The Elder Scrolls IV: Oblivion Remastered, released on April 22, 2025, has rekindled players’ love for Bethesda’s 2006 RPG, with over four million adventurers exploring Cyrodiil’s enhanced world, powered by Unreal Engine 5. Among the game’s many systems, equipment durability remains a core challenge, as weapons and armor degrade with use, reducing effectiveness. Repair Hammers, essential for maintaining gear, are prone to breaking, especially at low Armorer skill levels, frustrating players who burn through dozens in a single dungeon. However, a clever exploit allows players to achieve an unbreakable Repair Hammer, ensuring infinite repairs with just one hammer. By leveraging a Fortify Armorer spell or enchantment, players can unlock the Master Armorer perk early, revolutionizing gear maintenance and saving countless gold, a strategy that ties into Oblivion’s tradition of exploitable mechanics.
In Oblivion Remastered, Repair Hammers are lightweight tools (1 unit) costing 10 gold at merchants like The Best Defense in the Imperial City or Rasheda’s Fire and Steel in Chorrol. Found in chests, crates, or looted from enemies, they’re abundant but fragile, breaking randomly based on the player’s Armorer skill. At Novice level (below 25), hammers snap frequently, often after one or two uses, especially on high-quality gear like Daedric armor. As Armorer skill increases, hammers last longer: Apprentice (25–49) doubles durability, Journeyman (50–74) enables enchanted item repairs, Expert (75–99) allows over-repair to 125% for boosted stats, and Master (100) makes hammers unbreakable. Normally, reaching Master Armorer requires hours of grinding—repairing gear after every fight, looting enemies’ items, or using tricks like shooting arrows to damage bows. The unbreakable hammer exploit bypasses this grind, granting the Master perk instantly.
The primary method involves casting a custom Fortify Armorer spell to boost the skill to 100 temporarily. To craft this spell, players need access to the Arcane University (unlocked via the Mages Guild questline, typically by level 10) or Frostcrag Spire (from the Wizard’s Tower DLC). With a Restoration skill of at least 25, players visit a Spell Making Altar and create a spell named, for example, “Hammer Eternity,” with the effect “Fortify Armorer 100 points for 2 seconds on Self.” This costs minimal Magicka (around 10–15), making it castable even for non-mages. Before repairing, players cast the spell, then immediately open the inventory, select the Repair Hammer, and fix their gear. The temporary boost grants the Master Armorer perk, ensuring the hammer never breaks during the spell’s duration. By recasting every few repairs, players maintain an unbreakable hammer indefinitely.
An alternative approach uses a custom enchantment. Players with access to the Arcane University’s Enchanting Altar or Frostcrag Spire’s Atronach Altar can enchant a ring or amulet with “Fortify Armorer 100 points for 1 second on Self,” using a Grand Soul Gem. Equipping the item before each repair triggers the Master perk, mimicking the spell’s effect. This method is less Magicka-dependent but requires soul-trapping a high-level enemy, like a Lich, or buying a filled gem from merchants like The Mystic Emporium. For players avoiding magic, a third, less reliable option exists: repeatedly using Fortify Armorer potions (crafted with rare ingredients like Flax Seeds or crafted at high Alchemy levels) to hit 100 skill, though this is costly and impractical compared to spells or enchantments.
The exploit’s effectiveness stems from a quirk in Oblivion’s skill system, preserved in the remaster. Fortifying Armorer to 100 grants the Master perk (unbreakable hammers) without unlocking lower perks, like enchanted item repairs, which require a natural Journeyman rank (50). This means players can maintain mundane gear flawlessly but must level Armorer naturally to fix enchanted items like Umbra or the Mundane Ring. Community forums, like those on Reddit, confirm the exploit works across PS5, Xbox Series X|S, and PC, with no achievement penalties, unlike console commands (e.g., player.setav armorer 100). However, a May 2025 patch fixed similar exploits, like scroll duplication, raising concerns that this glitch may soon be patched, as noted on Steam discussions.
The unbreakable hammer transforms gameplay. Without it, players spend 3,000–4,000 gold per repair session at blacksmiths for high-end gear like the Umbra set, as one level 10 player lamented on Steam, or carry dozens of hammers, cluttering inventory. With the exploit, a single hammer suffices, saving gold for purchases like Rosethorn Hall (25,000 gold) or rare spells like Apotheosis (14,000 gold). It also boosts Armorer skill faster, as each repair grants 1.5 experience points, letting players repair everything—own gear, enemy loot, or even slightly damaged items at 99% health—without fear of hammer loss. This synergizes with strategies like damaging bows with arrow shots or using Disintegrate Weapon spells to create repair opportunities, accelerating skill gains.
For enchanted gear, players must still reach Journeyman Armorer naturally, as the exploit doesn’t unlock this perk. A creative workaround involves the Ayleid Crown of Lindai, obtained from the “Secrets of the Ayleids” quest. This zero-health item remains repairable at Expert level, allowing infinite Armorer experience by repeatedly fixing it with the unbreakable hammer, especially when paired with the Fortify spell. Alternatively, players can train with Armorer trainers like Gin-Wulm in the Imperial City, though limited to five sessions per level, or hotkey hammers for quick repairs after fights, as suggested on UESP. These methods, combined with the exploit, make leveling Armorer efficient, eventually enabling natural Master status.
The exploit’s economic impact ties into Oblivion’s broader systems, echoing glitches like the 1,000,000-gold duplication exploit discussed in community guides. While duplication floods players with gold, the unbreakable hammer saves it, letting players afford high-cost items without farming potions or looting dungeons. This aligns with Oblivion’s sandbox ethos, where exploits like 100% Chameleon builds or Mundane Ring combos let players bend rules. However, it risks breaking immersion, as infinite repairs remove the survivalist tension of gear management. On X, some players argue it trivializes the Armorer skill’s progression, while others, like @TrophyHunt_Me, celebrate it as a time-saver, freeing focus for quests like the Dark Brotherhood or Shivering Isles.
Community strategies enhance the exploit’s utility. Reddit’s r/oblivion suggests waiting for the hammer’s “repair sound” to finish before each tap, reducing break chance even without the exploit, though some dismiss this as a placebo effect. Others recommend hotkeying the Fortify spell and hammer for seamless repairs during exploration, especially in Oblivion Gates, where gear degrades rapidly. For early-game players, looting hammers from the tutorial sewers or Market District crates ensures a steady supply until the exploit is accessible. Mods, like “More Repair Hammers” on Nexus Mods, increase hammer drops, but the exploit renders them obsolete, offering a purer solution for console players without mod access.
The exploit’s longevity is uncertain. Bethesda’s patches, like the one addressing container duplication, suggest the Fortify Armorer glitch may be fixed soon, as speculated on GameFAQs. Until then, it’s a golden opportunity, especially for players tackling Oblivion Remastered’s 200+ hours of content, from Mages Guild spell-crafting to the Arena’s gladiatorial battles. For purists, legitimate Armorer leveling—repairing after every fight, letting weak enemies hit to damage armor, or using Shagrol gro-Uzug’s sparring weapons from Fighter’s Stronghold—remains viable but slower. The exploit, like Assassin’s Creed: Shadows’ streamlined mechanics, caters to modern players seeking efficiency over grind, reflecting a shift in RPG design.
In conclusion, the unbreakable Repair Hammer exploit is a quintessential Oblivion trick, blending clever magic with the game’s exploitable systems. By casting a Fortify Armorer spell or enchanting an item, players wield a single hammer forever, saving gold and time while mastering Cyrodiil’s challenges. As Bethesda eyes patches, this glitch stands as a fleeting testament to Oblivion Remastered’s chaotic freedom, proving that in a world of dragons and Daedra, a humble hammer can forge an adventurer’s legacy.