Chillquarium – Easy and Cheaper Gold Fish (and Potentially Rainbow)

Trying to fill out your fish pokedex but realizing the Marine and Giant packs are super expensive and you lose a ton of money? Well let’s cheese that a bit.

How to Get Gold Fish

First thing’s first

To begin this process, you will need a considerable amount of money. Even with this method, I was dropping $100 billion at a time to farm my golden giant packs. This becomes much easier as we go, since you’ll be pulling a bunch of painted fish which give way more income. Basically lock in all of your painted Epic+ fish and the income will flow in more and more as we go.

The Method

In your chillquarium save file, there is a “pity counter”, or in this game’s case, a mercy timer.

In gacha games, these are typically a number set by a developer to guarantee you a high rarity pull after a certain number of pulls. We can use this to our advantage. Much like gacha games, each fish you pull makes this number go up by 1, and the higher the number goes, the more likely you are to pull a rare fish, in this case, golds (and rainbows if you get very lucky).

What You Will Want to Have/Do

I used my 3rd Freshwater tank for this, since there’s only 2 packs of freshwater fish so I could easily spam 100 fish at a time. The method is simple.

We’re going to go into our 3rd Freshwater tank and basically buy 25 packs of fish to fill the tank up. Each pack adds 4 fish, so this will increase our pity number by 100.

After we’ve opened these packs, we’re just gonna sell the fish we obtained immediately, do not bother growing them. You can do this infinitely due to the packs only costing $5 apiece and your passive income should completely negate this.

With this method, we’re gonna build our pity up as high as we can, and because of how the pity system is coded in this game, it carries over between the different fish packs. I usually like to build my pity to 700-800 but you can go as high as you’d like. Keep in mind that while you are spamming your freshwater packs, you may pull golden and rainbow fish from the freshwater packs themselves and this will RESET your golden and rainbow pity timers.

After your pity is as high as you want it to be (you can go into your save file to check how high it is, it updates once every 60 seconds with the game open when you open your save file) we’re gonna switch over to whichever tank you are trying to buy fish for. My giants are in my saltwater 3 tank, so I’ll switch over to that tank. Once we switch over to our preferred tank, we’re gonna buy as many packs as we can and keep buying packs until a golden pops up.

My pity was about 1016 here.

What I like to do to ensure I can keep enough space to spam packs is sell the commons and rares I get immediately. Commons and rares are easy to get and provide the lowest passive income. I will keep my giants tank at about 70/100 which allows me to do 7 packs at a time.

With this method, instead of buying let’s say 250 packs to hit 1000 pity on our counter which would cost us $2 trillion, we’ve now bought 200 freshwater packs at $1000 and 50 giants packs at $400 billion instead, essentially saving us $1.6 trillion in the process (These numbers are arbitrary and randomly picked. RNG can be favorable or a cruel mistress depending on your luck).

Extra info to mention

You may want to grow your golden and rainbow fish before you try to get more, especially as you get far into finishing your gold and rainbow fish pokedex. The game has a reroll function to make it less likely to pull a golden fish that you already have grown as an adult, and if you land on a golden fish you already have grown up, the game will reroll and give you the golden fish it rerolls on instead. For rainbow fish, it will always give you a new rainbow fish that you do not have as an adult yet unless you have all of them.

I do not know if this will be changed or fixed in future patches. As of current it seems intentional. With that though, enjoy shiny hunting and good luck on your big golden fish!

Helena Stamatina
About Helena Stamatina 1775 Articles
My first game was Naughty Dog’s Crash Bandicoot (PlayStation) back in 1996. And since then gaming has been my main hobby. I turned my passion for gaming into a job by starting my first geek blog in 2009. When I’m not working on the site, I play mostly on my PlayStation. But I also love outdoor activities and especially skiing.

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