STOP RESETTING YOUR WORLD! YOU ARE KILLING YOUR ABYSS ARTIFACT DROPS! 😱🔥

Everyone is talking about “Reblockade,” but the pro players have just discovered something that feels like a legal cheat code. We’ve been told to liberate the forts to progress, but what if I told you that never clearing a specific stronghold is the only way to get infinite Abyss Artifacts? There’s a “Permanent Blockade” glitch—or maybe a hidden mechanic—that Pearl Abyss didn’t want you to find.

If you’ve already liberated the Shadow Cliff Watch Camp, you might have already messed up your farm. But for those who haven’t, there’s a way to trigger a “Loading Loop” that respawns Elite Inquisitors every 60 seconds without ever losing the “Conflict” status. We just found a player who pulled 15 Faded Abyss Artifacts in less than an hour using nothing but a Kuku Pot and a very specific spot on the Delissia border.

Why is the “War” setting actually bad for farming these items? And what does the Condemina Armor helmet have to do with increasing the drop rate of these artifacts?

The step-by-step guide to the “Eternal Siege” farm is below 👇

In the world of Crimson Desert, “Liberation” is usually the goal. But for an elite group of “Artifact Hunters,” peace is the enemy of profit. A new meta-strategy has emerged involving the game’s Reblockade System, where players are intentionally keeping specific strongholds under enemy control to create what the community is calling a “Permanent Blockade.” The goal? An endless, high-speed farm for Abyss Artifacts—the rarest crafting components in the game.

The ‘Shadow Cliff’ Goldmine

The epicenter of this farming craze is the Shadow Cliff Watch Camp in southeastern Pywel. Under normal circumstances, players are encouraged to clear the 13 factions occupying these forts. However, Patch 1.05 introduced a “Stable/Conflict/War” toggle in the gameplay settings that has inadvertently created a loot loophole.

By setting the world to Conflict mode and refusing to kill the final “Faction Leader” at Shadow Cliff, players can trigger a localized respawn of Elite NPCs. Unlike the standard open-world mobs, these Elites have a significantly higher drop table for Faded Abyss Artifacts and Electrical Components.

The ‘Loading Screen’ Exploit

The strategy, as detailed by veteran players on Discord and Reddit, involves a clever use of the game’s save mechanics. “You don’t need to wait for a natural respawn,” one top-tier farmer explained. “By initiating a loading screen—either by sleeping in a nearby bed or reloading a quick-save while inside the ‘Conflict’ zone—the game re-populates the Elites while keeping their ‘Looted’ status reset. It’s a 60-second cycle for items that are supposed to take hours to find.”

The Scholar Stone Connection

The sudden influx of Abyss Artifacts has had a massive impact on the game’s secondary economy. These artifacts are the primary currency used to gain “Trust” with the Tall Scholars at the Scholar Stone Institute.

By feeding this “Permanent Blockade” loot into the Institute, players are fast-tracking their way to obtaining Mercury, Brimstone, and the blueprints for the Enhanced Cuckoo Cooler. What was intended to be a multi-week grind for inventory expansion is now being completed by “Artifact Farmers” in a single afternoon.

‘Beautiful Disappointment’ or Intentional Design?

Pearl Abyss has yet to issue a hotfix for this “Eternal Siege” tactic, leading some to speculate that it might be an intentional “high-risk, high-reward” mechanic. However, critics argue that it trivializes the difficulty of the Delissia region.

“When you have a ‘Starter Build’ that’s already too strong and now you have infinite Abyss Artifacts, the sense of progression breaks,” warned an industry analyst. “Pearl Abyss needs to decide if they want Crimson Desert to be a survival epic or a looter-shooter style grind-fest.”

The ‘Inquisitor’ Bonus

Adding another layer to the drama is the discovery that wearing the Righteous Inquisitor disguise (the Condemina Armor set) during these blockade farms appears to alter NPC behavior. Some players report that Elites become less aggressive, allowing for even faster execution of the “Loading Loop.” While the “no-dye” glitch on this armor continues to frustrate fans, its hidden utility in farming has made it an essential part of the “Abyss Meta.”

What’s Next?

As rumors of Patch 1.06 circulate, the community is rushing to exploit the “Permanent Blockade” before it’s patched out. For the mercenaries of Pywel, the message is clear: if you want the best gear in the game, stop trying to save the world and start trying to keep it in a state of perpetual war. In Crimson Desert, the real treasure isn’t found in the peace of victory, but in the chaos of a siege that never ends.