Not really. The potions the lady he was trying to sell to on page 5 looked to be about 4oz/118ml; if we assume the doses of his wealth potion is the same, that's 4oz for 24 hours of extra cash drops.All that material for an extra 20% chance of cash drops? Seems like you'd lose more money than you gain using that.
All really depends on how much an extra 20% kettle drops actually gives him, and the other half of the function, manipulating his luck.Not really. The potions the lady he was trying to sell to on page 5 looked to be about 4oz/118ml; if we assume the doses of his wealth potion is the same, that's 4oz for 24 hours of extra cash drops.
That bucket looks to be about a standard 5 gallon/20 liter bucket and appears to be about a third full; that'd give him 1.7 gallons or about 6.5 liters, which is about 220oz or 6500ml.
That's roughly 55 individual doses of the potion or almost two full months worth, if he took one every day. All from stuff he can source with relative ease.
It costs a philosopher stone, which was described as when added to a staff being something that any magic user would pay any price to have. The only benefits here are that the money drops don't have any effect on the economy so he can use them on his item upgrade system without messing with the rest of the economy, and the vague fortune buff that suggests it is far more potent than just being financial benefits.Not really. The potions the lady he was trying to sell to on page 5 looked to be about 4oz/118ml; if we assume the doses of his wealth potion is the same, that's 4oz for 24 hours of extra cash drops.
That bucket looks to be about a standard 5 gallon/20 liter bucket and appears to be about a third full; that'd give him 1.7 gallons or about 6.5 liters, which is about 220oz or 6500ml.
That's roughly 55 individual doses of the potion or almost two full months worth, if he took one every day. All from stuff he can source with relative ease.
Believe it or not, that's because everyone here is always screaming"!" is a bit overused in this manga...
Yep. If someone else were to consume it, while they wouldn't see the kettle drops, they would gain benefits in some other ways, likely actual great god-like fortune for a limited time that could allow them to win a lottery.It costs a philosopher stone, which was described as when added to a staff being something that any magic user would pay any price to have. The only benefits here are that the money drops don't have any effect on the economy so he can use them on his item upgrade system without messing with the rest of the economy, and the vague fortune buff that suggests it is far more potent than just being financial benefits.