Allyson is an Editor at TheGamer. A graduate of the University of North Texas, she holds a bachelor’s degree in Journalism.
When she’s not busy editing/writing, she’s likely championing the Oxford comma and sipping on overpriced iced lattes.
Inventory management in Arc Raiders is one of those things you don’t really think about until your stash screams at you, and suddenly you’re debating the emotional value of a half-used ammo stack. The game throws materials at you like it’s doing you a favor, but keeping all of it? Yeah, that’s not happening unless you enjoy living in clutter.
Here’s where to find the Rusted Tools so you aren’t stuck on the basic Gunsmith.
Luckily, Arc Raiders actually gives you plenty of ways to stay organized; you just have to know where to look. Before you start hoarding every shiny thing or rage-selling your entire backpack out of spite, here’s how to set yourself up for a stash that won’t make you question every decision you’ve ever made.
How To Best Manage Your Inventory
Managing inventory in Arc Raiders is mostly about knowing what you need right now versus what you’ll need eventually. The game throws a lot of materials at you, but your stash fills up fast, so your priority should be tracking resources for current workstation upgrades and clearing out everything else.
You can track upgrade materials directly at any workshop bench; once you click ‘Track Resources,’ every required item gets an eye icon, and the list appears on the side of your logbook/map screen. Anything without that eye? That’s your candidate for selling, scrapping, or crafting through.
Your stash will balloon faster than you think, so plan to put some money toward stash upgrades whenever possible. Try not to stress about stockpiling for the far future. Half the fun is going out to re-find materials later. Take your time with this part, explore your stations, see what they produce, and don’t feel pressured to hoard every scrap you see.
Crafting Is Storage Management
Crafting isn’t just about survival; it’s also about freeing up space. Materials for shields, chargers, bandages, ammo, and grenades take up a ton of room, so crafting your kits regularly both prepares you for the field and clears bulk from your stash.
The same rule applies to free kits you pick up: upgrade them to green, then sell them for extra value.
Attachments should never just sit in your inventory. Equip them on any spare guns you’re keeping in your stash to free space instantly. Even if you don’t plan on using that gun right now, the attachment is still stored, just in a more space-efficient spot.
Scrap Smarter, Not Harder
If you keep looting Scrappy every run (the rooster that gives out basic crafting materials), you’re probably hoarding way more of those basics than you need. That’s essentially six extra stacks of low-value clutter filling your stash. Skip Scrappy sometimes and let your inventory breathe.
Sell The Right Things, Not Everything
A good rule of thumb: If it’s not tracked for an upgrade, and you’re not using it this moment, it can probably go. Sell generic trinkets, duplicate stacks, and spare materials. Selling partial stacks of ammo is especially efficient. If you find a stack with something like 12 rounds left, it’s better off sold.
Same goes for light shields and other partially used consumables. You’ll find more.
Periodically check each workstation and track what you need to level it. Build habits around collecting the materials that matter to your active progression goals. If you look at what upgrades cost and what each station produces, you’ll naturally get a better rhythm for what to pick up, what to craft, and what to ditch.
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