Arhat's Jinpachi: Difference between revisions
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Smithsmith. (talk | contribs) m (smithing subcraft is 48 according to asb) |
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{{Item Sections}}<section begin="Item Image"/>{{Item Image|Arhat'sJinpachi.png|Arhat's Jinpachi}}<section end="Item Image"/> | |||
==Statistics== | ==Statistics== | ||
{{Item Statistics | {{Item Statistics | ||
| Line 11: | Line 10: | ||
| set = Arhat's Gi Set | | set = Arhat's Gi Set | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Horizon Changes {{changes}}== | ==Horizon Changes {{changes}}== | ||
| Line 18: | Line 16: | ||
==Other Uses== | ==Other Uses== | ||
{{Used In | {{Used In | ||
| guild points value = {{Guild Points Value|3225| | | guild points value = {{Guild Points Value|3225|6400}} | ||
| resale price = {{Resale Price|3225}} | | resale price = {{Resale Price|3225}} | ||
}} | }} | ||
==Synthesis Recipes== | ==Synthesis Recipes== | ||
{{Synthesis Recipe | {{Synthesis Recipe | ||
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| cap = 81 | | cap = 81 | ||
| subcraft = Smithing | | subcraft = Smithing | ||
| subcraft cap = | | subcraft cap = 48 | ||
| result = Arhat's Jinpachi | | result = Arhat's Jinpachi | ||
| hq result = Arhat's Jinpachi +1 | | hq result = Arhat's Jinpachi +1 | ||
| Line 38: | Line 37: | ||
==Used in Recipes== | ==Used in Recipes== | ||
{{rl|Roshi Jinpachi|Clothcraft|94}} | {{rl|Roshi Jinpachi|Clothcraft|94}} | ||
==How to Obtain== | ==How to Obtain== | ||
Latest revision as of 20:24, 26 September 2025
Statistics
View the entire Arhat's Gi Set.
Horizon Changes 
none
Other Uses
| Guild Points Value: 3,225 / 6,400 (1.98 items) |
| Resale Price: ~3,225 gil |
Synthesis Recipes
Clothcraft (81), Smithing (48)
- Yield: Arhat's Jinpachi x 1
HQ 1: Arhat's Jinpachi +1 x 1 - Wind Crystal
- 1 x Darksteel Chain
- 1 x Darksteel Sheet
- 2 x Silk Cloth
Used in Recipes
How to Obtain
Auction House Category: Armor > Head ![]()
Only obtainable through synthesis.
Notes
In the sramanic traditions of ancient India (most notably those of Mahavira and Gautama Buddha) arhat (Sanskrit) or arahant (Pali) signified a spiritual practitioner who had—to use an expression common in the tipitaka—"laid down the burden"—and realised the goal of nirvana, the culmination of the spiritual life (brahmacarya). Such a person, having removed all causes for future becoming, is not reborn after biological death into any samsaric realm.

