4 Answers2025-11-07 20:05:08
If you’re heading into greater demons in 'Old School RuneScape', I usually lean toward a straight-up melee setup for speed and simplicity. I like an Abyssal whip in the main hand with a Dragon defender if I’m doing longer trips — it keeps the kills fast without needing to sacrifice too much defence. On top of that I’ll wear a mix of high-accuracy melee pieces: think about a mix of Rune or Barrows pieces depending on your bank, a good pair of gloves (Barrows gloves if you’ve got them), and whichever cape gives the best offensive boost you own. Prayer-wise I turn on Piety if I’ve got the level; it absolutely shaves time off each kill.
Inventory is basic but effective: high-heal food, a few prayer potions if I’m using Piety, a teleport out, and a bit of space for rune or bolt drops. If it’s a Slayer task I slap on a Slayer helmet — just makes everything smoother. If you prefer ranged, Toxic blowpipe with high-quality darts and black d'hide makes them trivial from a distance, and for magic the trident-style weapons or high-damage spells work fine if you like AFK-ish kills.
Tactics matter: single-target DPS wins here. Bring enough supplies to avoid banking constantly, stand where you don’t get agro from extras, and use your slayer or prayer bonuses when you can. Personally, I find whip + defender runs the most satisfying — quick, clean, and good XP — and I always come away with more loot than I expected.
4 Answers2025-11-07 00:45:58
Whenever I go on a slayer trip in 'Old School RuneScape', I reach for a mix of speed and solid damage. For pure melee I usually bring an abyssal whip for its speed and accuracy — it makes the kills feel effortless and keeps XP ticking. If I need raw crush power I switch to an abyssal bludgeon or another high-strength crush weapon because crushing hits tend to rack up damage quickly on tougher targets; it’s heavier but satisfying when it connects.
If I’m trying to finish a task faster or handle a higher-defense greater demon, I’ll throw a Dragon Warhammer or a heavy-hitting special weapon into the rotation to lower their defence for a burst window. For non-melee approaches I love the toxic blowpipe for range: it’s fast, efficient with darts, and melts through health on long tasks. For magic, a trident (or other high-damage, castable staff) gives consistent single-target damage without swapping spells or worrying about runes. In short, pick a weapon that matches your attack bonuses and playstyle: fast accuracy for steady kills or heavy-hitting specials for burst — both feel great depending on the mood. I usually leave the bossing session smiling, especially when the special strikes line up just right.
4 Answers2025-11-07 16:43:18
Surprising little detail: greater demons give 110 Slayer XP per kill when they count toward a Slayer task. I know a lot of people just want the number, so there it is — 110 XP in the Slayer skill for each properly assigned kill. You still get your normal combat experience regardless of task status, but the 110 only ticks when the monster is part of your active task.
If you’re planning a grind, that number makes greater demons a decent mid-tier option: not the fastest XP per hour compared to some higher-level tasks, but they’re accessible, fairly tanky, and drop decent loot for the time invested. I personally like rotating locations to avoid boredom and bringing a prayer pot and decent food so I can squeeze more kills per trip — 110 per corpse adds up quicker than you think, and it’s satisfying to watch the Slayer XP bar crawl forward.
3 Answers2026-01-31 23:43:19
I get a real kick hunting down slayer spawns, and for 'Old School RuneScape' Greater Demons there are a handful of go-to spots that I always check first. My favorite route is to head to Brimhaven Dungeon — it's compact, has a decent density of Greater Demons, and you can usually chain a task there without wasting time. Taverley Dungeon also has them sprinkled through its deeper rooms, and the Wilderness dungeon has high-density spawns if you don't mind the risk and PvP exposure.
If I'm being tactical, I'll rotate between Brimhaven, Taverley, and the Catacombs of Kourend because they balance spawn density with nearby banking or quick teleports. I use a slayer ring or house teleport to minimize downtime and bring an Earmuffs or Protect from Magic if necessary. For group sessions I sometimes camp a multi-combat area where cannoning is allowed — the kills fly by. I also keep RuneLite's Slayermonster indicators on so Greater Demons are highlighted; that plugin saves me minutes of searching.
Practical tips: bring a bite of prayer potions and a good defensive set if you're meleeing; ranged or magic works well if you want to safespot certain spawns. If you want exact tile locations, the quickest path is to glance at the 'Greater Demon' page on the OSRS Wiki and cross-reference with in-game markers. Happy hunting — these guys drop some decent loot and they make slayer tasks feel satisfying.
5 Answers2025-11-07 05:01:54
Dust devils are a surprisingly consistent goldmine when you run them properly, and I’ll walk you through what I actually see dropping in a typical session.
In my runs (usually 2–3 hours at a stretch) the most reliable per-hour value comes from three categories: rune drops (death/chaos/nature depending on your gear), mid-tier herbs and seeds, and occasional clue scrolls. On a good pace I’ll get anywhere from 200–300 kills per hour, which translates to steady stacks of runes and herbs — think dozens to low hundreds of runes and a couple dozen grimy herbs per hour. The real swing comes from rare uniques: you might see a single high-value item once every few hundred to a couple thousand kills, and that one drop can easily double your hourly take.
To maximize drops per hour I prioritize kill speed and inventory space: bring a looting setup (high accuracy, fast kills, and rune pouch/rune stack for common runes), note-taking for stackables, and use a familiar that helps me sustain. If I’m hunting pure GP I bank herbs and rune fragments and treat any clue scrolls or uniques as gravy. For me it’s a balanced, chill grind that usually pays off — gives you a nice mix of predictability from the stackables and excitement from the rare drops.
4 Answers2025-11-06 21:12:04
Trying to squeeze profit out of 'Dust Devils' in 'Old School RuneScape' is one of my favorite low-key hustles — they’re chill to camp and can spit out some sweet stuff if you’re patient.
From my runs, the most reliably lucrative things that come from dust devils are items that end up coming off the Rare Drop Table: high-value rune equipment and the odd dragon-tier piece, plus cut gems like dragonstones and occasionally onyxes. They also give clue scrolls sometimes, which can pay off big if you get a master or a good reward. Beyond the big-ticket drops, a steady trickle of herbs, runes, and assorted alchables keeps your bank ticking between rares.
If you want to maximize profit, I focus on efficient kills (protective gear that keeps damage low), use looting setups that let me pick up gems and noted herbs fast, and do extended trips so I ride out the dry spells — patience is everything. I always leave a session feeling satisfied when a dragonstone finally pops up, and that little rush never gets old.
4 Answers2025-11-06 01:26:12
Alright, here's the lowdown from my grind logs and what I've seen others pull — focusing on the high-frequency stuff you actually see once you start killing a pile of abyssal demons.
Most common drops you'll notice are coins, various runes (death and chaos show up a lot for me), and a steady trickle of herbs and seeds. They also drop dragon bones fairly often compared to other slayer monsters of a similar level, which is why many people bank pure profit from bones alone. Add in the usual miscellany — low- to mid-tier weapons/armor pieces, and occasional noted items — and that becomes your reliable yield when you're doing long trips.
On top of that, abyssal demons have a few headline drops that are rare rather than common: the 'abyssal whip' and 'abyssal dagger' are what most people are hunting for, but don't expect those at high rates. If you're doing slayer tasks, bring a blood rune stack or a good melee setup, and don't forget that the consistent coin + runes + bones + herbs is what makes longer trips worthwhile. Personally, I enjoy the quiet rhythm of collecting bones and herbs while chasing that one glorious whip.
3 Answers2025-11-06 09:14:10
If you’re gearing up for a brutal black dragon slayer grind, I get the excitement — these things actually feel worthwhile to kill. In my runs I always see the typical dragon-stuffs first: dragon bones and black dragonhide are the consistent staples, so they’re the bread-and-butter profit. Beyond that you’ll commonly pick up coins, a steady trickle of runes (think common combat runes like nature/chaos/death depending on your method), seeds and herbs (grimy herbs drop regularly), and the odd uncut gem or two. Those little resource drops add up over long tasks and keep you selling stuff to the bank between respawns.
On the rarer side there’s a miscellaneous table that can hand you higher-value items — occasional rune equipment, some mid-tier rares, and the kinds of drops that make you stop and check your inventory properly. Loot is pretty similar to other high-level dragons but skewed toward better herbs/runes and more consistent bones/hide. If you want exact probabilities, the OSRS Wiki lists the full drop table and rates; for casual planning though, expect steady dragon bones + hides, decent rune/coin skims, and an occasional gem or rare piece that spices up your bank balance. I always leave a slayer task with a smile when the hide and bones stack up, so it’s a reliable way to grind and unwind.
4 Answers2025-11-24 16:34:03
Crazy fact: I spent ages digging through drop tables to be sure, and here's the clean truth — Old School RuneScape does not have a standard item called 'golden nugget' that monsters drop. I know that sounds like a bummer if you were hunting for a shiny little collectible, but in the world I play the closest analogues are things like 'gold ore' and 'gold bar' which come from mining or smithing, not from monster drops.
I double-checked how people usually look for rare golden items: players often mix up the modern RuneScape (the evolving live game) with 'Old School RuneScape'. In the live game there are a few miscellaneous items and rewards that carry the 'golden' name or look like nuggets, and community guides sometimes blur those together. If you meant one of those RS3 items, that would explain the confusion; in OSRS you won't find monsters listed as dropping a 'golden nugget'.
If you're trying to farm something shiny for a costume or to sell, tell me what effect you want (gold bars, gold ore, or a rare drop) and I can recommend monsters, skilling spots and money-makers in 'Old School RuneScape' that do exist — I’ve got a few go-to farms I love and can share my favorite routes.)