming routes yet. Build those first. Seed Vault at Stella Montis is one of the easiest ways to refill materials because the seed return is strong and the trade value adds up fast. Scrappy helps too, and a lot of players still underuse him. Toss him the food you pull from raids and let the returns work over time. You'll see useful crafting pieces, gunsmith materials, and sometimes gear worth keeping. That's the real trick: rely on repeatable income, not mountains of junk. A lean stash is easier to manage, easier to upgrade, and if you ever need extra help filling a specific gap, eznpc is one of the straightforward places players look for game items without turning their storage into a mess.