One of the fastest ways to feel overwhelmed in RIFT is to open your bags, your event window, your vendors, and your quest log at the same time.
Suddenly everything looks like a currency. Some of it is tied to events, some of it is tied to progression, some of it is tied to old systems that still technically exist, and some of it is the kind of thing you really do not need to stress about in your first week back.
The good news is that current RIFT is actually much easier to understand once you stop trying to care about every token equally.
The first rule: not every currency matters equally
This is the mindset shift that makes the whole game easier.
In 2026, the currencies that matter most are usually the ones tied to:
- active events
- current progression systems
- clear short-term rewards
That means your attention should usually go first to:
- event currencies
- Battle Pass progress
- and whatever directly supports your current goals
If a currency does not help you right now, you do not need to panic-learn it today.
1) Event currencies matter the most in the short term
If an event is live, its currency usually jumps straight to the top of your priority list.
That is because event currencies are the most time-sensitive. They are often tied to:
- limited windows,
- limited reward stores,
- and rewards you may not want to miss later.
Gamigo’s most recent official RIFT news post is still built around Carnival of the Ascended 2026, while recent Steam posts and community event tracking show the game continuing to rotate through short live-event content. That means event currencies are still one of the most practical things to focus on in current RIFT.
What to do with event currencies
Simple:
- check what the currency buys,
- decide what you actually want,
- and spend it before the event rotates away.
The biggest mistake players make is farming event currency correctly and then treating the reward vendor like a future problem.
2) Battle Pass progress is not a currency, but it behaves like one
Battle Pass 3 in RIFT is really its own economy.
CADRIFT’s BP3 2026 quest guide says the pass runs from February 4 to May 4, 2026, requires 300,000 BPXP for all 30 levels, and is built around daily and weekly quest progress rather than one specific grind.
That makes Battle Pass progress function like a high-priority “soft currency”:
- you earn it over time,
- it unlocks rewards in stages,
- and it rewards consistent play more than random bursts.
If you are active during a Battle Pass season, BPXP is one of the most important progression values in the game — even if it does not sit in your bag like a coin.
3) Practical currencies beat “mystery value” currencies
The currencies that matter most are the ones with obvious value.
Good examples:
- the currency that buys the mount you want,
- the progression system that unlocks Battle Pass rewards,
- the event token tied to the thing that ends next week.
Bad examples:
- currencies you cannot even identify yet,
- vendor tokens tied to systems you are not actively using,
- things you are stockpiling without having a clue what your goal is.
If you do not know what a currency does and it is not connected to your current content loop, it is probably not your emergency.
4) Some currencies matter only when that system matters to you
This is where RIFT can look more complicated than it really is.
A lot of the game’s currencies and token-like systems are only important if you are actively engaging with the content tied to them. If you are not:
- pushing a certain system,
- chasing a certain vendor,
- or targeting a certain reward path,
then that currency can usually wait.
That does not make it useless. It just means it is not urgent.
For new or returning players, this is huge. You do not need a perfect spreadsheet of every number in the game. You need to know which ones are relevant to your next few sessions.
5) The best way to organize RIFT currencies
If you want a simple working model, use this:
Top priority
Time-sensitive event currencies
Focus on these first because they disappear or lose relevance fastest.
High priority
Battle Pass / seasonal progression
Important because the season has an end date and the rewards build over time
Medium priority
Currencies tied to your personal goals
If you want a specific mount, item, or unlock, the relevant currency matters.
Low priority
Old, unclear, or inactive-system currencies
These can wait until you actually need them.
That one little priority ladder solves a surprising amount of confusion.
6) What should new or returning players focus on first?
If you are coming back to RIFT and want the shortest correct answer, it is this:
Focus on the currency tied to what ends first.
That usually means:
- event currency,
- Battle Pass progress,
- your personal target reward,
- everything else later.
It is not glamorous advice, but it works.
What to ignore for now
If you are overloaded, safely ignore:
- currencies you cannot spend yet,
- systems you are not actively doing,
- and anything that feels like “I should probably understand this someday” but has no impact on your week.
RIFT becomes much more manageable when you stop treating every token like it deserves equal emotional weight.
If you only remember one thing
In RIFT, the currencies that matter are the ones tied to your current event, your current season, and your current goal. Everything else can wait.

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