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本帖最后由 Hartmann846 于 2026-2-27 17:12 编辑
In Path of Exile, currency has never been "just money." It's your crafting plan, your trading leverage, your backup route when a drop refuses to happen. With PoE 2 getting closer, the whole idea of what's worth picking up is shifting, and you can feel it even in the way you think about PoE 2 Items. The old habit of hoarding piles of low-tier orbs and then blowing them in a tired clicking marathon doesn't really fit anymore. Now it's more like: stop, look at the base, picture the outcome, then decide if the spend makes sense.
Transmutation and Augmentation used to be the kind of currency you'd toss around without caring, especially once maps took over your life. In PoE 2 they're getting pulled back into the spotlight. You don't just spam them because you can. You end up asking yourself simple questions: is this item worth turning on, or am I better off saving the orb for a base that actually has a future? That extra second of thought changes the rhythm of crafting. It also makes "cheap" currency feel less like clutter and more like part of a real toolkit.
The new currency types tied to specific bosses and league mechanics are a sneaky big deal. It means the market won't revolve around one best farming loop while everything else feels like a side quest. If a certain endgame boss drops the resource that finishes your craft, you've got a reason to go learn that fight instead of mindlessly repeating the same map. And if you hate that content? Fine—you can trade for it, but you'll pay for the convenience. That push and pull is healthy. It keeps different parts of the endgame relevant, not just the fastest route to raw drops.
The most interesting twist is how currency can interact with the new skill gem setup. Gear and skills start to feel like one project instead of two separate checklists. If a currency item can nudge a skill—more coverage, a tweak to chill or freeze, some small mechanical edge—you'll treat it like build progression, not a gambling chip. You'll also see people testing weird ideas again, because the cost isn't only measured in chaos-equivalents; it's measured in what the change does to how your character actually plays.
All of this would be a mess without better management tools, so the UI improvements matter more than they sound on paper. Fewer headaches with shards, clearer sorting, less time playing "where did I put that" in your tabs. If you're not a dedicated trader, that accessibility helps you stay in the economy without it becoming a second job. And if you do want a shortcut—say you're behind the curve or just short on time—sites like U4GM can be useful for picking up game currency or items so you can focus on testing builds and learning fights instead of endlessly grinding the same route.
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