Farming
Tower of Hell Coins Guide
Learn how to earn more Tower of Hell coins through cleaner runs, safer routes, better pacing, and practical farming habits.
# Tower of Hell Coins Guide: How to Earn More Through Better Runs
Tower of Hell coins are best earned by playing cleaner, finishing more often, and wasting less time between attempts. This guide focuses on coin farming through regular play rather than shortcuts, risky habits, or unrelated goals. The aim is simple: make every run more useful, even when you do not reach the top.
Coins matter because they give your runs a purpose beyond survival. A good farming session is not only about one lucky finish. It is about building a repeatable routine where you start quickly, read stages faster, recover from mistakes, and turn more attempts into progress. When you approach Tower of Hell coin farming this way, your earnings become more consistent because your gameplay becomes more consistent.
This guide is written for players who want to earn more through better runs. It is useful whether you are still learning basic movement or already reaching higher sections but want more reliable results.
The Core Idea Behind Coin Farming
The most important rule is that coin farming follows performance. The better your runs are, the more chances you create to earn rewards from normal play. That means your focus should not be only on coins. Your focus should be on the habits that lead to more completions and deeper climbs.
A weak farming session usually looks like this:
- You rush into the tower without looking at the first stage.
- You die early to the same obstacle several times.
- You get frustrated and start making bigger mistakes.
- You spend more time resetting mentally than actually improving.
- You finish the session with little progress and little currency.
A stronger farming session looks different:
- You quickly check what kind of tower you are dealing with.
- You play the early sections safely instead of showing off.
- You identify one or two problem jumps and adjust your timing.
- You keep moving after mistakes instead of tilting.
- You complete more runs, reach later stages more often, and build steady coin income.
Coins are the result. Better movement, smarter pacing, and calmer decisions are the method.
Start With Regular Runs Before Chasing Fast Runs
Many players try to farm coins by moving as fast as possible. Speed can help, but only after your survival rate is high enough. If rushing causes you to fall on the first or second section over and over, it usually lowers your earnings because you are not giving yourself enough chances to reach valuable progress.
A better approach is to divide your play into two phases. First, play for consistency. Second, play for speed.
During the consistency phase, your goal is to reach the later parts of the tower more often. You should take safe lines, pause briefly before unfamiliar jumps, and avoid unnecessary risks. This may feel slower, but it teaches you the patterns that let you clear stages repeatedly.
During the speed phase, you can start trimming wasted seconds. That means moving sooner after landing, turning your camera less, committing to jumps with more confidence, and skipping pauses on obstacles you already understand. Speed becomes useful once it is built on top of control.
For a broader improvement path, use the related [how to get better at Tower of Hell guide](/guides/how-to-get-better-at-tower-of-hell/) after you finish this coin-focused article.
Learn What Affects Your Coin Earning Rate
Even without focusing on exact numbers, you can improve your coin earning rate by understanding the factors that usually matter most during normal play.
Run depth
The farther you get, the more useful each attempt becomes. Early falls are part of learning, but repeated early falls slow down farming. If you want more coins, your first target should be reaching mid and late sections more often.
Completion consistency
A completed tower is often the best kind of run because it shows that your movement, pacing, and focus held together from start to finish. More completions usually mean stronger long-term earning.
Time efficiency
Long pauses, unnecessary resets, and repeated hesitation reduce the number of meaningful attempts you can fit into a session. You do not need to sprint at all times, but you should reduce dead time.
Mistake recovery
One fall does not have to ruin a session. Players who recover quickly get more value from their playtime. Players who tilt after one mistake often lose several attempts in a row.
Tower reading
Some stages punish blind rushing. Others reward immediate movement. Learning to read the shape, rhythm, and danger level of each section helps you choose the right pace.
Build A Simple Coin Farming Routine
A good coin farming routine should be easy to repeat. You do not need a complicated system. You need a structure that keeps you focused for more than a few attempts.
Use this routine when you start a farming session:
1. **Warm up for five clean attempts.** Do not worry about coins yet. Focus on smooth jumps, camera control, and not overreacting. 2. **Study the first two sections.** If you keep dying early, slow down and learn the safest path. 3. **Choose one improvement goal.** Examples include fewer missed ladders, cleaner wraparounds, or better camera positioning. 4. **Play for completions first.** Aim to finish or reach the final sections before trying to save every second. 5. **Speed up only on familiar obstacles.** Do not rush the parts that are still causing most of your failures. 6. **Reset your mindset after each fall.** Treat the next attempt as useful practice, not as punishment.
This routine works because it makes coin farming less random. You are not just hoping for a good tower. You are training the exact skills that create better earning sessions.
Prioritize Easy Wins In The Early Sections
Early sections are where many farming sessions are won or lost. If you constantly fall near the start, you spend too much time repeating the lowest-value part of the run. Your first priority should be making the opening stages automatic.
Look for simple ways to reduce early mistakes:
- Avoid jumping too early when an obstacle requires patience.
- Keep your camera lined up before narrow platforms.
- Stop overcorrecting in midair after a small movement error.
- Use short pauses only when they prevent a fall.
- Do not copy another player’s risky route unless you can control it.
This is especially important in Tower of Hell because there are no traditional checkpoints in standard runs. A single mistake can cost a lot of progress. To understand that pressure better, read the [Tower of Hell no checkpoints guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-no-checkpoints-guide/).
Improve Your Jumping To Increase Coin Consistency
Jumping is the foundation of coin farming. Every extra coin you earn through better runs comes from surviving more jumps, landing more cleanly, and making fewer panic moves.
Start with basic jump control. Do not hold movement keys or stick inputs harder than necessary. Many missed jumps happen because players enter the air with too much sideways movement, then try to fix it too late. Clean jumps usually begin before you leave the platform.
Next, practice landing discipline. After you land, give yourself a split second to confirm your position if the platform is small or moving. This does not mean stopping on every platform. It means knowing when stability matters more than speed.
Finally, practice jump rhythm. Some obstacles are not difficult because the jump is far. They are difficult because the timing changes. If you jump with the same rhythm on every obstacle, you will get caught by sections that require waiting, turning, or adjusting your angle.
For a deeper breakdown of movement fundamentals, visit the [Tower of Hell jumping guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-jumping-guide/).
Use Camera Control To Save Runs
Camera control has a direct effect on farming because it changes how well you can see the next jump. If your camera is fighting you, your runs become less consistent and your coin income drops.
Keep your camera pointed toward the next safe landing spot, not only toward your character. Before a jump, ask yourself what you need to see: the platform edge, a moving hazard, a ladder, or the next turn. Your camera should help answer that question.
Avoid spinning the camera too much during simple sections. Big camera swings can make easy jumps feel harder because your movement direction changes at the wrong moment. On the other hand, do not lock your view in one direction when the tower clearly requires turning. The best camera habits are flexible.
A practical method is to adjust your camera while standing safely, then commit to the jump. Adjusting camera and movement at the same time is possible, but it is harder. If you are farming coins and not speedrunning, stable vision is usually worth more than flashy movement.
You can improve this part of your play with the [Tower of Hell camera tips guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-camera-tips/).
Manage The Timer Without Panicking
The timer can make players rush, and rushing often leads to early falls. Good coin farming requires awareness of time, but not panic. Your goal is to move with purpose, not desperation.
At the start of a tower, give yourself permission to play safely while you learn the layout. Once you understand the early and middle sections, speed up where you are confident. If time becomes tight near the end, then you can take more aggressive lines. This order is better than rushing from the first platform and losing the run immediately.
Use the timer as feedback. If you are consistently running out of time but rarely falling, you may need to move faster between safe platforms. If you are falling often with plenty of time left, speed is not the problem. Control is the problem.
For more help with pacing, use the [Tower of Hell timer guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-timer-guide/).
Choose Safer Lines When Farming
A farming run is different from a highlight run. When you are farming coins, the best route is usually the route you can repeat. That may not be the fastest route, and it may not look impressive, but it helps you earn more over time.
When an obstacle gives you multiple options, choose the line with the highest success rate. A slightly slower route that works nine times out of ten is better for farming than a risky shortcut that fails half the time.
Ask these questions when choosing a line:
- Which path gives me the clearest view?
- Which landing is widest or easiest to control?
- Which route avoids moving hazards most reliably?
- Which jump have I already practiced successfully?
- Which option keeps me calm instead of tense?
As you improve, your safe line may become faster. That is the ideal farming progression: first reliable, then efficient.
Know When To Reset And When To Continue
Not every bad start needs an instant reset. If you fall very early and the tower is still manageable, continuing can be useful practice. You may learn the next sections, improve your route, or warm up a difficult jump. That knowledge can help your next full attempt earn more.
However, there are times when resetting your focus is smarter. If you are repeatedly making the same mistake because you are frustrated, pause briefly before starting again. If you are rushing because another player is ahead, ignore them and return to your own pace. Farming coins is not about winning every comparison. It is about improving your own average run.
A good rule is this: continue when the attempt is teaching you something, but mentally reset when frustration is making you play worse.
Avoid Common Coin Farming Mistakes
Many players reduce their own coin income without realizing it. The problem is not always mechanical skill. Sometimes it is the way they approach each session.
Mistake 1: Only caring about the final reward
If you only value completed runs, every fall feels like failure. That mindset leads to tilt. Instead, value better route knowledge, cleaner movement, and reaching a new section more often. Those improvements lead to more coins later.
Mistake 2: Playing too fast too early
Speed is useful, but uncontrolled speed creates repeated mistakes. If you are falling before the middle of the tower, slow down and build consistency first.
Mistake 3: Ignoring easy obstacles
Players often focus on hard stages while still making careless mistakes on simple jumps. Clean farming requires clean basics. Do not donate attempts to easy sections.
Mistake 4: Letting other players change your pace
Another player may be faster, but their route may not fit your skill level. Follow your own line when farming. You can learn from others without copying every move.
Mistake 5: Playing through lag without adjusting
If the game feels delayed or choppy, your timing will suffer. Reduce distractions, use stable settings, and avoid making fine timing harder than it needs to be. The [Tower of Hell lag settings guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-lag-settings-guide/) can help if performance is affecting your runs.
Make Each Session Measurable
You do not need a spreadsheet to farm coins better, but you should track something. Measuring progress keeps you focused on habits instead of emotions.
Pick one simple metric for a session:
- How many times did you reach the middle sections?
- How many times did you reach the final section?
- How many full completions did you get?
- Which obstacle caused the most falls?
- Did your first ten attempts improve compared with your last ten?
This kind of tracking helps you find the real bottleneck. If you are always falling on one obstacle type, your best coin farming upgrade is practicing that obstacle. If you are reaching the top often but running out of time, your best upgrade is pacing. If you are inconsistent from the first stage, your best upgrade is warm-up discipline.
Spend Coins With A Farming Mindset
This article is mainly about earning coins, but spending choices can affect motivation. Before spending, think about what keeps you playing consistently. Some players enjoy saving. Others like unlocking items that make sessions feel fresh. The important thing is to avoid spending in a way that makes farming feel pointless afterward.
Set small goals. For example, decide that you will play a certain number of focused runs before checking what you can buy. This keeps your attention on improvement rather than constantly opening menus.
For more on spending decisions, use the [Tower of Hell shop guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-shop-guide/). If you want to understand broader currency planning, stay within the [Tower of Hell guides](/guides/) collection.
A Practical 30-Minute Coin Farming Plan
Use this plan when you want a focused session without overthinking it.
Minutes 0-5: Warm up
Play safely. Do not chase perfect speed. Your goal is to feel your jump timing, camera movement, and landing control.
Minutes 5-10: Identify the main problem
Notice where you are falling. Is it a narrow platform, a moving obstacle, a timing section, or a camera turn? Name the problem clearly.
Minutes 10-20: Farm with safe routes
Play for deeper runs. Choose reliable lines. Pause briefly before your problem obstacle if needed. Try to reach later sections more often than you did during warm-up.
Minutes 20-25: Add speed carefully
Speed up only on sections that feel comfortable. Keep playing safely on the obstacle that caused the most trouble.
Minutes 25-30: Finish strong
Do not end the session by rage-resetting. Play the final minutes with clean movement. Even if you do not complete the tower, end with useful practice.
This plan works because it balances learning and earning. You get enough time to improve, but you also keep the session focused on actual runs.
When Coin Farming Feels Slow
Some sessions will feel slow. That does not always mean you are doing something wrong. Tower of Hell rewards consistency, and consistency takes time to build. If your coin farming feels stuck, check the basics before changing everything.
Ask yourself:
- Am I dying early too often?
- Am I rushing because I am impatient?
- Am I using poor camera angles?
- Am I repeating the same mistake without adjusting?
- Am I playing while frustrated?
- Am I ignoring easier guides that would fix my fundamentals?
If the answer is yes to any of these, your next coin boost will probably come from better play quality, not from a new trick. The [Tower of Hell common mistakes guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-common-mistakes/) is a good next step if your runs keep falling apart in the same way.
Final Tips For Earning More Coins
The best Tower of Hell coin farming strategy is steady improvement. You earn more by turning weak attempts into decent attempts, decent attempts into deep runs, and deep runs into completions. Do not measure a session only by one lucky finish. Measure it by whether your average run got better.
Keep these final tips in mind:
- Play for consistency before speed.
- Treat early sections as the foundation of your farming.
- Use safe routes when you are trying to earn, not impress.
- Improve camera control so you can see the next landing clearly.
- Watch the timer without letting it force panic jumps.
- Track one simple weakness each session.
- Take short breaks when frustration starts affecting your movement.
Coins come faster when your runs are cleaner. Focus on the habits that keep you climbing, and your regular play will become a stronger source of currency over time. When you are ready to connect coin farming with wider improvement, continue with the [Tower of Hell beginner guide](/guides/tower-of-hell-beginner-guide/) or jump straight into [playing Tower of Hell](/play/) with a more focused plan.