Warframe Trading Guide: How to trade, where to find items, and when to barter for the right price

Randomness is a vital, inescapable part of Warframe. Nearly every item in the loot-and-shoot action game is randomly awarded - f𒀰rom finishing missions, killing enemies, or just being in the right place at the right time. This can make it awfully hard to get that last blueprint you need to complete a set, or that one upgrade you desperately want to add to your Warframe or weapon loadout.

Trading between fellow players is possible and takes some of the sting out of that grind. Unfortunately, it can be just as complicated as the rest of🅷 Warframe, and that's why we’ve compiled this guide꧒ to tell you where, how, and what to barter with your fellow players. Read on, and you'll soon be setting up trades and locking down that key loot you've been after.

What You Need and How to Get It

Obviously, the first thing any prospective 🍸trader needs to know is what they want and where to find it. The most immediate place to check is Warframe’s in-game “Trading” channel. It’s one of༒ the default tabs in your text chat visible at the bottom-left of the screen. It’s also where most players looking to move or acquire items immediately start.

. The very slick website doesn’t just let players post buy and sell orders - it lets you filter by price, trade items as a set, look only for traders who are in-game, and see useful information about whatever item you’re looking at, like where it drops naturally and how much it’s worth to the vendor Baro Ki’Teer. For more information on him, see our 澳洲幸运5开奖号码历史查询:Warframe Mods guide.

There’s no guarantee players will honor their listed price - you’re still dealing with human beings at the end of the day, but that almost never seems to be an issue. There’s nothing forcing you to complete a bad trade, either, after all.

A slower option is to check War🔴frame’s official . This avenue trades immediacy for specificity, but it’s a great place to find more randomized, esoteric items like Riven Mods and companion animals with specific genes. The downsides are that it’s harder to search and has fewer viewers than the more instantaneous markets.

The Meet-Up Process

Once you know what you want and how to get it, it’s time to set up a meeting. You’ll need to private message the potential trade partner with your intentions - if you found the user in-game, either through trade chat or becauseꦜ you already know them, just select𒊎 their username in chat and choose “whisper” to message them. If you found their name out-of-game (e.g. through Warframe.Market), you can type “/w username” followed by your message.

The two of you should then join a squad, as if you mean to play a mission together. Instead of starting a mission, however, you can load into either player’s Clan Dojo from the star map. If you’re not part of a clan the other player w🔥ill have to invite you to theirs. In the unlikely event neither of you has a clan, you can go to the zone called Maroo’s Bazaar on Mars instead.

Dojos are the better option, as every tradable item in Warframe comes with a “trade tax” that requires the game’s basic currency, credits, to complete. Maroo charges more than Dojos by default - clan leaders can set a higher tax on trades at their Doꦬjos, as well, but it’s rare.

Spawning inside a Dojo usually places you in front of a towering trade terminal. From there, you can initiate a trade with anyone else in the area, select the items or platinum you want to exch🌞ange,𒁃 and finally select confirm. That’s it!

The process is similar at Maroo’s Bazar. Except you don’t need to hit up a terminal. Just press your gear button (“Q” on keyboards by default) and select “set up shop” to open yourself to trades. You can also use this method to publicly show off, or search for, potential trade goods. The problem is that Maroo’s Bazaar is instanced - unlike the trade channel, you won’t see everything or show off to everyone, so select the bu༒siest instance you can when🦩 loading into the zone.

Limitations and Workarounds

Brand new players🐲 can’t actually trade at all, as the feature doesn’t unlock until you reach a “Mastery Rank” of two. This is an account-wide level that you increase by leveling up multiple Warframes and weapons.

From then on you can trade as many times per day equal to your mastery rank. So a rank 10 player can trade 10 times, a rank 15 player 15 times, and so on. Even then you🎃 can only trade up to five items per exchange, although the credits tax is usually more of a hindrance than these strange limitations.

Speaking of which, trading can b𒆙e a real drain on your wallet. The tax is pretty light for Prime parts, void relics, and mods, but can jump as high as one million credits on high-tier items. Platinum also costs 500 credits per unit traded. And since platinum is the most commonly traded “item” in Warframe, the costs add up quickly.

One way to make up the difference is by selling specific Warframe blueprints. Technically you can sell any item in your inventory for credits. It’s just rare that you’ll have anything you want to part with. The big exceptions are Harrow chas✨sis and Oberon blueprints. Both are fairly common drops from killing enemies during regular play. Duplicates serve no purpose besides being sold - especially after you’ve built the frames themselve✱s - and sell for a few thousand credits a pop.

Notice we said you can only sell those blueprints. Normal Warframe components can’t be💟 traded between players, and neither can fully crafted weapons or Prime W꧅arframes, as only their constituent parts and incomplete blueprints are fair game. Crafting resources, Endo, Orokin Catalysts and Reactors, as well as platinum you gained from free promotions, are also off-limits when it comes to trade.

Bear all of this in mind, figure out what items you need and which you can sell off, and you'll be trading like 𓂃a pro in no time.

Looking for more Warframe? Then check out the reasons Warframe's tough to start, but that's also why it's still so fun.

Steven is currently the Senior Managing Editor at Fanbyte, but was formerly a freelance journalist with bylines at Ars Tech꧃nica, PC Gamer, Dorkly, Waypoint, Rock Paper Shotgun, and GamesRadar.