

Plastids are a scam. They are not as easily built up as other random resources, yet almost every item craftable in a dojo requires at least 300+ plastids per piece. Plastids are a way of controlling the flock. Sheep. We're all being played by the masses of infested, the hive of the infested. Maybe even Wally, the man in the wall.
It's all a set up. We grind plastids, day in day out. Farming to build our cool little dojos but it's all some elaborate scheme to distract us from figuring out what's really going on. It's like some backwards laundering scheme, where we get the plastids while they stay cooped up, shrouded like a stalker in the smoke. I don't know what they're up too, but I am gonna figure it out.
They can't keep controlling us with these plastid droughts. It's like mining for coal at the age of 8, calling it Minecraft to cope. It's all too simple, so simple we never figured it out. Plastids are the Warframe's diamonds. They're not too scarce if you know where to look, but not too common to be farmed so easily early on. The infested even lure us to the farms by giving "bonus affinity!, Bonus Resource drops and drop chance!" even extra affinity on specific weapons. We've all been fooled time and time again.
It's time we made a revolution for plastids! Look at it, it mocks us. Stand up Tenno, it's time to get our plastids.
1. Overpaying for car insurance
The average American saves a whopping $410+ a YEAR (source) when they switch auto insurance carriers - sometimes significantly more than that: I saved $1,300 this year.
The reason: some carriers offer discount prices to new customers when they switch.
Take 30 seconds and go to a 3rd party comparison site (Coverage.com and Auto-Savings.com are both fine) to see if you can find cheaper rates. You’ll likely save yourself a bunch of money.
Some people suggest switching every 6 months, that's a little bit overkill imo. Once a year should be fine.
2. Overpaying when you shop online
Big stores like Amazon know that no one has time to price shop through dozens of sites, so there’s often no incentive for them to offer bargain prices.
I typically hate browser extensions with a fiery passion, but Capital One Shopping has always worked well for me and I'd recommend trying it (link here).
When you shop online (on Amazon or elsewhere) it will automatically compare prices for you, and auto-apply coupon codes when possible.
3. Paying for subscriptions you don't use.
We've all signed up for free trials and forgotten to cancel them. Stop paying for services you aren't using!
Take a minute and get yourself a good cancellation app: I like Rocket Money (link here).
It's an app that will put together a list of your subscriptions so you can pick/choose which ones to cancel.
They also have a premium service that will cancel them for you, if you'd like.
Here's a link (it's free).
4. Dealing with debt on your own
If you’ve got $10k+ in unsecured debt (think credit cards, medical bills, etc), you can ask a debt relief company to come in and negotiate it for you. You typically will save around 23% on average (after their fees).
Here’s a link to a savings calculator from National Debt Relief's website if you want to see how much you could save: link here.
5. Not having a financial advisor.
You know why so many rich people have financial advisors? It isn't because they're better at picking stocks (spoiler alert: they're not)
It's because a good financial advisor will help you with all of the bizarro tax implications you never would have thought of. People with financial advisors end up making ~3% more/year thanks to better tax planning.
If you don't know an advisor personally, use a 3rd party comparison site to find somebody with good reviews (WiserAdvisor is solid).
6. Using normal, low-interest savings accounts
I'm always shocked at the number of people still using garbage savings accounts that pay 0.5% (or less) a year. There are literally hundreds of banks that will pay you 8x that, usually 10x that rate
Here's a link to a bunch of options.
7. Needing cash, but taking out high-interest loans.
So many people take out high-interest payday loans – please don’t do this. If you get into trouble you can typically get a relatively low-interest HELOC (a home equity line of credit)
Essentially with a HELOC, you’re borrowing against the equity you have in your house and use it for whatever you need (much like a credit card).
Typically, you’ll get lower interest rates and more flexible repayment terms compared to traditional loans.
Here’s a calculator you can use to see how much/little you could borrow (link here).
Side note: if you hate debt, you can still get money out of your home’s equity by using something like Hometap, where you more or less sell investors a portion of your equity without a loan)
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There are tons of other things (obviously) but these are the ones that I see the most. Hope that helps.
I love this game, I really do... but why in Drifter's green Duviri do I need so. many. damn. orokin. cells. And don't get me started with Argon Crystals. I just happened to land a resource booster with the login reward and I just spammed Void missions. But is that intended?
Let me know what's your current bottleneck.
Edit: Thank you all for your replies. I'm a returning player, so a lot of this information is super helpful. I've always used Hydron to level up stuff, but I hear a lot of Helene suggestions!
Rapiers' single target problems stem from their one stance. I know asking for a bigger fix to the weapon class would be unrealistic since they do have certain priorities, and i'd probably not even like any changes since the combos look good as is.
Something as simple as one incarnon could have been the perfect bandaid. Easiest thing i could think of is straight AoE on hits, and that's low effort, i'm sure the team would come up with something fun and relevant.
It's gotta be one of the coolest designs ever and arguably one of the hallmark weapons from early Warframe, so sad to see it left out.
I think he might just be my fan.
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