In this article, we shall go over the differences between the grow tent and the pot in Schedule 1 and help you decide which to use.

Note: This article focuses on Schedule 1 and its content, which is a video game set in a fictional world. Items, recipes, etc, mentioned in the article are exclusively from the game and don’t refer to anything in real life.
Schedule 1 starts out pretty simple, with you running around Hyland Point and selling drugs to customers. The game lures you into the simple premise before massively expanding and turning into a drug organization simulator. You have to manage properties, handle employees, and, most importantly, produce your own drugs.
You produce drugs by growing plants, and you do this by using the grow tents or the pots. The grow tents are dedicated spaces for you to host your plants. These tents come with built-in lighting and a pot, allowing your plant to grow in a healthy environment. Pots require much more effort and require you to set up and place your pots on the suspension racks under growing lights.
With these differences, it can be a little difficult to pick the right one. In this article, we shall go over the differences between the grow tent and the pot in Schedule 1.
Differences Between Grow Tent and Pot in Schedule 1

As stated earlier, pots require extra effort as you need to set them up in suspension racks with growing lights. The grow tents, however, give you this exact setup of pot + growing light, but in the confines of a tent. Furthermore, grow tents also produce yield faster than their pot setup counterparts.
Grow tents come at the exact same price as your pot setup, if not entirely cheaper. Grow tents come at the cost of $100 apiece. This means you’re spending roughly $100 per plant (excluding supplements). On the contrary, a plastic pot comes at $20, but this is only part of the setup. You would then buy soil for $10, as well as a suspension rack to hang the pot, which will cost you $40 apiece. Furthermore, you will need growing lights, with the cheapest sitting at $40. The pot setup totals up to $110 at the minimum, which is the same as the grow tent, but with the additional hassle of purchasing parts individually and setting everything up.
The only downside to using a grow tent is that the plants turn out smaller due to the limited space offered by the tent. The pots give you a higher yield, meaning more drugs are produced and more products are sold. This means that grow tents come cheaper and with less effort, but also offer less produce. Pots are more expensive, require greater effort, and have far more produce to show for it. The grow tent produces faster, while the pots give you more. The one you pick should depend on if you want products quicker or if you want a greater yield. There is no wrong choice here.

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