Fastest Method To Obtain The Green Dwarf Scroll
If you want the Dwarf Scroll II — the green dwarf scroll — the fastest, most reliable approach is to treat the hunt like a repeatable, optimized loop. Focused combat on the frozen Mine band combined with occasional tilling on early Mine floors gives the best balance of speed and low risk. This guide walks you through everything: why those floors work, how enemy spawns and drop-rolls behave, minute-by-minute run plans, exact loadouts and consumables, multiplayer strategies, tilling routines, inventory and donation workflow, and advanced optimizations that shave hours off the grind. Read this as a single, continuous playbook you can follow in-game; the goal is to convert time played into independent drop-rolls as efficiently as possible so the green scroll appears sooner rather than later.
Understanding the mechanics behind the hunt
Before you start grinding, it helps to understand the underlying principle: every eligible monster kill and every eligible tilling tile is an independent chance to produce a scroll. The green scroll is not tied to a single unique floor number; instead, it appears as a rare drop from a set of monsters that spawn on certain floors and as a very rare result of tilling dirt on earlier floors. That means your hourly success is determined by how many independent opportunities you create per hour. The two levers you control are spawn density (how many monsters you can kill per minute) and clear speed (how quickly you kill them). Everything in this guide is about maximizing those two levers while minimizing downtime and risk.
Why the frozen Mine band is the best target
The frozen floors in the Mines spawn groups of Dust Sprites and Blue Slimes and also include Frost Bats and Ghosts. Those enemies are ideal for scroll farming because they appear in clusters and die quickly to area damage or fast weapons. Clusters mean more independent drop-rolls per room clear; fast kills mean more rooms cleared per hour. When you combine high spawn density with AoE or bomb clears, you dramatically increase the number of drop opportunities you generate in a single session. The elevator lets you lock into a comfortable floor range and repeat the same layout types, which reduces wasted time and keeps your runs consistent.
Preparation and loadout: what to bring and why
Preparation is the difference between a frustrating grind and a productive session. Your loadout should prioritize speed, crowd control, and sustain. Choose a weapon with a high swing rate or a slingshot with explosive ammo to clear groups quickly. Bring stamina-restoring food and a few speed or luck consumables if you have them. Bombs are essential for dense rooms; staircases are optional but useful if you want to skip slow layouts. Keep inventory space free for artifacts and scrolls so you never lose a drop.
Wear any gear that increases drop rates or improves survivability. If you have the Burglar’s Ring or similar items that affect drops, equip them. If you’re short on combat confidence, bring a few healing foods and a defensive ring. The point is to minimize time spent healing or running back to town; every minute saved is more kills and more chances.
How to pick the exact floors and lock a route
Pick a frozen-floor cluster you can clear quickly and consistently. The exact floor number matters less than layout speed. Some players prefer the lower end of the frozen band because the rooms are simpler; others prefer deeper frozen floors for slightly denser spawns. The practical approach is to try a few floors and measure your clear time. If you can clear a floor in under 10 minutes with consistent kills, that floor is a keeper. Lock into that floor range using the elevator and repeat the same cluster until the layout becomes slow, then leave and re-enter to reset spawns.
When you find a floor with many tillable patches near the entrance, use it as a dual-purpose stop: do a quick tilling sweep between combat runs. That gives you passive chances without adding much time.
In-run pacing and room-by-room tactics
Start each run by buffing with speed and luck consumables if available. Enter the floor and move methodically: clear one room at a time, prioritize clusters, and use bombs in rooms with many small enemies. If you have an AoE weapon or explosive slingshot ammo, use it to clear Dust Sprites and Blue Slimes in one pass. Avoid long single-target fights; they reduce your kills per minute and therefore your drop-rolls per hour.
If a room has a single tough enemy and few spawns, skip it with a staircase or leave and re-enter the floor to reset spawns. The goal is to maximize the number of independent kills, not to clear every tile. When you finish a floor, use the elevator to return to your chosen band and repeat. Keep sessions short and focused: 20–40 minute runs with a short break to restock and eat are often more productive than marathon sessions where fatigue slows you down.
Tilling: the low-effort supplement
Tilling dirt on early Mine floors is a slow but steady way to add extra chances. Each tilled tile has a tiny chance to yield a scroll, so a floor with many dirt patches can be tilled quickly and revisited repeatedly. Use tilling as a supplement between combat runs or when you want a low-risk break. It’s especially useful if you’re farming alone and want to avoid long combat sessions. The trade-off is time: tilling yields are rare, so don’t rely on it as your primary method unless you prefer a relaxed pace.
Multiplayer: how to coordinate for maximum yield
Multiplayer accelerates the process because more players spawn more monsters, and each monster killed by any player can produce independent drop-rolls. Coordinate roles: one player focuses on AoE clearing, another on crowd control, and a third on healing and staircases. Communicate about inventory space and donation plans so scrolls don’t get lost or hoarded. If you can run with two or three friends who clear quickly, your hourly roll count can multiply, turning a long solo grind into a few efficient sessions.
Be mindful of loot sharing and etiquette: decide whether scrolls are shared or donated immediately. If your group’s goal is to unlock the Dwarvish Translation Guide quickly, donate duplicates to the Museum as you go to track progress.
Inventory, donation, and the Museum workflow
As you collect scrolls, donate them to the Museum. Donating all four Dwarf Scrolls triggers the Dwarvish Translation Guide, which unlocks Dwarf dialogue and vendor options. Keep inventory space free so you never miss a drop. If you pick up extra artifacts or valuable items, sell or store them between runs to maintain space. A simple workflow: clear a 20–40 minute run, return to town, donate scrolls and sell excess loot, restock food and bombs, then head back. This loop minimizes downtime and keeps your runs efficient.
Advanced optimizations that save hours
There are several advanced techniques that compound into major time savings. First, stack speed and luck buffs before a run. Speed increases kills per minute; luck increases the quality and quantity of drops in general. Second, use bombs and AoE weapons to clear clusters in a single action. Third, rotate floors proactively: if a layout becomes slow, leave and re-enter rather than stubbornly grinding. Fourth, use staircases to skip single-room bottlenecks. Fifth, on days when your in-game luck is high, prioritize longer runs because the marginal benefit per kill increases. Finally, if you have access to rings or gear that affect drops, use them during dedicated scroll runs.
Risk management and time budgeting
Scroll farming is a marathon, not a sprint. Expect to invest multiple hours if you’re unlucky, and plan sessions accordingly. If you have limited playtime, aim for short, high-intensity runs rather than long, unfocused sessions. Keep a small buffer of healing items and a plan for quick exits if you get low on health. If you’re farming on a day with poor in-game luck, switch to tilling or other activities and return when luck improves. The key is to convert your available playtime into the maximum number of independent chances.
Troubleshooting common problems
If you’re not seeing progress, check these common issues: are you clearing floors quickly enough? Are you using AoE or bombs effectively? Are you running floors with low spawn density? Are you filling your inventory and losing drops? Are you playing solo when multiplayer would be faster? Fixing any of these will usually restore progress. If you’re consistently getting no drops after many hours, try switching floors or taking a break and returning later; sometimes a fresh layout yields better spawn patterns.
Practical session templates you can copy
Use these session templates as starting points and adapt them to your playstyle.
Short focused run (30 minutes): buff with speed and luck, bring 6 bombs and 3 stamina foods, lock into a frozen-floor cluster you clear in under 10 minutes, clear two floors, return to town, donate and restock.
Balanced run (60 minutes): buff, bring 10 bombs and 6 foods, alternate three combat floors with a quick tilling sweep on an early floor, coordinate with a friend if possible, donate scrolls mid-run.
Relaxed tilling session (45 minutes): skip combat, pick a floor with many dirt patches, till and leave, repeat via elevator, check inventory and donate any scrolls found.
These templates are flexible; the important part is consistency and minimizing downtime between runs.
Why patience and tracking matter
Because scroll drops are rare, tracking your progress helps maintain morale and informs adjustments. Keep a simple log: date, session length, floors run, and scrolls found. Over time you’ll see patterns: certain floors or layouts yield more, certain times of day or luck levels feel better. Use that data to refine your route and loadout. Patience is essential; the right approach reduces wasted time and makes the grind feel purposeful rather than random.
Post-collection uses and next steps
After you collect and donate all four Dwarf Scrolls, you receive the Dwarvish Translation Guide. That unlocks new dialogue and vendor options with the Dwarf, which can be useful for late-game crafting and lore. Keep extra scrolls if you like collecting or if you want to use them in tailoring or dyeing later. Once the guide is unlocked, you can shift your time to other late-game goals with the satisfaction that the scroll hunt is complete.
FAQ
How long will it take to get Dwarf Scroll II? There’s no guaranteed time because drops are random. With optimized runs on frozen floors and consistent play, many players find the scroll within a few hours; others may take longer. The best strategy is to maximize kills per hour and keep sessions focused.
Which enemies drop the green scroll? The green scroll drops from the common frozen-floor enemies you’ll encounter in the Mines: Dust Sprites, Blue Slimes, Frost Bats, and Ghosts. Tilling dirt on early floors also has a tiny chance to yield scrolls.
Is there a single best floor? No single floor is guaranteed better; choose a frozen-floor cluster you can clear fastest. Layout speed matters more than the exact floor number.
Does luck affect scroll drops? Luck affects general drop quality and frequency, so buffing luck can improve your effective yield. Speed buffs increase kills per minute, which indirectly increases your hourly chances.
Should I play multiplayer? Yes. Multiplayer increases monster spawns and independent drop-rolls, making it the fastest route if you can coordinate.
What if I don’t like combat? Use tilling as a low-effort supplement. It’s slower but requires less combat skill and is a good fallback.
Final checklist before you head in
Make sure you have a fast weapon or explosive ammo, stamina food, bombs, free inventory space, and a chosen frozen-floor cluster you can clear quickly. Buff with speed and luck if possible. Decide whether you’ll run solo or with friends. Set a session length and stick to short, focused runs with restocking breaks. Donate scrolls as you collect them to track progress.
This guide gives you a complete, practical playbook to convert your playtime into the maximum number of independent chances for Dwarf Scroll II. Follow the loadout and pacing advice, lock into a frozen-floor route you can clear quickly, supplement with tilling when you want a break, and use multiplayer when possible. With consistent, optimized runs you’ll dramatically reduce the time it takes to unlock the Dwarvish Translation Guide and finally get that green dwarf scroll into your Museum collection.
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