Final Fantasy 14's latest variant ...

FF14 के वेरिएंट डंगऑन रिवॉर्ड्स बेहतरीन डिज़ाइन को बर्बाद कर रहे हैं

Final Fantasy XIV का नया वेरिएंट डंगऑन, The Merchant's Tale, MMO के सबसे बेहतरीन डंगऑन में से एक है। तो फिर रिवॉर्ड्स इतने निराशाजनक क्यों हैं?

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

Eliza Crichton-Stuart

अद्यतनित Apr 6, 2026

Final Fantasy 14's latest variant ...

The bosses are imaginative, the art direction is spectacular, and the new advanced difficulty hits a sweet spot that most MMOs never manage. Final Fantasy XIV's latest variant dungeon, The Merchant's Tale, is genuinely one of the best pieces of content Square Enix has put into the game. And then you look at what it actually rewards you with, and the whole thing deflates.

A dungeon that earns its praise

Let's be clear about what The Merchant's Tale gets right, because it gets a lot right. The visual design is unlike anything else currently in Final Fantasy XIV, a painterly aesthetic that feels almost like a different game entirely. Each of the four bosses has a distinct identity: a genie who hurls a carpet at you, a dueling swordsman fought on a moving mount, a mermaid conducting an oceanic choir with her own spear, and a whale boss that has apparently eaten more than a few players whole.

The new advanced difficulty is the real win here. It sits in a space between normal and extreme raids, demanding actual coordination and execution without requiring a full eight-person static group. For players who want more than a faceroll but don't have the time or inclination to commit to savage progression, this is exactly the kind of content FFXIV has been missing.

The Merchant's Tale boss fight

The Merchant's Tale boss fight

What the chest actually gives you (and why it stings)

Here's the thing: the rewards do not match the quality of the content.

On normal difficulty, the mount that used to be the completion reward for clearing all routes has been moved to advanced difficulty. Its replacement? A sleep mask. The dungeon mostly drops consumables from its chests, which makes opening them feel like a chore rather than a highlight.

The advanced difficulty is worse. Corvosi Brass is the currency you grind, and the accessories it buys cost 12 Brass a piece. At roughly 5 Brass per run across three challenging bosses, you're looking at around 3 full clears just to buy a single bangle. The accessories themselves are tradeable, which at least gives players a path to converting runs into gil. But that's a thin silver lining.

What most players miss is that one of the advanced rewards is actually Elevated Ester, a material from last expansion's criterion dungeon. Access to that is genuinely welcome for players who want those older glowy Endwalker weapons. But recycling a reward from a previous expansion's hardest optional content as a selling point for new content is a sign of how thin the pool is.

The gear wall that keeps stubbing Square's toe

The deeper issue is that none of this content rewards gear in any meaningful way, outside of tomestones that players can farm from other sources anyway. Square Enix has maintained for years that best-in-slot gear should come exclusively from savage raids, and that philosophy is actively working against the rest of the game.

The savage raid timeline during the current Dawntrail expansion tells the story clearly. The first tier of the Arcadion launched in July 2024. The second arrived in April 2025. The third didn't land until January 2026. That's roughly nine months between each tier. Nine months is a long time to leave midcore and casual players with no meaningful gear progression outside of the tomestone grind.

The argument for protecting savage as the sole source of top-tier gear made more sense when patch cycles were shorter and content was denser. At nine-month intervals between raid tiers, there's a real case for letting variant dungeons and other optional content drop gear that's relevant, even if it sits a tier below current savage drops.

Square Enix has acknowledged the problem. Director and Producer Naoki Yoshida has signaled that rewards, including tomestone adjustments, are being looked at ahead of the next expansion. According to the official patch 7.5 announcement, Trail to the Heavens is set for April 28, which gives the team one more patch cycle to course-correct before the expansion winds down.

The cost of wasted content

The frustrating part is that The Merchant's Tale proves FFXIV's design teams are operating at a high level. The fight designers, artists, and writers who built this dungeon did exceptional work. A content structure that funnels players through it a handful of times before the reward pool dries up is failing that work.

Patch 7.5 is the last major content patch of the Dawntrail cycle, so a fix for The Merchant's Tale specifically isn't coming. But for players who want to follow how the next expansion handles this exact problem, the patch 7.3 notes from August 2025 show that Square has been iterating on the rewards conversation for a while. The question is whether the next expansion actually changes the philosophy, or just shuffles the same limited pool around.

The pro tip for now: run advanced Merchant's Tale for the experience and the gil from tradeable accessories, not for the gear. The fights are worth your time even if the loot table isn't. For more on what's coming to FFXIV and other games, make sure to check out more:

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रिपोर्ट्स, गेम अपडेट

अद्यतनित

April 6th 2026

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April 6th 2026

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