Yakuza games are well known for being packed with minigames, diversions, distractions and other timesinks, and the Fortune Exchange collectathon is pretty par for the course for what you’d expect to find in Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth. After being introduced to the Fortune Exchange collectathon midway through Chapter 3 you’ll want to keep an eye out for glowing motes of light scattered around, as these are one of Kamulop’s misplaced fortune slips. Bring them back to Kamulop and you’ll earn points, which you can exchange for prizes… including some pretty good accessories. This page will provide information regarding the Fortune Slip minigame, including how many points different fortunes are worth, what rewards you can obtain by collecting fortune slips, and how many fortune slips you need to find to claim all the rewards.
All Fortune Exchange Rewards and Tips¶
Around midway through Chapter 3 - after returning from Akane’s house the second time - you’ll run afoul of Kamulop. This annoying mascot character that Ichiban seems to consistently run afoul of has another request for you; this time he needs you to seek out fortune slips that were lost due to accident.
From this point on you’ll find fortune slips scattered throughout Hawaii, which appear as you explore as golden motes of light. You can usually find these lying on the ground out in the open, but the odd fortune slip may be found atop objects, in trash cans, or in out-of-the-way spaces. These fortune slips are also almost exclusively found outdoors, so you don’t need to worry about looking for them in stores, or different areas - if you zone-in to a new area, you probably won’t be finding any fortune slips. All in all, fortune slips are pretty easy to spot and quite numerous, so you should be scooping up plenty as you explore Honolulu, and finding enough points to redeem for some nice rewards won’t take much effort. Finding enough points to get all the rewards takes more work, but it should be something you can achieve if you thoroughly search Hawaii… perhaps while also keeping an eye out for Aloha Links?
To add an extra bit of complexity to fortune slips, there are four different types you’ll find lying about, all of which are worth a different number of points when you turn them in to Kamulop, as follows:
Fortune | Points |
---|---|
Bad Fortune | 1 |
Modest Fortune | 2 |
Good Fortune | 3 |
Best Fortune | 4 |
You can’t tell fortune slips apart while exploring, so this is pretty much a difference without a distinction - you’ll just want to pick up every glowing mote of light you see. Stop by the shrine between Sakura St. and Fuji St. (west of the Shinobi Sushi restaurant) and talk to Kamulop to turn in your fortunes and redeem the points, which you can then exchange for rewards. These rewards are as follows:
Reward | Points | Effect |
---|---|---|
Divine Water (x5) | 5 (each) | MP +180, Lowers drunkenness |
Wisdom King’s Talisman | 30 | Recover HP at the start of the turn |
War God’s Talisman | 30 | Recover MP at the start of the turn |
Sea God’s Talisman | 30 | Perfect Guards evade attacks entirely. Decreases the input window for Perfect Guards |
Thunder God’s Amulet | 20 | Greatly lowers the damage taken from electric attacks |
Water God’s Amulet | 20 | Greatly lowers the damage taken from ice attacks |
Fire God’s Amulet | 20 | Greatly lowers the damage taken from fire attacks |
Safe Travels Amulet | 15 | Recover MP after winning a battle |
Health Prayer Amulet | 15 | Recover HP after winning a battle |
Lucky Money Charm | 15 | Increases money obtained from battle |
Raiden Amulet (x2) | 5 (each) | Lowers the damage taken from electric attacks |
Rime Amulet (x2) | 5 (each) | Lowers the damage taken from ice attacks |
Flame Amulet (x2) | 5 (each) | Lowers the damage taken from fire attacks |
Tranquility Bat | 10 | Atk +18, MAtk +16, Attacks and weapon skills may buff your critical hit rate |
Kamulop will offer you rewards starting from the bottom of the list (see above) and will progressively offer more rewards as you bring in points and claim existing rewards, so you can’t really pick and choose and instead must work your way up to the good stuff at the top of the list. A good minimum goal is the Lucky Money Charm that will boost the money you earn in combat, but the Sea God’s Talisman, War God’s Talisman, and the Wisdom God’s Talisman are the real winners, being potent accessories that will prove useful for much of the game.
By our count, you’ll need 235 points to reach the Divine Water at the top of the rewards list, which… are okay restoratives, but they’re not really comparable in quality to the accessories below them. This creates a buffer of about 25 points, and you really shouldn’t lose sleep over that Divine Water, but if you care it’ll take you 260 points to claim every reward Kamulop offers. After scouring Hawaii, we ended up with exactly 299 points, and we wouldn’t be surprised if there were more out there, so this collectathon is pretty generous, giving you a 64+ point buffer if all you care about is getting the best accessories Kamulop offers. That’s roughly 80% of the fortune slips, which isn’t a hard ask. Better yet, you can technically find most or all of these slips by Chapter 4… although the enemies along the westernmost reaches of Honolulu might be a bit dangerous for low-level parties.
Be sure to keep an eye out as you walk around Hawaii and you’ll be amply rewarded for it!
Check out the following pages for other activities you can work on while you’re out on the prowl for misplaced fortunes:
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