Some of the finest weapons your characters can acquire in Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth must be forged, which requires you to gather rare materials. Here is our guide telling you where to get the especially useful Empty Cough Drop Tin inLike a Dragon: Infinite Wealth.

Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth – where to get the Empty Cough Drop Tin

A lot of high-level weapons you can craft atJulie’s Gearworksrequire you to supply an Empty Cough Drop Tin, along with other more common components and plenty of cash. For example, the tin is a necessary component if you wish to make theTrue Legendary Hero’s Bat. The same is true for numerous other 6-star and 7-star weapons. Unfortunately,the best place to find the Empty Cough Drop Tin is very late in the game, at the Yokohama Underground Exchange.

TheYokohama Underground Exchangeis available once you progress the story campaign to a certain point inChapter 10. Then you meet a character namedUtamaru, who helps facilitate runs into a randomly generated dungeon inYokohama. It’s similar to theHawaii Hauntlocation in Hawaii.

Empty Cough Drop Tin

Related:All Honk-Honk locations in Like a Dragon: Infinite Wealth

As you acquireGeomijul’s Survey Datadisks, you may exchange them for rewards. Every Empty Cough Drop Tin costs2,000 disks, which isn’t terribly expensive. You should get enough disks for a couple of tins after each run through the more advanced dungeons.

Although the Yokohama Underground Exchange is the best place to reliably secure the Empty Cough Drop Tin, you may also find it elsewhere on rare occasions.Some powerful enemies very late in the game may drop it as loot.I also found one while visiting a particular plot-related destination near the end of Chapter 12.

You’ll see weapons listed on menus starting fairly early in your adventure. Given the stat improvements they provide, you may wish to craft them much earlier than the necessary components are available. At least for now, you’ll just have to wait.

Jason Venter

Jason Venter is a contributing writer for PC Invasion since 2022 who can trace his love for video games back to the Apple IIe port of Mario Bros. in the late 80s. He remains a diehard Nintendo fan to this day and loves JRPGs, adventure games, and platformers in particular, but he still plays games in most genres and on most hardware. After founding indie gaming site HonestGamers in 1998, he served as an editor at Hardcore Gamer Magazine during its entire print run. He has since freelanced for a variety of leading sites including IGN, GameSpot, and Polygon. These days, he spends most of his time writing game guides and entertaining readers with his fantasy novels.