Schedule 1 Mix Calculator
Schedule 1 Mixing Calculator (Advanced)
How to Use the Schedule 1 Calculator
Choose from OG Kush, Sour Diesel, Green Crack, Grandaddy Purple, Meth, or Cocaine. Each has a distinct base price and base cost:
- Weed (OG Kush, Sour Diesel, etc.) = $35 base price
- Meth = $70 base price
- Cocaine = $150 base price
Check all the ingredients (e.g., Cuke, Banana, Donut, Iodine) you want to mix in. Each ingredient has:
- A base effect (e.g., Energizing, Gingeritis)
- A cost (deducted from your total)
- An advanced replacement rule that can transform existing effects.
The calculator applies the base effects first—respecting a maximum of 8 total effects—then processes advanced replacement rules. You’ll see a final list of effects and a final price that reflects all multipliers.
Review Final Selling Price vs. Manufacturing Cost
- Final Price = Product base price × (1 + sum of effect multipliers)
- Manufacturing Cost = Product cost + sum of ingredient costs
If you notice you’re not making enough margin, try removing expensive ingredients with low multipliers or combining items that yield multiple strong effects without big cost increases.
Schedule 1 Calculator Guide & Features
1. Multiply Your Profits
Each effect in Schedule 1 adds a multiplier to your product’s base price, potentially boosting your final selling price by up to 60% per effect. By strategically combining ingredients and taking advantage of advanced replacement rules, you can create powerful, high-value mixes that skyrocket your income.
2. Simplify Complex Mixing
Schedule 1’s mixing system is far from straightforward. Effects can replace each other, some have zero multipliers, and each product has its own base price. Rather than memorizing a massive table of advanced ingredient rules, a Schedule 1 Calculator automates these interactions, helping you discover optimal blends with minimal trial and error.
3. Control Manufacturing Costs
It’s not enough to have a pricey final product; you also want to ensure the cost of production stays low. The calculator tracks both ingredient costs and product base cost, letting you balance high revenue with a reasonable investment. By minimizing overhead and maximizing multipliers, you’ll dominate Hyland Point’s black market in no time.
4. Real-Time Advanced Effects
With advanced effect replacement rules, certain ingredients can transform effects you’ve already added. For instance, Cuke can shift your Euphoric effect into Laxative if present, or a Foggy effect into Cyclopean. The calculator handles these intricate rules automatically, so you don’t lose track of the chain reactions that yield new effect combinations.
Best Practices for Schedule 1 Calculator Users
Don’t be afraid to try multiple ingredients. Sometimes a single shift—like turning Munchies (0.12) into Athletic (0.32)—can dramatically affect your profit.
Our integrated replacement rules cover everything from simple effect shifts to multi-step transformations. If something’s unclear, consult the in-depth table in the calculator’s code or the advanced mixing guide.
Found a high-yield combination? Write it down, bookmark it, or store it for quick replication. Turning out consistent quality mixes keeps your customers loyal and your profits stable.
Effects like Laxative or Paranoia might look harmless, but they can block you from stacking money-making effects. Keep an eye on the final effect list and check if any zero multipliers are preventing bigger gains.
Advanced Mixing Tips
While you can stack up to eight effects, not all effects are beneficial. Certain 0-multiplier effects (Toxic, Smelly, etc.) may pave the way for more profitable transformations, but they also take up effect slots that could go to lucrative multipliers like Cyclopean (0.56) or Shrinking (0.60).
If Sneaky is present when you add Cuke, it could become Paranoia (0.00 multiplier)—which might then be replaced by Anti-Gravity (0.54) via a further ingredient. These chain reactions can drastically boost or lower your final price, so check the calculator carefully.
Some high-multiplier effects require expensive ingredients (e.g., Addy at $9 for Thought-Provoking, 0.44x). Make sure your final margin still justifies the investment.
Exceeding the maximum of 8 effects means you lose out on potential multipliers. If your mix is already hitting 8 effects and you add a new ingredient, the “default effect” might not apply or an existing effect may get replaced. The calculator will handle this logic for you.