v1.00, 17 June 2003 ______O__________________O_______ ~_ ___ _ __ _~ ~_ /| |__/ /_\ / \\ _~ ~_ /|| |__ .| |. ^ /. _~ ~_ || |_ \ || || . | _~ ~_ || \ | || || \' _~ ~_ || /.// '|_|' /_// _~ * Anno 1503 ~_ |/ \_/ \_/ \_/ _~ * 1503 A.D. ~____________________________________~ * The New World ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Anno 1503/1503 AD - The New World Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ/Strategy Guide) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== CONTENTS ============================================================================== ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1. Preface ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - 1.1 Notes - 1.2 Credits and Legal - 1.3 Version ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2. Introduction ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - 2.1 What is Anno 1503? What is 1503 AD? - 2.2 Who developed the game? - 2.3 What are the minimum requirements? - 2.4 What has changed since Anno 1602? - 2.5 Where can I download patches and demos? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3. Gameplay ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1 Important Concepts - 3.1.1 How do I explore? - 3.1.2 How do I gain territory? - 3.1.3 What are civilization levels? - 3.1.4 How do I make money? - 3.1.5 What operating costs are there? - 3.1.6 How does the balance sheet work? - 3.1.7 How do service areas work? - 3.1.8 What is the significance of road access? - 3.1.8 How does production occur? - 3.1.10 Why should I colonize new islands and how? 3.2 Setup and Interface - 3.2.1 What do the symbols, names and levels on the initial player menu mean? - 3.2.2 How do I enable pirates? - 3.2.3 Can you play as native races or pirates? - 3.2.4 Can other players be made less aggressive? - 3.2.5 Are the endless play mode maps random? - 3.2.6 What are the differences between 'endless' level difficulties? - 3.2.7 Which way is north? - 3.2.8 Can I see the current objectives in-game? - 3.2.9 Can I hide trees or buildings from view? - 3.2.10 What can hotkeys be assigned to? - 3.2.11 Is there a list of short-cut keys? 3.3 Climate and Resources - 3.3.1 How many different climate zones are there? - 3.3.2 What characterises each climate zone? Where can I find certain resources? - 3.3.3 How do I determine resources? - 3.3.4 Why, after exploring, do no crop types show for the island? - 3.3.5 How do you find other players and natives? - 3.3.6 Where do I get Tools from? - 3.3.7 How do I build and operate Quarries and Mines? - 3.3.8 Do mines run out? - 3.3.9 Can I turn Gold into coins? - 3.3.10 Is Wine the same as Alcohol? - 3.3.11 Where can I grow Hemp? - 3.3.12 Can I change what type of trees I plant? 3.4 Roads and Storage - 3.4.1 Is road access needed? - 3.4.2 Are cobbled roads faster than dirt roads? What is the benefit of Marketplace squares? - 3.4.3 Do buildings have to face onto a street? - 3.4.4 How do I build bridges? - 3.4.5 How do I build roads along hills and mountainsides? - 3.4.6 Can I have more than one Warehouse on the same island? - 3.4.7 How do I increase the storage capacity on an island? - 3.4.8 Why can't I build a warehouse? - 3.4.9 What is the operating cost of Market Places and Warehouses? - 3.4.10 Can I start an endless game without the first Warehouse placed? 3.5 Colony Buildings - 3.5.1 How do can I build a ...? Why is a building 'greyed out' on the construction menu? - 3.5.2 What do wells do? - 3.5.3 How do I determine what Small Farms grow? - 3.5.4 Why doesn't my Whaler work? - 3.5.5 Where should I build Fur Trappers? - 3.5.6 What is the significance of sales stands' service areas? - 3.5.7 Is the Tavern's service area important? - 3.5.8 Do Churches replace Chapels? Universities replace Schools? - 3.5.9 What are Gallows and Courthouses for? - 3.5.10 What does the Pavilion's service area need to cover? What's a park? - 3.5.11 What do Doctors do? - 3.5.12 Where are the sewers? - 3.5.13 Can I change the design of houses? - 3.5.14 What rewards and statues are there? How do I get them? - 3.5.15 Do I need ornaments? What do they do? 3.6 Colony Development and Events - 3.6.1 What causes bankruptcy? - 3.6.2 How do I delete buildings, roads and trees? - 3.6.3 Is there a limit to the number of people on each island? - 3.6.4 How do you stop your population using building materials? - 3.6.5 Why don't Merchants upgrade to Aristocrats? - 3.6.6 When I downgrade civilization levels, why am I told goods that are not needed anymore are in shortage? - 3.6.7 Why do my houses decay? - 3.6.8 Occasionally my people die whilst walking around my city. What's wrong? - 3.6.9 What can I do about fires? - 3.6.10 Can I prevent the Plague? - 3.6.11 Can I change the prices my stalls sell things for? - 3.6.12 Are people needed to work in buildings? Do I need houses on production islands? - 3.6.13 How much of ... will my population need? - 3.6.14 What do the question marks over buildings mean? - 3.6.15 What do the coloured bars that appear above farms during building mean? - 3.6.16 What does the "you founded an ancient graveyard" message mean? - 3.6.17 What is the benefit of finding treasure? 3.7 Research - 3.7.1 How do you research? - 3.7.2 How do I research above a certain level of knowledge points? - 3.7.3 Why can't I build cannon after researching them? 3.8 Trade and Diplomacy - 3.8.1 How does external trade work? - 3.8.2 Can I trade without being fired on or starting a war? - 3.8.3 Where are the Venetians? - 3.8.4 What do Venetians sell? - 3.8.5 Why does my automatic trade route fail when I transport more than one item? - 3.8.6 Can I set my automatic trade route to wait for a full load? - 3.8.7 Can I edit automatic trade route paths? - 3.8.8 How do I demand tribute from other players? - 3.8.9 What is a moratorium? - 3.8.10 Do trade agreements cover player empires or specific cities? - 3.8.11 How does the trade slider work? How do you set prices and volumes? 3.9 Pirates and Natives - 3.9.1 What do native curses do? - 3.9.2 How do I trade with natives on another island? - 3.9.3 Do all native cultures appear in every game? - 3.9.4 What do natives buy and sell? - 3.9.5 How aggressive are natives? Can I ally with them? How do I attack? - 3.9.6 Where do pirates come from? 3.10 Ships - 3.10.1 What is the capacity of ships? - 3.10.2 Why is my ship sold each time I build a new one? - 3.10.3 How can I build ship cannons? - 3.10.4 Where can I load cannon on my ships? How do I arm ships? - 3.10.5 Why can I not repair a ship? - 3.10.6 When should I repair ships? - 3.10.7 Why does nobody buy my ship? - 3.10.8 How does the white flag work? - 3.10.9 My ship got stuck on land. Why? 3.11 Military Units - 3.11.1 Are there limits on the number of units I may have? - 3.11.2 What do the yellow stars and numbers above troops mean? - 3.11.3 Can waypoints be set for scouts and other units? - 3.11.4 Can units be set to patrol? - 3.11.5 Can I select certain unit types from a group of units? - 3.11.6 How do I retire units? - 3.11.7 How do I heal injured units? - 3.11.8 Can I capture enemy units? - 3.11.9 What units can attack buildings? - 3.11.10 What is the difference between ship and land cannon? - 3.11.11 My scout/soldier got lost/stuck/disappeared/abandoned his mule/will not come down from the mountain/has taken up scuba diving. What can I do? - 3.11.12 Why don't my troops go up onto the walls? - 3.11.13 How do I remove units from my towers? 3.12 Combat - 3.12.1 How do I capture an enemy settlement? - 3.12.2 Can I steal from the enemy's warehouse? - 3.12.3 Do cannon towers fire? - 3.12.4 Can I unload multiple units from ships at once? - 3.12.5 Can I accidentally kill my own units in friendly fire during battles? - 3.12.6 Must I assign specific targets for my troops? - 3.12.7 Can I attack trees? 3.13 Multiplayer - 3.13.1 Multiplayer? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4. Campaigns and Scenarios ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.1 Tutorials - 4.1.1 Discovery and Settlement - 4.1.2 Trade and Diplomacy - 4.1.3 Combat Training - 4.1.4 What now? 4.2 Campaign 4.2.1 Nova Fora - 4.2.1.1 Introduction - 4.2.1.2 Map - 4.2.1.3 Objective: Found a city with 250+ Settlers - 4.2.1.4 Why can't I settle an island? - 4.2.1.5 Objective: Find Katherine von Breitenstein and return her to your city - 4.2.1.6 I lost Katherine von Breitenstein after rescuing here. Is that a problem? - 4.2.1.7 Objective: Find Mongols and trade 20t Salt - 4.2.1.8 Why can I not find the Mongols with my ship? - 4.2.1.9 Objective: Equip a fleet with 4 Archers, 4 Swordsmen, Scout, 50t Wood, 100t Tools, 50t Food, and sail west - 4.2.1.10 Suggested fleet - 4.2.1.11 Why can't I train Archers and Swordsmen at my Fortress? How do I get weapons? - 4.2.1.12 Where is "Westward"? How do I finish? 4.2.2 Barbarrossas' Throne - 4.2.2.1 Introduction - 4.2.2.2 Map - 4.2.2.3 Can I restart the mission from the menu? - 4.2.2.4 Objectives: Build Citizen level city; Sell 25t Iron to Covana - 4.2.2.5 Island choice - 4.2.2.6 My Wood is in one ship and my Tools in another ship. How do I build my first warehouse? - 4.2.2.7 How do I stop Ramirez destroying my fleet? - 4.2.2.8 How do I get Merchants and Aristocrats? Where is the Marble? - 4.2.2.9 I accidentally insulted or attacked Covana, and now he will not trade with me. What can I do? - 4.2.2.10 Objectives: Covana's city must not be destroyed; Destroy both of Ramirez's main cities - 4.2.2.11 Naval strategy - 4.2.2.12 Invasion strategy 4.2.3 Helter-Skelter - 4.2.3.1 Introduction - 4.2.3.2 Map - 4.2.3.3 Objective: Positive balance sheet and at least 100 Citizens - 4.2.3.4 Colony redesign strategy - 4.2.3.5 Total demolition strategy - 4.2.3.6 Objective: Get 20t Furs and 20t Medicinal Herbs and sail north with them - 4.2.3.7 Why can't I get the Scout to leave the city? - 4.2.3.8 Why don't the Mongols sell me enough Furs? 4.2.4 Infernal Triad - 4.2.4.1 Introduction - 4.2.4.2 Map - 4.2.4.3 Strategy overview - 4.2.4.4 Objective: Hire O'Reilly - 4.2.4.5 Objective: Hire Madrugada - 4.2.4.6 Objective: Destroy Peles' fortress 4.2.5 Pack-Ice - 4.2.5.1 Introduction - 4.2.5.2 Strategy overview - 4.2.5.3 Objective: Fill your colony's warehouse with Food - 4.2.5.4 Why can I not trade for enough Food? - 4.2.5.5 Objective: Expand Ulfilla to population 80, build a ship - 4.2.5.6 Objective: Trade 25t of Medicinal Herbs for Whale Blubber 4.2.6 Toguldur's Stone - 4.2.6.1 Introduction - 4.2.6.2 Objective: Find and claim Stone of Toguldur - 4.2.6.3 Must I destroy the Mongols? How? 4.2.7 New Acquaintances - 4.2.7.1 Introduction - 4.2.7.2 Map - 4.2.7.3 Objective: Destroy Galerius's colonies - 4.2.7.4 Defeating invaders - 4.2.7.5 Economy strategies - 4.2.7.6 Immediate counter-attack strategy - 4.2.7.7 Defeating Galerius 4.2.8 Resistance - 4.2.8.1 Introduction - 4.2.8.2 Objective: Conquer fortress and free bookkeeper - 4.2.8.3 How do I capture the Fortress? Why do I fail the mission after destroying the city? 4.2.9 Genesis - 4.2.9.1 Introduction - 4.2.9.2 Map - 4.2.9.3 Objective: Build 700 Citizen city - 4.2.9.4 Objective: Trade 20t Medicinal Herbs to Native Americans - 4.2.9.5 Objective: Destroy all houses on the Isle of the Dead - 4.2.9.6 Single-ship strategy 4.2.10 Revenge - 4.2.10.1 Introduction - 4.2.10.2 Map - 4.2.10.3 Objective: Defeat de Freeren and destroy his city 4.2.11 Quentin's Reef - 4.2.11.1 Introduction - 4.2.11.2 Map - 4.2.11.3 Objective: Prevent de Freeren's flagship from escaping and save Katherine - 4.2.11.4 Why does de Freeren's ship keep escaping? 4.2.12 Justice - 4.2.12.1 Introduction - 4.2.12.2 Map - 4.2.12.3 Objective: Destroy von Breitenstein's palace 4.2.13 Good or Bad - 4.2.13.1 Introduction - 4.2.13.2 Map - 4.2.13.3 Objective: Find the treasure - 4.2.13.4 To be continued... 4.3 Scenarios 4.3.1 Hobson's Choice - 4.3.1.1 Introduction - 4.3.1.2 Map - 4.3.1.3 Strategy overview 4.3.2 Ruthless Richard - 4.3.2.1 Introduction - 4.3.2.2 Map - 4.3.2.3 Strategy overview 4.3.3 Friendly Neighbors - 4.3.3.1 Introduction - 4.3.3.2 Map - 4.3.3.3 Strategy overview 4.3.4 The Bet - 4.3.4.1 Introduction - 4.3.4.2 Map - 4.3.4.3 Strategy overview 4.3.5 Playing for Time - 4.3.5.1 Introduction - 4.3.5.2 Map - 4.3.5.3 Strategy overview - 4.3.5.4 Objective: Build 200 Pioneer settlement within 30 minutes - 4.3.5.5 Objective: Build 350 Settler town within 30 minutes - 4.3.5.6 Objective: Build 600 Citizen city within 80 minutes - 4.3.5.7 Objective: Build 900 Merchant city within 80 minutes 4.3.6 Settlement Recipe - 4.3.6.1 Introduction - 4.3.6.2 Map - 4.3.6.3 Strategy overview 4.3.7 The King of Ore - 4.3.7.1 Introduction - 4.3.7.2 Map - 4.3.7.3 What does the objective mean? Must I mine Ore on 6 islands? - 4.3.7.4 Strategy overview - 4.3.7.5 How do I stock 170t - my warehouse only holds 50t? 4.3.8 Many Small Islands - 4.3.8.1 Introduction - 4.3.8.2 Map - 4.3.8.3 Strategy overview 4.3.9 Negative Influence - 4.3.9.1 Introduction - 4.3.9.2 Map - 4.3.9.3 Strategy overview 4.3.10 Siege - 4.3.10.1 Introduction - 4.3.10.2 Battle Map - 4.3.10.3 Strategy overview ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5. Strategies ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.1 Getting Started - 5.1.1 Common mistakes - 5.1.2 Initial colony building - 5.1.3 Settlers 5.2 Colony Planning and Building - 5.2.1 Island Choice - 5.2.2 Colony territory - 5.2.3 City design - 5.2.4 Aristocrat cities 5.3 Industry Planning and Building - 5.3.1 General industry/farm design strategies - 5.3.2 Food production - 5.3.3 Salt - 5.3.4 Iron related production - 5.3.5 Stone and Marble - 5.3.6 Alcohol 5.4 Colony Management and Research - 5.4.1 General strategies - 5.4.2 Balancing demands and development - 5.4.3 Research 5.5 Trade and Diplomacy - 5.5.1 Mechanics of trade - 5.5.2 Benefits of trade - 5.5.3 Diplomacy 5.6 Pirates and Natives - 5.6.1 Pirates - 5.6.2 Natives 5.7 Military - 5.7.1 AI players' troops are stupid - 5.7.2 Ground unit choice - 5.7.3 War preparation - 5.7.4 Defense - 5.7.5 Naval - 5.7.6 Economic warfare - 5.7.7 Invasions ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6. Cheating ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - 6.1 What are the cheat codes? - 6.2 How do I edit a game? - 6.3 Are there any trainers? - 6.4 Can I skip campaign scenarios without completing them? - 6.5 Are there other gameplay 'cheats'? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7. Custom Scenarios ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - 7.1 Is there a campaign or scenario editor? - 7.2 How do I install scenarios? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8. Technical Issues ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ - 8.1 How many bugs are there? - 8.2 How do I take a screenshot? - 8.3 Can I stop the statue video playing? - 8.4 Can I play without the CD? - 8.5 Why aren't sounds played at non-normal game speed? - 8.6 Can I turn auto-save off? - 8.7 Can I play save-games from other language versions? - 8.8 Can I copy or rename save games? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Appendices ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A. Building and Industry Data B. Production Links C. Production Efficiency D. Military and Ship Data E. Research Trees ============================================================================== 1. PREFACE ============================================================================== 1.1 Notes This FAQ/guide should be applicable to all versions of the Anno 1503, including 1503 AD. I have reluctantly labelled this guide complete because the pace of new additions and changes has slowed to a crawl. As released, the game contains many odd or missing design features, which *may* be changed by future patches. Some could radically change how the game is played - such as pirates becoming more of a threat, Courthouses needing to be added to city designs, or ore deposits running out. Consequently, you should use this guide with caution. The game is not documented well, particularly when one considers the overall level of complexity and steep learning curve for new players. Jochen Bauer, one of the game's producers, wrote at the end of 2001: "Contrary to anything you might have heard there will be a comprehensive handbook." Well, in my opinion, the manual is just about sufficient to get you through the tutorial before leaving you puzzled, while the in-game help is hard to digest. Although not all versions have the same manual, as Vander comments: "The German manual is a coloured 80 page manual. And there is a poster with the product chains and a poster of ship on the box." I have a 44 page manual in greyscale with no posters... Frieden adds: "The German manual contains special hints for 1602- gamers only." I cannot find those either :-/ . At the time of writing there are no known published strategy guides in English, although there are two in German: an official one published by Future Press, and an unofficial one by Katja Ti, published by X-Games. Neither has been used directly in the creation of this FAQ. Finally, consider the inscription on the upgraded school building in the game (thanks to Renaud for pointing it out): "Non scholae sed vitae discimus", which roughly translates from Latin as "not school but life we learn". It occured to me that this is quite close to one of the underlying design philosophies in 1503 - not to teach players how to play, but to let them learn by playing. Some will find such an approach enjoyable; others will find it excessively frustrating. Maybe this FAQ/guide will help those in the later category get more out of the game. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1.2 Credits and Legal This FAQ was written by Tim (timski) Howgego, copyright 2003, unless otherwise stated. Errors and suggestions should be reported to tim (at) capsu (dot) org. Please put "1503" somewhere in the email subject field. If you are writing with a game query, please read and search through this document carefully first, to check your question has not already been answered. This FAQ includes ideas and strategies posted on forums, primarily the forum at http://www.anno1503.com/ (including posts that have subsequently been deleted), and fan sites including http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/ and http://www.a-pianto.ch/Englisch/e_Anno1503/e_Index.htm - contributors are noted with the relevant text. Particular thanks to people like BaldJim and Hakea for 'probing' into the game, and LadyH and many of the 1602 "freaks" for endlessly answering questions. You may save and print this document for your own personal use only. You may copy and repost this FAQ, but the content of the document, including the credits, must remain unchanged. You must not charge for it, sell, rent, or otherwise profit from it. Informing the author that you are hosting it is appreciated, but not mandatory. Ensuring you host the most recent version is also appreciated, but not mandatory. Anno 1503 copyright Sunflowers Interactive Entertainment Software GmbH, 2002-2003. All rights reserved. Other trademarks and copyright are owned by their respective trademark and copyright holders. This is not an official FAQ. It is not endorsed by the game's developers or publishers. The author is not affiliated to the game's developers or publishers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 1.3 Version This is version 1.00, 17 June 2003 (the 500th aniversary of the game... in storyline terms anyway ;-) ). Various small additions, mostly under strategies and gameplay. Added sale price list under gameplay, and alternative names list in the appendices. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 2. INTRODUCTION ============================================================================== 2.1 What is Anno 1503? What is 1503 AD? Anno 1503 and 1503 AD (or 1503 A.D.) are precisely the same game: Anno 1503 is used in Europe, 1503 AD in North America. From the official FAQ: "Worldwide, the game will be called 'Anno 1503', with the exception of the USA, where the product name '1503 A.D.' will be used. The reason for this decision is that the term A.D. is more commonly used in the USA than the term Anno." Some versions of the game have the subtitle "The New World". Anno 1503 was first release in German at the end of 2002. Other language versions were released in March/April 2003. 1503 is the sequel to Anno 1602/1602 AD. Like 1602, 1503 is a real time strategy game, set at the start of the Early Modern period of history. The game is based around colony building and resource management on a series of small islands. It includes aspects of exploration, combat, diplomacy, trade and research. 1503 is primarily an economic strategy game. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2.2 Who developed the game? The game was developed by Sunflowers Interactive Entertainment Software ( http://www.sunflowers.de/ ) subsidiary, Max Design. Programming was lead by Wilfried Reiter, art lead by Martin Lasser. Albert Lasser wrote the AI (artificial intelligence). The game was published by Electronic Arts. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2.3 What are the minimum requirements? Windows 98, ME, 2000 or XP. Pentium-II 500 MHz processor, 128 MB RAM, 8 speed CD-ROM drive, 930 MB hard drive space, 16MB DirectX 8.1 compatible video card and compatible sound card, keyboard, and mouse. On huge, highly developed maps, the game is capable of swallowing 2GHz worth of processing 'power' and still running slowly. However, basic gameplay and campaign scenarios will not experience this, only custom maps such as Metropol and Gigapol, where the aim is basically to push the game to its limits and build ridiculously large cities. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2.4 What has changed since Anno 1602? Visualize.Raven writes: "If you know Anno 1602, you will play 1503 very easily until you get 200-300 settlers. Then you will begin a 'new game'." Here is a short list of major changes: - Income is primarily generated by selling goods to your population in 1503, not raised via taxes as was the case in 1602. This requires slightly different strategies to be adopted, since 'just having Citizens' (for example) probably won't be enough to turn a profit - but you can profit when they are being sold many goods. Why was this changed? Wilfried Reiter comments: "Because it allows different prices to be charged for different goods in different places, promotes trade and adds importance to new construction strategies." - In 1503, houses have internal streets, and don't specifically need road access. Residents actually walk between their houses and the facilities they need. - 1503 is 'bigger' than 1602: Bigger maps, islands, and larger cities needed break-even. In 1602 one could play an entire game with about 25 2x2 houses; in 1503, 50 4x4 houses are more likely to be needed as a minimum. - Greater, but not excessive, depth of commodities, production and climate, including many historically 'accurate' items that were missing from 1602 - it still has no slave trade or specific historic context to scenarios. - The original 5-tier civilization level system for housing still exists, but the requirements of higher level civilizations are quite different from 1602. Merchants no longer upgrade to Aristocrats - Aristocrat housing needs to be built separately. Aristocrats may no longer be the optimum population type to aim to house. - Service areas still exist, but there are some subtle changes: Houses need facilities within the service area of the house, it does not matter whether the house is within the service area of the facility, as was the case in 1602. - Research (mostly small enhancements and new units, very Warcraft-ish), which did not exist at all in 1602. - Military aspects are slightly more important, particularly during the campaign. 1503's combat AI is similar to 1602 - weak and predictable once you understand it. 1503 is still an economic strategy game at heart ;-) . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 2.5 Where can I download patches and demos? Demo versions and patches are linked from http://www.anno1503.com/ . Non- German versions were released with all patches up to and including 1.04.02 (12 March 2003), even though some display version 1.00 or "Unknown" where the version number should be. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 3. GAMEPLAY ============================================================================== This section contains short answers to specific commonly asked questions. Associated Strategies are contained in a later section. This section assumes one has at least skimmed through the manual, attempted to play the game and/or completed the tutorials: It does not cover absolutely everything, just topics which have confused new players enough for them to ask the question. Topic specific information may be found in-game, by clicking the question mark icon on the bottom bar or pressing F1, and typing in the name of the thing you want information on. However, much of the content of the in-game help seems to have been written without regard to features that changed mid-development or were never implemented, so you will find many inaccuracies. Also, the extended tutorial level, the Citizen difficulty endless game, includes a series of hints in the form of message icons that appear at the bottom of the screen. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.1 Important Concepts ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.1.1 How do I explore? Agricultural resources are revealed by moving a ship close to the island. Natives, pirates, and other players may be revealed in this way if they have settlements close to the coast. If not, you must send a ground unit inland. One can normally see where 'hidden' settlements are by the absence of trees or by watching movement of shipping. Mineral resources are revealed by ordering a Scout to walk towards mountain ranges. Mineral resources are shown as a nugget of rock with a small pair of hammers. You need to examine each mountain peak to ensure all resources are revealed by your Scout. Any resource that falls within your territory (see below) will automatically be revealed. There is not need to explore if you are prepared to gamble on the presence or absence of resources. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.2 How do I gain territory? Territory is gained by building Warehouses and/or Main Markets. These can be built on unoccupied territory, and immediately allow you to build on any land within the Warehouse/Main Market's service area. The service area is the highlighted area seen when the building is selected, explained in more detail below. Occupied territory cannot be claimed in this way. In the case of other players, their Warehouses/Main Markets need to be destroyed by certain military units (Cannon, Mortars, Catapults, Archers with flaming arrows). Once destroyed, you can *rapidly* rebuild the Warehouse/Main Market, and any buildings and facilities exclusively in its service area are captured by you. Alternatively, the destroyed building can be allowed to crumble completely, which causes the land to become neutral and all the other buildings exclusively in its service area to be destroyed. In the case of natives, Main Markets can only be destroyed and the land turned neutral, not captured. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.3 What are civilization levels? Civilization levels restrict what can be built and researched, what goods can be sold (and hence your ability to make money), and how densely populated your housing can become. Housing starts at Pioneer level. To develop this housing to Settler level, certain goods need to be sold to residents of houses, and those houses need to have access to certain facilities. Appendix Building and Industry Data contains a list of these requirements. In some cases, population will demand things that are not needed for them to develop, for example Pioneers demand Salt, but it is not needed for them to develop to Settlers. You can of course sell Salt to increase revenue (the merits of Salt sales are discussed under Industry Planning and Building strategies). Houses do not need to be rebuilt from new when evolving between civilization levels, however construction materials do need to be available to your residents. The exception is Aristocrat housing, which is not an evolution of Merchant housing - instead it needs to be built as new. Aristocrats are not necessarily the ultimate aim of city building, and almost everything is available with a large Merchant level population (the merits of Aristocrat cities are discussed in the context of Colony Planning and Building strategies). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.4 How do I make money? Money is primarily generated by selling goods to your population. Goods are sold via stalls, which need to be placed within the service area (see below) of housing. Different civilization levels make different demands for goods. Different stalls sell different types of goods. Goods must be procured by you, and made available on the island the stalls are selling them. Goods can sometimes be purchased from other players, natives, pirates, or Venetians (Free Traders), but in most cases you will need to produce the goods yourself. Production of goods, provision of facilities, and other expenses such as military, need to be balanced carefully against revenue from sales of goods. Further complexity is added by the fact that certain goods can only be produced on certain islands, which means that higher level civilizations need to be supported by multiple islands with goods shipped between them. That balancing act requires good city design, good financial management, and robust advanced planning, particularly when moving between civilization levels. New players struggling with these concepts are invited to read the Getting Started section under strategies. Money can be generated from several secondary sources - trade, demanding tribute (in theory, there are some bugs here) and finding treasures, but these should not normally be relied on as a source of revenue. It is important to note that, unlike 1602, there is no taxation of your population. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.5 What operating costs are there? Production buildings that produce goods constantly, and population related facilities, have an operating cost. Production buildings where products have to be ordered (such as shipyards, fortresses, and certain weapons shops) do not have a fixed operating cost - they cost nothing to maintain when they are not producing. Houses have no operating cost - the only costs associated with them relate to building and upgrading, and of course the supply of goods for sale. Ships and military units also have an operating (upkeep) cost. Operating costs are deducted at regular intervals. A full list of building operating costs can be found in appendix Building and Industry Data. Production buildings can often be de-activated ("turned off"), which reduces, but does not eliminate, operating cost. Population related facilities cannot be deactivated in this way, and operating costs can only be saved by demolishing the building. Ships and ground units similarly cannot have their operating cost reduced - the units can only be sunk or killed to eliminate upkeep (and the unit). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.6 How does the balance sheet work? Each island settlement has separate stocks, operating costs and revenue. Money (coin) is pooled in a single treasury. Loses on one island may therefore be offset against profits on another island without physically moving money or balancing trade deficits. Goods are not automatically shared between islands - they need to be shipped between islands. Operating costs are deducted at regular time intervals, while sales and other revenues occur at different times. This can cause the overall balance figure to be quite dynamic, and so the balance needs to be considered when averaged out over a few cycles. *Very* dynamic balance sheets are often associated with under-supply or infrequent deliveries. For example, a ship unloads a cargo, which is in heavy demand. As it sells it generates sales revenue. Before the ship returns with another load, stocks have been emptied, so nothing can be sold, and the sales revenue returns to zero. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.7 How do service areas work? Service areas are the highlighted area when the building is selected. Buildings that produce things need to have the raw materials they require for production within their service area. In the case of farms and plantations, the service area needs to contain suitable land or crop fields. Stonemasons need a Quarry within their service area. In the case of most other production buildings, the supply of raw materials may be a Main Market or Warehouse *or* the original producer of the raw materials. If the raw materials are available in the island's stores, they will be simultaneously available from every Main Market or Warehouse on that island. Population related facilities (such as Chapels and stalls) need to be in the service area of the houses they serve. The houses do not specifically need to be in the service area of the facilities. So long as the facilities are in the service area of a Main Market or Warehouse (it is almost impossible for them not to be), these facilities' service areas are mostly meaningless. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.8 What is the significance of road access? Most buildings benefit from road access. Production buildings have specific entrances, shown by green arrows when building. Roads must adjoin one or more of these entrances to function. In the case of most farms and mines, road access is optional. If the farm or mine is within the service area of the processing industry that requires its raw material, no road is required because the materials can be collected by a worker walking to the farm/mine. If road access is provided, carts can be sent from Main Markets or Warehouses to pick up goods, which will allow excess goods to be stored until needed, and goods to be moved around the same island or made available to be shipped elsewhere. The disadvantage is that each Main Market/Warehouse only has a finite number of cart drivers, so complex economies can rapidly run out of transport capacity if they rely too heavily on cart transport. Carts will be sent out automatically to pick up finished materials or goods. Once the cart has returned to a Main Market or Warehouse, the goods become available at every Main Market or Warehouse owned by you on the same island. Processing industries must have road access, since the end product will not be transported by any other means than cart. Road access for housing is a moot point. Housing does not require road access, because houses have small internal walkways between them. However, these walkways can become crowded at higher civilization levels, which can prevent residents from accessing all the facilities they need. Consequently most players provide some level of road access to housing, even if only a proportion of all houses are connected by road. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.9 How does production occur? Primary production involves growing and harvesting crops or livestock, or mining. Secondary production is often needed to process these into useful goods. Most production is a simple case of taking one raw material to a processing industry, and returning with the finished product. In a few cases, two items need to be used for production to occur. For example, Ore smelters require Ore and Wood to produce Iron. Sometimes more than one production process is needed. For example, after Iron is produced it is made into Tools or weapons before it has any proper use. End products are sold to your population, used by your military, or used in further construction. Appendix B shows Production Links. Industries operate at a percentage efficiency, primarily based on how well supplied they are with raw materials, although other factors such as draught or poor supply lines can cause efficiency to drop. Balancing the provision of different industries within your economy is part science, part art - appendix C contains Production Efficiency data to assist in this. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.1.10 Why should I colonize new islands and how? New islands will need to be colonized in order to support higher levels of civilization. It is not possible to produce everything Citizen or higher populations require on any one island. Specific agricultural resources are required to produce certain goods, and no one island has all agricultural resources. Depending on the map and objectives, further islands may be needed to access mineral resources, or simply provide space for city building. To colonize a new vacant island, you need to build a new warehouse on it. This is done either by moving a ship with the required construction materials close to the island and using the construct warehouse icon on the ship's menu; or by landing a Scout, loading it with the required materials, and then using it to build a warehouse. In most cases it is useful to have direct sea access to a new colony, so the former method is more common. If the island is already completely occupied, you will need to invade first - see How do I capture an enemy settlement? below. For warehouse troubleshooting, see Why can't I build a warehouse? below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.2 Setup and Interface ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.2.1 What do the symbols, names and levels on the initial player menu mean? From hatchmoe: "One star = easy, two stars = difficult, three stars = more difficult..." Balou adds: "Those circles ('half-moons') indicate time-limits for missions. The time limits themselves differ from mission to mission." [I think the half circles indicate scenarios that are about 30 minutes long.] On the numbers, S.SubZero suggests they are, "the estimated time, in hours, to complete that mission." BaldJim writes: "The Citizen Single Player scenario is the easiest level. It has no provision to customize anything. You shoot right from selecting the scenario to playing. There are computer opponents, but you have to explore to find them. The other eight Single Player scenarios range in difficulty from easy Baron to difficult Emperor. They have a customization option. In it you may toggle the pirates on or off and the disaster on or off. You may also toggle each computer opponent on or off. Four of them have three opponents available, and four of them have four opponents available. Also there are 12 profiles for the computer players which give some indication of what the player will do. Each one in each scenario has a default. However, you can change them, thereby changing the difficulty level somewhat. That is, you can make the AI a bit more or less aggressive." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.2 How do I enable pirates? BaldJim writes: "For the single player/endless scenarios (except Citizen): On the page where you choose your flag color, look toward the bottom center for the customize clicker. Click on it and you will go to a page where you can make sure the pirates are toggled ON." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.3 Can you play as native races or pirates? No. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.4 Can other players be made less aggressive? BaldJim writes: "There are 3 or 4 AI players in each game. You may turn one or more off. Alternatively, you may change their profile from the default profile. A list of the profiles least likely to cause you war problems: The Trader, The Timid One, The Reluctant One, The Quiet One, The Just One, The Introvert." Changes are made under the customize button (not available at Citizen level). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.5 Are the endless play mode maps random? The Citizen level map is not random. On other levels, Badcat109 writes: "The islands are all in the same spot and basically the same size, just different shapes. Also resources are randomly placed." Zomby Woof adds: "Also the Venetians will always have their base on the same island. ... Originally 'Baron' was the easiest level in the German version, but the more easy 'Citizen' was added later." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.6 What are the differences between 'endless' level difficulties? Based on the writings of LadyH. Pirates can be toggled on/off at the start of the game (except Citizen): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Starting Pirate Level Cash Activity Islands Natives Treasures ---------------------------------------------------------- Citizen 500,000 None 20 2 15? Baron 50,000 Very easy 27 3 15 Viscount 45,000 Very easy 27 3 15 Count 30,000 Easy 27 3 12 Marquess 30,000 Average 28 3 12 Duke 30,000 Average 23 4 10 Prince 25,000 Hard 27 5 10 King 20,000 Very hard 28 5 10 Emperor 20,000 Hard 25 5 8 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ No, the Citizen starting cash is not mistyped... Citizen is slightly different from the other difficulty settings, because the Citizen game occurs on a fixed map with no customisation or variety in resources. It is designed primarily as a training level. Balou notes: "The prices at the booths change with the difficulty level: the easier the game, the more money you make selling stuff to your own people." Is there a level which is so difficult as to be impossible? Jochen Bauer writes: "No, they can all be completed - I tried it myself." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.7 Which way is north? From Hakea: "North/South puzzled me for a few minutes too, as it doesn't line up with the map edges as you'd expect, but with the edges of the screen. But you'll kick yourself once you see the compass - it's a huge black/grey thing with a North spike at the top, that takes up the whole centre of the map. Oddly enough it's still easy to miss." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.8 Can I see the current objectives in-game? Yes. Select help (small '?' on the bottom bar or press F1), and then select the check-box icon. Current objectives are shown, along with a tick-box. A tick indicates the objective has been met, an empty box means the objective has not been completed. You can also read the text from the video sequences here. If you can only see and not hear, this will help you understand the plot. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.9 Can I hide trees or buildings from view? No, not without deleting them completely, which is not always an option. When fighting in woodland, entire armies tend to disappear from view, while streets in large cities may never be seen again... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.10 What can hotkeys be assigned to? Custom hotkeys (Crtl + 0-9) can only be assigned to groups of ships or units. You cannot assign them to buildings or locations. 'H' can be used to jump (cycle) between colonies, however this will always focus on the same spot. 'J' can be used to jump to the location of an event that has been reported, such as a battle or fire. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.2.11 Is there a list of short-cut keys? Yes. It can be found in the manual and in the game's readme.txt file. This is an important reference for things like game speed, which cannot be changed using the mouse. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.3 Climate and Resources ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.3.1 How many different climate zones are there? Six: Polar, Tundra, Northern, Prairie, Steppes and Jungle. At first glance, Polar, Tundra and Northern may be confused. The first is entirely snow covered, the second only part snow-covered, and the third is devoid of snow. Some individual maps contain less than six. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.2 What characterises each climate zone? Where can I find certain resources? The list below is based on the comments of BaldJim. Natives and resources shown are those that *may* be found in different climates - they will not always all be available: Polar: - Ground: All snow and ice. - Natives: Eskimos. - Resources: Whales, Wild Game, Iron Ore, Stone. Tundra: - Ground: Some snow. - Natives: Mongols (also Eskimos in the campaign). - Resources: Whales, Wild Game, Trees, Potatoes, Hemp, Grain, Salt, Marble, Iron Ore, Stone. Northern: - Ground: Grassland, evergreen and mixed forest. - Natives: Mongols, Native Americans, Venetians. - Resources: Wine, Hops, Medicinal Herbs, Wild Game, Trees, Potatoes, Hemp, Grain, Salt, Marble, Iron Ore, Stone. Prairie: - Ground: Dry rocky with North American wildlife. - Natives: Native Americans. - Resources: Wine, Tobacco, Cotton, Wild Game, Trees, Potatoes, Hemp, Grain, Gems, Iron Ore, Stone. Steppes: - Ground: Dry rocky with Asian wildlife. - Natives: Africans, Bedouins, Moors, Polynesians. - Resources: Wine, Spices, Wild Game, Trees, Potatoes, Hemp, Grain, Gems, Iron Ore, Stone. Jungle: - Ground: Palm forest with "colorful birds, noisy animals". - Natives: Africans, Aztecs, Moors, Polynesians. - Resources: Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Wild Game, Trees, Potatoes, Hemp, Grain, Gems, Gold, Iron Ore, Stone. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.3 How do I determine resources? Agricultural resources are revealed by sailing a ship close to the island, and then moving the mouse cursor over the island and reading the resources off the bottom bar. Only rare crop types show in this way - those that can be grown on any non-ice surface such as Hemp and Grain are not shown. On finding mineral deposits, samstein12345 writes: "Take a scout and send him to a mountain. Then tell him to go from mountain to mountain and you will see ore and salt deposits pop up over mountains." Visualize.Raven adds: "Minerals are automatic discovered if they are in range of your market." Hakea writes: "The scout can find other things (small caches of money)." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.4 Why, after exploring, do no crop types show for the island? This occurs for Tundra and Polar islands. There are no special crop types available on these, so the resource information bar may look just like it did before you explored. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.5 How do you find other players and natives? Other players' colonies will appear when you sail, or send a ground unit, close to them. Gunter notes: "By looking to an island, you can guess that somebody is living there if you notice a large treeless area." Also watch the movement of other players' ships, which normally gives the location of their warehouses. On natives that do not have a port, Visualize.Raven writes: "Load a Scout on your ship, and unload it on that island you want to explore. Walk your Scout in to the middle of the island. You can use any unit you want, but the Scout is the cheapest." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.6 Where do I get Tools from? You may buy Tools from Venetians - either by setting a buy requirement at your Warehouse or (on certain maps only) trading with the Venetians at their colony. You may trade with other players or pirates. Other players may be just as short of Tools as you, and so be unwilling to trade them. Jini comments: "If you have found the pirate's warehouse, first have look there. If they are selling tools, they sell it for an incredible good price." Pirate settlements cannot be found on most maps. In the long term you should produce Tools yourself. Rayyvin writes: "Use your scout to discover an ore deposit on an island, and then build an ore mine, small ore smelter and tool maker. Also make sure for enough wood because the tool maker and the small ore smelter need wood otherwise they can't make their products." Jarrah writes: "Running out of Tools is a common thing so it's good to get into the habit of building the Tool chain early." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.7 How do I build and operate Quarries and Mines? Quarries may be built on every mountain or large rock formation. Other mines require specific mineral deposits to be present in the mountain (you will not always find every type of mineral on every island). Quarries need to be within a Stonemason's service area - they do not produce anything alone. Admiral Drake writes: "To get bricks you need two buildings: a quarry placed on a mountain's slot and a stone mason placed near by the mine; but never directly before the quarry - leave a minimum of one square free space." Other types of mines will produce minerals automatically, and if road access is provided, carts can pick up and store minerals. Workers at facilities such as Ore Smelters can also collect minerals direct from mines. Hakea describes the process of building an ore mine: "(1) Send the scout to explore mountains to find the site of the deposit. (2) Supply enough building materials to construct the necessary production chain (see next step). (3) Run enough road to get to the site (this may involve building more than one Market in order to reach the mountain). (4) Place the mine in the spot(s) that the game allows. (5) Either collect the finished goods when you think there are enough to warrant the trip, or else set up an auto-route to get a ship to do it for you." If you cannot build a mine, LadyH asks: "Is there a main market place near enough that its service area reaches the mountain? Check that by double- clicking one of your main market buildings. The mountain has to be inside of the highlighted area." Helen adds: "You don't place it directly on the mountain, a little below..." Certain mines only become available at higher civilisation levels: For example, you will not be able to mine ore until you have at least 80 Settlers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.8 Do mines run out? Jini writes: "I am not 100% sure, but I think mines never run out, even ore mines. At least I have never seen a mine running out even though I've been playing the game for months." The game's readme says: "Once a certain quantity of iron ore has been mined, you have to place a deeper ore mine on top of the small ore mine in order to continue mining." Jochen Bauer's slightly cryptic answer: "In 1602 only the iron deposits could sometimes run out. In 1503 things will be similar, but that's enough for here." I suspect this is a missing feature, that was not implemented in the release version. I have never experienced a ore deposit become exhausted. I have never needed a Deep Ore Mine either. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.9 Can I turn Gold into coins? No. You cannot mint your own money. Nice try ;-) . Dobber comments: "They already have a building that turns gold into money, it is called a Jeweler. 7500 Aristo's turn jewelry into cash so fast it makes your head swim." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.10 Is Wine the same as Alcohol? Not in this game. "Wine" is only sold to Aristocrats, and is produced with Wineries. "Alcohol" is drunk by other civilization levels at Taverns, and may be produced from Sugarcane, Hops or Potatoes. Wine should probably be called "fine wine" and Alcohol called something altogether less sophisticated... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.11 Where can I grow Hemp? Dragonling writes: "Like grain and potatoes, it can be grown on every island. Even on tundra islands where no other farms can be build, these three grow up perfect, but not direct on snow." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.3.12 Can I change what type of trees I plant? When you plant trees, a random tree type will be selected. To select a different type, select the tree tool, and click on an existing tree (or another area or object where no tree can be planted). The tree type will change to a different one, and you can repeat this as often as you wish until the desired tree appears. Nerle has catalogued tree types - pictures of different saplings and fully grown trees can be found here: http://www.hjbomanns.de/ANNOTools/Baumschule.htm . There are 14 types found on colder islands (Tundra, Northern and Prairie), and 12 types found on warmer islands (Steppe and Jungle). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.4 Roads and Storage ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.4.1 Is road access needed? BaldJim writes: "Roads are required to get end products of production chains from the building where they are made to a warehouse or market building. Everything moves fine without roads except the cartmen who are based in the warehouses and market buildings." Many farms and plantations do not need road access, so long as they are within the service area of the relevant processing industry: Workers from that processing industry will walk across crop fields to collect goods. However, road access allows excess stocks to be taken away and stored, and allows stock to be taken to processing facilities which are not nearby. Ravell writes: "You have to connect the building at the right spot, watch the green arrows. They don't mean the side of the building only, but the exact spot, doors, gates." On residential housing, Nacht writes: "Pioneer houses don't need roads. Nor any other houses. Only buildings that produce end products need roads." A small number of roads in a densely populated area seems to decrease the chance of residents getting lost and not accessing facilities. Jini writes: "The fire brigade will reach burning houses even if there are no roads at all. ... Because of those off-road fire fighters, there is actually no real reason to build roads in the city." LadyH comments: "They don't need roads, that's right. But roads will protect against fire, until you're able to build a fire brigade." Gunter clarifies: "Some people have noticed that it's better to build some roads because it seems that fires don't cross them, and roads therefore prevent your city from being burned completely if one house catches fire." Limited road access around residential areas improves the flow of people round your city at higher population levels, and can make the difference between residents being able to access facilities and not. But there is no need to provide absolutely every house with road access. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.2 Are cobbled roads faster than dirt roads? What is the benefit of Marketplace squares? Nacht writes: "Movement is not faster." Cambio comments: "In the help menu it says that movement is supposed to be faster..." Visualize.Raven answers: "Yeah is a bug, it will be resolved in a coming patch." Samstein12345 notes: "Your people from houses don't need road connections, they get anywhere at the same speed." From balou: "Those two 'market places' are just fancier streets... with no added value, just looking better..." Beemav3 notes: "Your cartmen can go diagonally across them which shortens their trips a little bit." Are there any uses for cobbled roads? Svar writes: "I use them for surveying because they are easy to count." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.3 Do buildings have to face onto a street? Jini writes: "The entrance has to be 'free' - there has to be a street *or* an empty field before it. If one builds a building in front of an entrance, the original entrance is blocked and can not be used anymore." Some buildings have multiple entrances (green arrows on the build plan) - in these cases only one entrance must be kept clear. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.4 How do I build bridges? Tom Sailor writes: "Find a straight area at a river and built a street from one side to the other. While moving the cursor over the river the bridge will appear automatically." Stone bridges first need to be researched, and are constructed using the cobbled/stone road tool. BaldJim adds: "The stone bridge will not cross anything that the wooden bridge will not cross." Ornamental (Merchant level) bridges vary from the first method - they are built using a specific icon on the build menu. Balou notes: "Roads build with the 'ornamental bridge' costs just as much as 'plain' stone roads. They only turn expensive when spanning rivers." Bridges are used to cross rivers. They differ slightly from piers, which are used to build along coastline or over shallow areas of sea. Piers are constructed using the same method as roads. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.5 How do I build roads along hills and mountainsides? BaldJim writes: "Building roads up and down slopes requires a technique that takes a bit of practice to acquire. Certain parts of the slopes will not accommodate a road - namely the 'corners'. Since the land forms follow square patterns, there are 'corners' of the various levels. The road needs two squares on the slope and one square on both the upper and lower levels, all in a straight line. I find that if I start with a 'held' click at the base of the entrance to the mine and drag the road line away, a good path will appear with a bit of patience. Be careful not to drop the 'held' click, or you have to clean up with the pick axe." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.6 Can I have more than one Warehouse on the same island? Zomby Woof writes: "You can build more than one warehouse per island. Additional warehouses you can build via the 'maritime buildings' in the building menu." Solarion adds: "They can only be built inside your Market range." Extra warehouses don't always equate to extra storage, read on. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.7 How do I increase the storage capacity on an island? Jini writes: "Every new warehouse or main market building increases the storage capacity on that island by 20 tons. After 4 warehouse or so, the storage increase drops to 15 tons per additional warehouse/main market building. The absolute maximum is 190 tons. One can not have more storage capacity on an island, even if one is building hundreds of warehouse. There is a limitation of 2 cartman per warehouse/main market building. Cartmen are hardwired with market buildings, i.e. every market building has its very own cartmen. This cartmen can only fetch goods from buildings which are in the service area of his market building and he is only moving goods from production buildings into his market building. So, there is definitively no 'teletransportation' of cartmen." The initial (Pioneer level) Warehouse and Main Markets are only assigned one cart. Upgrading to Settler level adds one extra cart. Admiral Drake notes: "Even if you delete the houses, all the existing warehouses keep level 2, only new one (built later) will again get level one. This way you can have different warehouses on same island." This is discussed in more detail under What is the operating cost of Market Places and Warehouses? below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.8 Why can't I build a warehouse? Ravell writes: "If you have enough wood and tools [on your ship] (and cash of course) you should be able to build a (sea)-warehouse. If you can't maybe the shore is too rugged, try it somewhere else. Also you have to build it from the ships menu on the bottom right (yellow), not from the construction menu." Note that in the first campaign scenario, Nova Fora, you may only build on one island. Also see Can I have more than one Warehouse on the same island? above. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.9 What is the operating cost of Market Places and Warehouses? From Jarrah: "There are 3 levels of markets and shore based warehouses. They get more expensive to build and run as you progress. The markets cost 10, 15 and 30 to run. The warehouses cost a little more - 15, 25 and then 35 at the top level." The values apply to Pioneer, Settlers and Citizen or higher respectively. They do not upgrade immediately, as BaldJim comments: "I found that the upgrade did not occur when there were 50 (or indeed 60) settlers. I found that it happened when there were between 120 and 135 people and 50 of them were settlers. It seems there are two options to gain the minimum population to upgrade the warehouse/market buildings. (1) Build 16 houses and arrange for only four of them to upgrade to settler level. (2) Build 9 houses and arrange for all of them to upgrade to settler level." Jarrah adds: "I think that what you need is 125 inhabitants. Why? Because it ties in with the usual figure required for an upgrade to Settler (Why 125? Because you can't build a Chapel without 125 people, and without a Chapel they won't upgrade). And, according to the in game help, the major key to market upgrades is the move up from one social status to another." The second stage of development is often reported as 220 Citizens. The main advantage of the first upgrade is a second cart is added to the roster (from Andj Pianto). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.4.10 Can I start an endless game without the first Warehouse placed? Yes. The warehouse is only placed for you in the Citizen level endless game. On other levels, you have a free choice of where to start your colony. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.5 Colony Buildings ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.5.1 How do can I build a ...? Why is a building 'greyed out' on the construction menu? Buildings require construction materials, coin, flat land, and certain population requirements to be met in at least one city in your empire. For requirements, see the Building and Industry Data in the appendices. Construction materials must be available on the island you are trying to build, meaning in your Warehouse on that island; not in your ship's hold (except for the first Warehouse on an island), or on another island. You can only build within your territory. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.2 What do wells do? Balou writes: "Wells increase the fertility of the land... of course that only works, if it is below 100% (all green bar)." They also protect fields during droughts, as Zomby Woof notes: "Not completely, but without wells half of the fields dry up and with a well maybe 5-7 fields or even less." Balou writes: "There's a 'well-draught' bug, where the wells loose their function after a draught - this is a local effect though and seems to re-balance itself after a while. Build the farm building first - the well later. Otherwise you won't get any effect out of it. The service area has to cover at least one part of the farm building to service this building. That way one well can serve more than one building. The upgraded well doesn't seem to enhance the effect of the 'normal' well by much - so it's usually of no consequence to build this 'better' well over an old one." Budgie notes: "Building two or more wells for one farm is useless and has no additional effect on the fertility." BaldJim notes the effect extends to trees: "When I build a well and there are some trees in its service area, the trees 'snap' to full growth." You do not need wells in residential area - only agriculture uses them. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.3 How do I determine what Small Farms grow? Visualize.Raven writes: "When the Small Farm has potatoes in its range [service area], it will produce Alcohol. When it has grassland, it will produce Food. You can produce both Food and Alcohol by putting just some potatoes fields." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.4 Why doesn't my Whaler work? Hakea asks: "Did you build in an area where there actually were some whales to catch - e.g. Polar or Tundra?" HJB notes: "Whales are bound to the shores of polar and tundra islands, not to a specific northern area of the sea." Jini adds: "'Whales' are the big grey ones, not the black ones with white skin (Orcas). I built my very first whaler in an area with Orcas instead of whales and of course it didn't work." Balou adds: "Try to avoid bays as a location for the whale hunter, the ships tend to 'get caught' there and not work." Visualize.Raven comments: "After you build the whaler, from it you need to build the ship." On building the whaling ship, Tilandra comments: "Even though the hammer at the bottom of the window is Xed out in red, you can still click it to build a ship. That threw me off at first also. Once you click it, the grey square next to it should fill with a graphic of a ship and the orange-to- green progress bar that shows the ship building. Once the ship is built, you cannot build another." Whalers may be observed to only work at 50%, even though two Whale Oil Factories are placed for every Whaler. Zomby Woof writes: "This is a bug, don't worry about this. If your whaler appears to be working steadily, it runs with 100%." There is no need to relocate a Whaler so long as it is positionned correctly to start with. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.5 Where should I build Fur Trappers? LadyH writes: "The Fur hunter will only hunt animals with white fur." White furred animals are more common on colder, more northerly islands. Trappers are also effect when working with orange furred Leopards found on jungle islands. BaldJim writes: "I have tested the trapper, and it does not work on Northern, Prairie, or Steppe islands." [Northern islands are a moot point - Trappers seem to work on them for me, although they are perhaps not as efficient as on other islands.] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.6 What is the significance of sales stands' service areas? Budgie answers: "The service area of the sales stands has no meaning. The service area of the houses is important though - all public buildings required by the inhabitants and all sales stands should be within this area." Stalls do not need to be placed next to Main Markets in order to function, although AI players frequently do this. Note that the green arrows on stalls are significant - at least one side with a green arrow needs to be accessible in order for the stalls to sell goods. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.7 Is the Tavern's service area important? Yes, but only to ensure the supply of Alcohol at the Tavern. When selling Alcohol to your population, it is still the service area of the house that is the important one. Dobber writes: "The main concern however still is the tavern has to be within range of a source of alcohol to function. That is one good that does not teleport from the marketplace to the point of sale." From BaldJim: "If they are within the service range of the tavern, the porter will just as gladly walk to a small farm, a brewery or a distillery as he walks to the market building. All he is concerned about is getting the alcohol to the customer." If demand for Alcohol is very high (for example, one Tavern serving 2000 people), the Tavern needs to be close to the main market. If not, you may find the deliveries cannot be made quick enough to satisfy demand, leading to Alcohol shortages [a crisis, if ever there was one ;-) ] even when there appears to be a large volume of Alcohol in stock on the island. Jarrah writes: "Initially that doesn't matter much, but as you develop to higher social levels more and more people will be crammed into those houses and the distance will become more crucial. Eventually, your houses will become unstable (and further development will be choked off) even though you have plenty of alcohol in the market building, just because the tavern is too far from his supplies." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.8 Do Churches replace Chapels? Universities replace Schools? Yes and no. Zomby Woof writes: "University and church: you need only one of them. As soon as you build the university all schools get upgraded (no matter if they are covered by the university or not) and have the same function like a university. The same with church and chapels." BaldJim adds: "You can NOT get the upgrade and then destroy the church and/or the university whilst keeping the upgrade." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.9 What are Gallows and Courthouses for? Nothing in the release version. Tom Sailor writes: "Later on your people will be able to take to the streets if they're unsatisfied. There'll also be crime. Unfortunately it does not work in the current version." LadyH adds: "Later Gallows will help against bandits and thieves; District Courts will help against rebellion." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.10 What does the Pavilion's service area need to cover? What's a park? A Pavilion acts as a park - it needs to be within the service area of the housing whose residents require park access (Aristocrats). Gunter comments: "The service area of the pavilion has no meaning at all, and it doesn't need a street connection." The in-game help disagrees with this, suggesting parkland should fill the service area of the Pavilion, however many effective Aristocrat cities have been built as Gunter describes. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.11 What do Doctors do? They cure plague victims. Doctors need supplies of Medicinal Herbs to function, and they only cover houses within their service area. Ravell writes: "You can't control the doctor - but he does his job pretty well all on his own. The paramedic (military unit) only heals other military units, not civilians. The paramedic was able to 'heal' ships too in previous patches." Medicinal Herbs are grown at a Medicinal Herb plantation - these must be built on a Northern island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.12 Where are the sewers? There aren't any (sewerage systems were uncommon in the 17th century, particularly in the 'new world'). These rumours relate to a 1 April 2001 'Sim City' spoof, which also featured dual-lane donkey highways and Aristocrat apartment blocks ;-) . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.13 Can I change the design of houses? Yes and no. When upgrading, colonists will pick their own design. When you build a new house (either at Pioneer or Aristocrat level), you can change the design by selecting the build house tool, and clicking once on an un-buildable area, such as an island you don't own. Each click will change the design to a different (randomly selected) design (from Nerle and others). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.14 What rewards and statues are there? How do I get them? The most common are statues. Balou writes: "The statue is the only award you receive for 'doing well'. All the other 'awards' can be build, after a certain amount of people of a certain level lives in your city." Ravell writes: "When you build monuments [statues], they count towards the satisfaction part of the final score." Balou adds: "You only get points if you use those statues. Even if you see that video a dozen times, it's just points for the built ones." [I think statues are granted on the same basis as 1602 - keep a Citizen or higher population happy for 30 minutes, although there is a quirk in which each large city you have may offer a separate statue, all at about the same time.] BaldJim adds: "It's not so easy to meet the conditions at higher levels of difficulty." When you have a certain number of Aristocrats you can start building a Cathedral and Palace. From LadyH: "You need 600 Aristrocrats and about 2500 people in your town to get a Cathedral." With 1000 Aristocrats you can start building your Palace. LadyH notes that your total population also needs to exceed 1900 - "You can have xxx merchants plus 1000 aristocrats, or you must have a minimum of 1900 aristocrats if there are no others". Zomby Woof writes: "With 3000 aristocrats you will get 4 more parts and with 5000 aristocrats you can build you palace unlimited. Once you have built a palace or the cathedral you won't loose those buildings if you throw out your aristocrats. But without aristocrats you can't anymore build the parts of the palace unlimited if you save the game and load it again." You can only build the Cathedral once in a game - if you destroy it, you will not be able to build another. When you defeat an enemy you will be awarded an Triumphal Arch. Rewards and statues do not currently have any purpose except to look visually impressive. Balou writes: "Maybe it will have a function in the upcoming add- on, just like the Aristrocrats themselves are supposed to have a 'soothing' effect on your lower-level population... but nothing so far." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.5.15 Do I need ornaments? What do they do? Dobber writes: "None of the ornamentals are necessary. They just make your city look nice." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.6 Colony Development and Events ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.6.1 What causes bankruptcy? Jochen Bauer answers: "When your account lies under -1000 pieces of gold over a longer period of time." Visualize.Raven writes: "It's not so important how much cash you have on minus, is important how time you are on red balance." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.2 How do I delete buildings, roads and trees? Curley writes: "Go to the Public buildings screen. See the Pickaxe in the bottom right corner? You will not recover materials spent when you destroy them but it does not cost anything to use this tool. It's great for clearing out large sections of trees quickly but watch out for roads, it will take them too." You cannot clear mountains or rock formations, or delete things outside of your territory. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.3 Is there a limit to the number of people on each island? Wilfried Reiter comments: "I'm eager to find out myself - the theoretical limit lies around 60,000." From Admiral Drake: "The highest population in one town is restricted by an integer overflow with more than 65xxx." You can have more than 65,000 population across multiple islands in empire. More than 200,000 people have been reported on one map. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.4 How do you stop your population using building materials? Your population only requires building materials if they wish to upgrade their houses (to higher civilization levels). Visualize.Raven writes: "Select a Marketplace or a Warehouse, click on information button ('?'), and down in menu you have a button for stopping people evolving." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.5 Why don't Merchants upgrade to Aristocrats? Budgie writes: "Your people do not jump up from merchant to aristocrat level. Merchants stay merchants. The aristocrat houses have to be built separately from the buildings menu. When you reached 1,900 merchants, the aristocrat house appears in the public buildings menu." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.6 When I downgrade civilization levels, why am I told goods that are not needed anymore are in shortage? From Zomby Woof: "Another bug, occuring when downgrading and afterwards upgrading again. Such announcements can be ignored." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.7 Why do my houses decay? Complete house collapse may be caused by events such as fire or plague, if the event is not dealt with quick enough - see What can I do about fires? and Can I prevent the Plague? below. If houses collapse for no apparent reason, it is normally because you are not supplying enough basic goods, such as Food. This may be due to the good not being in stock on the island. It is more commonly due to your people not being able to buy the good, either because no appropriate stall has been placed to sell it, or such stalls cannot be reached by the people in the house: Either it is outside of the house's service area, or there is no easy walk route between the house and the stall. Aristocrats seem to be exceptionally difficult to satisfy. Even when they are notionally being supplied with everything they need, they can become angry and leave, destroying their houses. Many have observed that Aristocrats dis-like walking any distance, and are prone to getting lost. Sometimes over-supply of buildings such as Market Places, or simply removing troublesome houses and building them somewhere else, can help resolve decaying Aristocrat cities. Since Aristocrats aren't needed in most game situations, it may be easier to leave your population as Merchants. Some strategies for building Aristocrat cities are given in the Strategies section. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.8 Occasionally my people die whilst walking around my city. What's wrong? From balou: "The 'dying while walking' just happens - doesn't affect anything... If you tear down a house, while its inhabitant walks someplace, he'll die." Hurric@ne writes: "Sometimes a bug appears. Then your people don't go to the next building they need, they walk around and around, and die sometimes." Budgie notes that this often happens when people go to Church. As Zomby Woof comments: "If the church would have a cemetery, this would be a feature..." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.9 What can I do about fires? Fires tend to occur regularly among houses at lower civilization levels. You cannot stop them occurring, but you can save a burning building by ensuring it is within the service area of a Fire Brigade. Fire Brigades will automatically dispatch a man with a small fire truck to put out the fire. Road access is not needed. Fire Brigades must first be research at a School (initially research Wells). From Gunter: "If you haven't researched the fire brigade, I'm afraid there's only one way to protect your village from taking fire: tear down immediately a house which has caught fire before it affects the neighbors." Balou writes: "Fire doesn't spread across streets - or empty space. If a house catches fire, the number of inhabitants will count down. That way you can check, how 'badly' a house is burnt. I'm not sure about the minimum number of inhabitants before the house crashes... probably one." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.10 Can I prevent the Plague? No. But you can build Doctors (and supply them with Medicinal Herbs) to deal with it when it comes. See What do Doctors do? above. The in-game help notes that access to Public Baths reduces the chance of plague appearing, which seems logical. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.11 Can I change the prices my stalls sell things for? No. Prices are determined by the computer, and are linked to difficulty level and location. Balou comments: "The prices are per ton - one visitor buys one full ton on each visit." Hakea writes: "The basic Stall items get modifiers applied. Things like Spice have three levels (0,5,10) plus additional bonuses depending on where your main island is. For example, Spice fetches a bit more on North Islands (two +5 bonuses). Not sure what the (0,5,10) is for - maybe difficulty level. Anyway, the 60 listed for Spice base cost becomes 80 on the Stalls at the basic Citizen level on a North island." Here are some price observations, based on the scenario Metropol: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tundra Northern Prairie Steppes Jungle -------------------------------------------------------------------- Cloth 80 80 80 80 75 Clothing 140 145 145 145 140 Food 45 45 50 50 50 Jewelry 210 210 205 205 205 Lamp Oil 90 90 90 90 90 Leather 80 80 80 80 80 Salt 43 38 43 43 43 Silk Cloth 95 95 95 95 90 Spices 80 80 80 70 75 Tobacco 90 90 85 95 95 Wine 75 75 75 75 75 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.12 Are people needed to work in buildings? Do I need houses on production islands? Budgie writes: "You don't need your people for supporting or working. You need them for buying your goods and making money." BaldJim adds: "The figures that you see doing things around each such building come with the building, and you do not have to recruit or supply them otherwise than just building the building. The population listed (and the ones who buy things to support the economy) come exclusively with the houses - the residences. They have no explicit connection with the work structures." Consequently, you do not need to build housing for workers on remote 'production' colonies. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.13 How much of ... will my population need? Data on Production Efficiency is contained in the appendices. H3ck|0 has produced a series of spreadsheets - http://www.marcelhecker.de/anno/suppliecalculator.xls (Excel) and http://www.marcelhecker.de/anno/suppliecalculator.sxc (Open Office), translated by Serra Angel (also http://www.marcelhecker.de/index.php?url=anno/ ). Mitret's javascript based Requirement Calculator is available here in German only: http://www.mitret.de/anno1503.html . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.14 What do the question marks over buildings mean? Question marks indicate a problem with the building, preventing production. Jini writes: "There are three question mark like symbols: (A) The 'no resource symbol' appears if a building does not have the resources it needs to do it's job. For example, if you place a forester building in an area with absolutely no trees, this symbol will be displayed. (B) The 'storage full symbol' appears if the storage of a production building is full and the workers in the building therefore can't continue with their job. (C) The 'no road connection symbol' addresses the same problem like (B), but here the game 'thinks' that the problem exists because the production building is not connected with the street grid. In the case of (A), if there are only a few trees in the service area of the forester hut and the lumberjack has already chopped down all these trees. Now he has to wait until the trees have grown again. Plant more trees. In (B), if no cartmen from the surrounding main market buildings can reach the forester hut via a street. The forester hut has to be in the service area of a main market building and has to be connected with it by a street. Also watch the green arrows in the building overview window on the right side - these are the entries of the building." On road access problems, vorosz writes: "First thing to do is be excruciatingly careful of the details of where that building has 'opening' for access. Not all sides are the same, for example spice plantation some are in the middle some are on the left side of building." Look carefully at the location of the small green arrows when building new structures. Tom Sailor has a further suggestion: "Press the Ctrl-Key while building farms, factories or houses. The buildings will be put into the right position automatically then." Lothark notes: "This works only when close to a road." LadyH adds: "Check that you have enough main market buildings. When there are not enough, the pushcart drivers are too busy and that symbol appears." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.15 What do the coloured bars that appear above farms during building mean? They give an indication of fertility. From Jini: "If it's not in the green range, the plantation will never have a good efficiency. On the desert like wine and spice islands this is quite important because half of the area on these islands is infertile desert. It really matters on which spot of the island you are placing the plantation." Balou notes: "The placement indicator just checks the fertility of the ground for the selected building - it ignores any trees completely." During a drought, the indicator may show an entirely red bar. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.16 What does the "you founded an ancient graveyard" message mean? Gunter writes: "You've found a treasure chest - it's one of the strange names the game gives for them. Sometimes it's also called an 'idol'." Visualize.Raven adds: "If you recieve message about an ancient graveyards, it means that if you build on that island you will get a lot of problems." LadyH notes: "When you will find a treasure chest on a ice island there is a chance to see it, but only when your speed is F5 or F8." Treasure is often uncovered by your Scout, when they walk close to where it is buried. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.6.17 What is the benefit of finding treasure? Buried treasure typically adds 2,000 coins to your treasury. However, Ravell notes: "I've found a treasure chest of 10,000 gold once, on an ice-covered arctic island. Maybe it was such big because it was so well preserved, laying there deep-frozen for some centuries." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.7 Research ______________________________________________________________________________ The appendix contains Research Trees. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.7.1 How do you research? From Visualize.Raven: "For research you need a School and later a University. To research, you need research points (given by population and it's level) and gold [coins]." Research points slowly build up over time at your School or University, up to a maximum level (see below). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.7.2 How do I research above a certain level of knowledge points? Research is limited by the population number and civilisation level, and the type of facility available. The number of facilities you have does not make a difference. Libraries add 10 research points to the total, but must be researched at a University. To save upkeep cost, S.SubZero comments: "I built the library, got the last tech, and then deleted the library, with no ill effect." This applies to all research - once something is known, it cannot be lost during that scenario. The following table is based on various sources, including Andj Pianto, BaldJim and Wargamerit: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Maximum Knowledge Points Requirement ----------------------------------------------- 20 50 Settlers + School 25 170 Settlers + School 50 200 Citizens + School 70 600 Citizens + University 80 600 Citizens + University + Library 90 750 Merchants + University 100 750 Merchants + University + Library ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.7.3 Why can't I build cannon after researching them? There are two types of Cannon, ship and land. The initial cannon research (probably at a School) only allows ship cannon. Further research at a University is required for ground based Cannon. See What is the difference between ship and land cannon? below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.8 Trade and Diplomacy ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.8.1 How does external trade work? There are three types of trade between settlements owned by different groups. (1) Trade with other players - this requires a trade agreement to be signed, after which ships may be sent to one another's warehouses, and goods sold directly. AI players may also send ships to your warehouse if you have allocated goods for sale. (2) Trade with Venetians (Free Traders), who act as middlemen - in most cases the Venetians will send their ships to your warehouses. Buy/sell requirements must be set at your warehouse (also see How does the trade slider work? How do you set prices and volumes? below). (3) Trade with natives - goods are exchanged at the natives' market huts/tents. Trade with natives is covered under Pirates and Natives below. Trade with pirates occurs just as with other players, except that you do not need a trade agreement. Budgie writes: "Barter is only possible with the native people, i.e. the Indians. The Venetians and the other (AI) players buy and sell goods, they accept no barter." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.2 Can I trade without being fired on or starting a war? Yes. When visiting another player's warehouse, remove the cannon from your ship (via a Shipyard) and sail with the white flag up. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.3 Where are the Venetians? Ravell writes: "If you play citizen game, there is no Venetian island [this applies to campaign scenarios too]. They just pass by with their ships. You can recognize them by their flags, a horizontal striped red/white flag. Their islands are quite small and covered with buildings, thriving trading cities." LadyH adds: "Just look for a really small island without any trees and animals." BaldJim comments: "The benefit of the island is that you can go there and buy (sell too if they want anything). You don't have to wait on their ship. ... It looks like their list of buys and sells changes fairly rapidly. Perhaps they have 'teletransport' between their warehouse and their ships." Visualize.Raven notes: "Venetians have a regular route, they come from player to player even is nothing to sell/buy." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.4 What do Venetians sell? Venetians normally sell Tools, Food and Wood (from Budgie) [In my experience they do not always sell Wood, but do always sell Tools]. They often sell Ore once one player has started mining it, even if that player is not selling it. They will also sell and buy goods from other players. BaldJim writes: "The Venetians are middlemen who buy cheap from you and sell dear to the other players. So they are only interested in buying from you only what the other players have listed they will buy." With the exception of the items listed above, you will only be able to purchase an item from the Venetians if another player is selling it, and only be able to sell to the Venetians if another player is buying it. You must have a warehouse on the coast for the Venetian ships to visit you. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.5 Why does my automatic trade route fail when I transport more than one item? If two different items are set to be transported on the same trade route, and one or more of those items is already fully stocked at the destination, the item will not be unloaded. Having not unloaded the item, the computer then becomes confused about what goods to pick up and unload. This issue does not occur if ships are able to unload all the cargo at the destination. Cargo will not be unloaded if the destination warehouse is already full. This is considered by most people to be a bug, although Ravell notes, "it was intended by the programmers to play like this." It is likely to be 'fixed' by a future patch. Serra Angel writes: "Watch your stocks in your warehouses regularly. As long as none of your stocks are full none of your ships will have trouble unloading their cargo." An alternative solution is to assign only one good to each trade route, which tends to be an inefficient use of ships. Jarrah writes: "It's mildly annoying when it first happens, but it still basically boils down to lack of player management. Either make sure your warehouse can sell stuff as fast as it's delivered, or lower the tonnage on the shipping orders (and adjust production for a while)." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.6 Can I set my automatic trade route to wait for a full load? Zomby Woof writes: "There is no wait-till-full function in the game. The ship stops at the warehouse and what is available will be loaded." Jini notes: "You just have to pay the maintenance costs of that ship, regardless whether it's hanging around in your harbor or transporting goods." Consequently, keeping half-empty ships moving continuously does not have any financial disadvantage; indeed half-empty ships move slightly quicker, so it is probably advantageous to operate them in this way. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.7 Can I edit automatic trade route paths? Yes. From BaldJim: "You can drag the buoys - you can change the route quite a bit." Capt Bly adds: "I find the ships understand only 8 directions (0, 45, 90, 135, etc [degrees]). As a result, so do the shipping lanes. When the game goes to pick a short path, it must be choosing from these poorly plotted paths to begin with." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.8 How do I demand tribute from other players? Anno1962 writes: "It has been reported as bug. They will never pay you." There are some unconfirmed reports of tribute being paid, but it is certainly unusual. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.9 What is a moratorium? This tells the other player you are unwilling to pay a demanded tribute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.10 Do trade agreements cover player empires or specific cities? A trade agreement with one AI player covers all of their cities, however, as Balou comments, "it doesn't really help trading, since the computer player only uses his main island to sell/buy things." BaldJim adds: "Contrary wise, you are not so restricted. You may sell from any of your islands. A real advantage because you do not have transport stuff to your main island to put it up for sale." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.8.11 How does the trade slider work? How do you set prices and volumes? Balou writes: "With this slider you set the amount of goods to be left in your warehouse (and not be sold)... all goods that exceed this limit can be purchased by others. Changing the prices just a little (to your advantage) is always safe. Basically you keep lowering/raising the prices, until no-one sells/buys anything anymore, and then re-adjust." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.9 Pirates and Natives ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.9.1 What do native curses do? Budgie writes: "Maybe your islands will have many droughts now, or a nearby volcano will erupt, or the plague will come frequently." Visualize.Raven adds: "A severe severe drought will come upon you, but only at high difficult levels." Curse or maybe a bug, from largefry07: "When I killed all the natives the annoying dude said that a curse was set on me and then all my units disappeared. They still show up on the map and I'm still paying for them." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.9.2 How do I trade with natives on another island? Tom Sailor answers: "Put the goods and a scout on your ship. Sail to the natives' settlement, unload the scout, and put the goods on the scout. Go to the natives' warehouse and trade with them... In the end you can load the scout back on the ship." Native warehouses (market places) are indicated by flags. Some native settlements include coastal warehouses, allowing trade to be conducted directly from a ship - these are not common and are always provided in addition to inland market places. Trade with natives is based on exchange of goods. The precise rate of exchange varies, seemingly by good, tribe, and trade. In some cases you will be able to sell them 1 unit of something, and take many (up to 9 or 10) units of their sale good in exchange. In other cases you may need to offer them 4 or 5 units before they allow you to take one. Until you understand the nature of the trade, always sell to the natives one unit at a time, and try and take as much as it will let you in return. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.9.3 Do all native cultures appear in every game? No. Annofriend writes: "I think there are never all cultures in a game." Balou adds: "The higher the difficulty level, the less other cultures are placed. I'm not sure about the exact numbers, but it's something like 3-4 cultures on the two lowest level (excluding 'citizen' map), 2-3 cultures on the next three level, etc." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.9.4 What do natives buy and sell? BaldJim writes: "It seems to me that some of the trade items for native cultures have been - possibly inadvertently - reversed. This is especially true for Native Americans. They want unprocessed tobacco and they have cloth to trade for it." Products sold do not always reflect the climate. Wilfried Reiter writes: "For example, the Bedouins have lamp oil, but players can only produce it in polar regions." Based on the endless game (this does not apply to campaign scenarios), using information from BaldJim, Gunter and Andj Pianto ( http://www.a-pianto.ch/Englisch/e_Anno1503/e_Index.htm ): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Native Sell Buy ----------------------------------------------- Africans Medicinal Herbs Tobacco Aztecs Gold Spice Bedouins Spice Salt Eskimos Lamp Oil Cloth Mongols Iron Alcohol Moors Gems Silk Cloth Native Americans Cloth Tobacco Polynesians Silk Cloth Salt ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.9.5 How aggressive are natives? Can I ally with them? How do I attack? You cannot form alliances with native tribes. Natives will not attack you unless provoked. You do not declare war on natives as you might with other players - just start attacking their troops and buildings and they will get the message. BaldJim writes: "If any of your troops other than a scout happens onto their territory, you will have war. Well at least with some; I haven't gone about testing them all. Be warned that they generate more 'troops' at a fantastic rate." The combat strength of different native tribes varies, as Wilfried Reiter notes: "Messing around with the Mongolians or the Aztecs is not a good idea." Dobber comments that the Venetians cannot be attacked: "I tried to attack their city just for the heck of it, couldn't do it. Would not attack." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.9.6 Where do pirates come from? Pirates sometimes have an island settlement, which you can sail to to trade or make agreements - assign then to attack another player or pay protection money. You can also attempt to destroy their settlement to remove or reduce overall levels of piracy. They do not always have a settlement and pirate ships may operate independently. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.10 Ships ______________________________________________________________________________ Military and Ship Data is contained in the appendices. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.1 What is the capacity of ships? Each ship has a separate cargo and passenger (troop/unit) capacity. Each cargo slot can hold up to 50t of one cargo type. Each passenger slot can hold one unit. War Machines with crews count as one unit, as does the Scout and mule. A full list of ship capacities is contained in the Military and Ship Data appendix. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.2 Why is my ship sold each time I build a new one? This is caused by changing bgruppen.dat, which corrupts the game balancing - see How do I edit a game? in the cheating section below. [This is in line for 'most frequently asked' non-campaign question award at the moment - whoever first posted that 'cheat' has a lot to answer for...] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.3 How can I build ship cannons? Gunter writes: "It's the job of the Gunsmith." You must first research ship cannons at a School. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.4 Where can I load cannon on my ships? How do I arm ships? Ship cannon can only be loaded and unloaded at your shipyard. Your ship must be moored near the shipyard. Click on the repair icon, and then change the number cannon using the arrows next to the cannon icon. Cannon can also be added when the ship is first comissioned. [This differs from 1602, where cannon could be swapped at Warehouses.] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.5 Why can I not repair a ship? The ship needs to be close to a shipyard: With the ship selected, the shipyard tab and ship repair icon will be available if this is the case. Repair materials (Wood, Cloth, Rope) and cash need to be available on the island. Unfortunately, if repair materials run out during the repair, the repair must be manually restarted (this is commonly regarded as a bug). Precise repair costs are unknown, but appear to relate to approximately the cost of the ship, factored by the percentage damage. Balou writes: "The repair of a pretty damaged medium ship will cost you about 2500 gold... that amount will be taken off your account, once you click on the icon." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.6 When should I repair ships? When they are damaged from combat. There is no need to repair them for routine maintenance. The percentage damage is shown by the proportion of red in the bar above the ship, displayed when it is selected. Damaged ships can sustain less damage in subsequent attacks before being sunk, and move more slowly. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.7 Why does nobody buy my ship? Visualize.Raven writes: "Selling depends of the price, ship, scenario, if computer player need it." From fireball21: "Just lower the price one notch and usually get sold right away." Largefry07 suggests moving the ship closer to potential buyers before selling makes other players more likely to purchase the ship. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.8 How does the white flag work? The white flag is a sign that you are willing to surrender. From Lothark: "You can sail with white flag and cannon or military units in your ship. You must hoist the flag after starting the ship." Gunter adds: "If you don't want to fight the opponent your ships should always be unarmed and have set the white flag." The in-game help adds: "A computer-controlled player's reaction will depend on his personality profile." Supply ships can fly the white flag continually. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.10.9 My ship got stuck on land. Why? It's a bug. Wiles writes: "No guarantees, but many have suggested to try the following things if any of your units get stuck: (1) Rotate the world map and then try to move your units. (2) Alt-Tab out of the game and back in, then attempt to move the units." LadyH writes: "Check each new auto route of each ship. Look that is none of these buoys is too near to land. You can move the buoys [away from land]." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.11 Military Units ______________________________________________________________________________ Military and Ship Data is contained in the appendices. Military strategies are discussed later. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.1 Are there limits on the number of units I may have? Yes. Gunter writes: "The [ground unit] limit progresses with the population level, for example, settlers = 60, citizen = 80, merchants = 100 units as maximum. The overall limit in the game is fixed at 100." Balou notes that only crew count for cannons, mortars and war machines [I suspect this is what leads to confusion when not being able to quite reach the limit]. The ship limit is a maximum of 40. Specific scenarios may impose other limits. Balou, translating Wilhelmine Roth: "The limit for land units is 100... exceptions listed below: Campaign: 'Nova Fora' - limit is 20 [10?]. Campaign: 'Revenge' - limit is 200. Single Player Mission: 'Siege' - limit is 200." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.2 What do the yellow stars and numbers above troops mean? Yellow stars indicate the unit's experience level. These stars can only be seen when zoomed in fully on the unit(s). Balou comments: "As far as I know only the crossbow and archer units gain combat experience. I consider this a bug." Numbers indicate what group (if any) the unit is assigned to. Bizarrely, it is sometimes possible to see this information for opponent's troops. The numbers can give an indication of which units might act in unison. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.3 Can waypoints be set for scouts and other units? No. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.4 Can units be set to patrol? No. Gunter writes: "It was cancelled from the game at the last moment, and we hope that it will be added in a forthcoming patch." The in-game help reads: "Soldiers can be used to protect objects. To do this, draw a frame around the units while the info mode is active. Right-click on the object to be protected and the soldier will take up his position." ...but I have not been able to get this to work. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.5 Can I select certain unit types from a group of units? No. Another feature that was in 1602, was rather useful, but is not in 1503. The only work-around is to assign hot-keys (Ctrl + 0-9) based on unit type. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.6 How do I retire units? From balou: "To 'delete' military units, you have to select them and use the 'skull' icon. There's no undo for this function, either. Mortars and cannons need to be destroyed by themselves... they'll still be there after the units [crews] attached to them are gone." Ships can be sunk by selecting the ship, and then pressing the sinking ship icon. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.7 How do I heal injured units? Sir Henry writes: "You can with medics, which you then have to send along with your troops. They will heal the wounded soldiers." Select the Medic and then click on specific troops to order the medic to heal them. Simply leaving a Medic and injured soldiers close to one another also normally works. War machines (Catapults, etc) cannot be repaired once damaged. However, if the machine survives and the crew die, a new crew may be trained and assigned to the original war machine. This tactic can also be used with abandoned enemy war machines. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.8 Can I capture enemy units? You can assign new crews (train them at your fortress first) to enemy war machines (including cannons and mortars) when their crews have been killed and the machine has been abandoned. You can use the same technique to re-use your own war machines when their crews die. You cannot capture other military units. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.9 What units can attack buildings? Jini writes: "The only units which can attack enemy buildings are catapults, upgraded archers (fire arrows), cannons and mortars." Ship cannon can be used when the target is near the coast. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.10 What is the difference between ship and land cannon? Zomby Woof writes: "Ship cannons are produced by the Gunsmith. You have to research them via the naval research menu. Land cannons are produced by the Cannon foundry (including the crew for them), which you research via the military research menu." Ship cannon can only be mounted on ships (all except the smallest trading ship), and do not have a specific crew attached to them. Land cannon require crews to man them. They can be used as ground units or assigned to guard towers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.11 My scout/soldier got lost/stuck/disappeared/abandoned his mule/will not come down from the mountain/has taken up scuba diving. What can I do? This is a long-standing bug. Sometimes the unit can be recovered, sometimes there is no other solution except to train a new unit. Zomby Woof suggests: "Try to rotate the map, this can help sometimes." From LotharK adds: "Hit the N button on your keyboard and you find the scout." Zuchla writes: "I got a couple of my explorers stuck in mountains, my two traders locked in tents, and my ship half buried in sand." From Ravell: "I've lost quite a few scouts already by visiting the natives. One time it looked like he got killed, because he fell down and just laid there - couldn't move him anymore, the mule was still standing but didn't move." From vorosz: "My scout lost his donkey. Everything worked fine. He even managed to haul 20t of product on his back. I tried loading and unloading him a few times on my ship but I guess the donkey wasn't onboard. I left him for a while to take care of my main island and when I came back he found the donkey." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.12 Why don't my troops go up onto the walls? You need to build a wall access, preferably on the 'friendly' side of the wall. Balou notes: "Each 'strip' of walls needs its own stairs. Units can't 'cross' towers or gates." Only basic infantry units can walk up these stairs: War machines and cannon cannot. The in-game help suggests walls increase the range of units like Archers, however Balou suggests they do not have a range advantage. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.11.13 How do I remove units from my towers? From the in-game help: "To remove units from the watchtower, click on it while the info mode is active. Left-click on the unit and then send it to an accessible location by right-clicking on it. The soldier will then leave the watchtower." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.12 Combat ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.12.1 How do I capture an enemy settlement? First destroy their Warehouse and Market places. In order to capture a settlement, you should then immediately build replacement warehouses/markets on the site of the old ones (your Scout can do this if carrying the correct materials). You do not need to do this if you simply want to destroy a settlement. Other players tend to build Fire Brigades in response to attack on their markets, and you may need destroy these first. AntiPenguinGun notes: "If you can't build the market because it wont let it build over the rubble, it's either that you already have another market in the suitable place or that the enemy has a market near by that is making you unable to build it." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.2 Can I steal from the enemy's warehouse? From bobbyrookie: "You assume ownership of the goods in his warehouse if you build your own warehouse right on top of his before his turns to rubble. You cannot, however, pirate goods from other player's ships." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.3 Do cannon towers fire? You need to assign a cannon to the tower. From Jini: "Armed towers have a tiny flag on top of the big flag, where as empty towers only have the big flag. Cannon towers have a shorter range than single cannons. So, they do fire but only if the target is quite near." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.4 Can I unload multiple units from ships at once? No, you have to click on each individually. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.5 Can I accidentally kill my own units in friendly fire during battles? From Zomby Woof: "There is no friendly fire in this game, so let you cannons fire in the middle of the crowd and they always find the right targets." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.6 Must I assign specific targets for my troops? You can, but you do not have to. Setting the unit's attack mode to 'normal' means the unit will automatically engage units that come close. An 'aggressive' setting will pursue enemy soldiers come what may. When in 'passive' mode, soldiers will only attack enemy units that come into range whilst they remain in range. Also, from the in-game help: "If you keep holding the Alt key while right-clicking to assign an assault target to your soldiers, the soldiers will attack all enemy units on their way to the target." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 3.12.7 Can I attack trees? From Dobber: "To force an attack on the trees hold down your control key and then attack." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.13 Multiplayer ______________________________________________________________________________ 3.13.1 Multiplayer? Erm. Not at the time of writing, at least not officially. Kay Bennemann writes: "Multiplayer will be released as a free patch. Multiplayer in 1503 A.D./Anno 1503 can be played by 2-8 players in cooperative mode or against each other. It can be played as Continuous play or in special multiplayer scenarios. The AI can be included into multiplayer sessions: Dependent on the chosen game scenario, AI controlled characters will occupy all free slots not used by human players. Multiplayer can be played via internet or local area network. Internet games use the GameSpy matchmaking software; manual connection to a certain IP address is also possible. You will be able to save and load your game in multiplayer. Saved multiplayer games will continue to be playable even if one of the human players drops out during the next session, although this player won't be able to reconnect and continue his play once the game has been loaded without him or her being connected. Different localized versions of the game are compatible in multiplayer mode. Therefore, players from different countries can connect to the same MP session. Presently the multiplayer is still in the process of testing and finalizing - a precise release date for the patch can not be provided yet. The total number of scenarios included in the multiplayer patch has also not been finalized." The first German release included an unsupported file, AnnoNetTool.exe. This theoretically enabled the multiplayer game, but did not work well enough to be widely used. Vander notes: "They said it makes only trouble, so they removed it in version 1.04.02." At the time of the German versions release, Wilfried Reiter wrote: "The Multi-Player Patch is currently in the beta phase. If everything goes well it should be ready in November [2002]. There are some specially adapted missions, but there's nothing like the long matches to give you that real Anno feeling." It will play using a 56K modem, "but it would be better if the host had ISDN for 8 players." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 4. CAMPAIGNS AND SCENARIOS ============================================================================== These walkthroughs assume basic competence when building colonies. If you are struggling with the basics of colony building, or find yourself going bankrupt in normal conditions, please review some of the Getting Started strategies in the Strategies section, and/or read through some of the common questions under Gameplay. These walkthroughs primarily cover the things that make a specific scenario difficult - they don't hold your hand and walk you through every last detail. On a similar note, although it is possible to play the campaigns and scenarios through as your first game, I'd only recommend that for anyone with experience of Anno 1602, or who regards themselves as a veteran of these sorts of games. Unlike 1602, the first part of the campaign is not an extended tutorial - it has a very steep learning curve. If you are entirely new, break off after the tutorials and play an "Citizen" endless game and develop a profitable colony to Merchant level civilization. This will give you experience of colony building on a map with plentiful resources and no threats. In order, the campaigns are: Nova Fora, Barbarrossas' Throne, Helter-Skelter, Infernal Triad, Pack-Ice, Toguldur's Stone, New Acquaintances, Resistance, Genesis, Revenge, Quentin's Reef, Justice, and bonus scenario Good or Bad (or "Bonus aut Malus"). Scenarios are: Hobson's Choice, Ruthless Richard, Friendly Neighbors, The Bet, Playing for Time, Settlement Recipe, The King of Ore, Many Small Islands, Negative Influence, and Siege. Translations of campaign and scenario names by LadyH are available here: http://www.dorokult.de/anno1503/glossar/names.html . Campaign missions must be played one at a time - once you have completed one, the next mission will be available. In the case of Barbarrossas' Throne, this mission follows on directly from the previous mission, Nova Fora (you start the mission with whatever ships you took from the previous mission). Some illustrated walkthroughs for campaign scenarios can be found at http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/ , including translations of German Gamestar guides. Where relevant, I have included simple ASCII representations of maps. Maps are always aligned with North towards the top of the page. The maps indicate the approximate size of islands as follows: * [ ] = Small. Suited only to small secondary production colonies. * ( ) = Medium. Best suited to secondary production colonies, but you may be able to fit a small town in here instead if you are desperate. * { } = Large. Sufficiently large to build a city. * < > = Huge. Often huge islands are large enough for more than one player to build a city on them. Objectives are numbered in the order in which they appear. Normally the lowest numbered objectives need to be completed before others are shown. Where several objectives are given at the same time, they are shown with letters, for example 1a, 1b. If you do not know how to read the objectives as you play, see Can I see the current objectives in-game? above. The in-game rating for each scenario is shown as 1-4 stars, where 1 star is easy, 4 hardest. Since many do not enjoy the war aspects of the game, I have added a "war-o- meter" rating to each scenario, to give an indication of how important the war aspects are. The scale is as follows: - * = Entirely city/economy building. No other hostile players to fight, even if you wanted to (I exclude natives from the list of possible hostile players here). - ** = Objectives can be completed without warfare, and you are unlikely to need to go to war. - *** = Warfare is needed to complete the scenario, but city building/economy is what makes this scenario difficult. - **** = War is a major objective, with city building/economy secondary. - ***** = War is the only objective. Here is a summary of ratings and war-o-meters: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rating War-o-meter ---------------------------------------------- CAMPAIGN Nova Fora ** * Barbarrossas' Throne ** (?) ***/**** Helter-Skelter ** * Infernal Triad *** *** Pack-Ice *** * Toguldur's Stone *** ***** New Acquaintances *** **** Resistance *** ***** Genesis *** **/**** Revenge *** *** Quentin's Reef *** ***** Justice **** *** Good or Bad *** ** SCENARIOS Hobson's Choice *** **/**** Ruthless Richard *** *** Friendly Neighbors ** ** The Bet ** * Playing for Time **** * Settlement Recipe ** * The King of Ore ** * Many Small Islands ** * Negative Influence **** ** Siege ** ***** ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.1 Tutorials ______________________________________________________________________________ The tutorials should be self-explanatory, so I have not gone into great detail here. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.1.1 Discovery and Settlement The first hint screen contains general information about the interface. To start the tutorial proper, click the "X". Once the tutorial is complete, you can continue playing - the game will not automatically end once the tutorial part has finished. There is only one island here, so I do not recommend you play this after the tutorial has ended. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.1.2 Trade and Diplomacy Trade with the Native Americans at their Market place - look for the flag outside the tent. You will first need to offload the Scout, select it, and then select the box/barrel symbol and move good between the ship and Scout. On the southern island, trade via the other player's warehouse, which can be found on the northern side of the inland bay. Don't accidentally declare war on your would-be trading partner, by missing the trade agreement button and pressing the declare war icon instead (it's rather too easy a mistake to make) - if you do, restart the tutorial. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.1.3 Combat Training When adding the cannon unit to the cannon tower, click on the tower itself, not the stairwell next to it (the stairs allow certain troops to access the walls, although not cannons). In the final battle, remember the game can be slowed down to half speed by pressing F8. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.1.4 What now? Before commencing the campaign or scenarios, I suggest you try a "Citizen" endless game (this level does not exist in the unpatched game - play "Baron" level instead). This gives you lots of cash and resources with which to learn to build colonies. Aim to master building a profitable colony, advancing until you have at least Merchant level civilisation. Help with Getting Started can be found in the Strategies section. Also read through some of the common questions under Gameplay. This is a far more gentle start than the campaigns and scenarios. If you have played 1602 or consider yourself a veteran of these types of games, you may wish to dive straight into the campaign. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2 Campaign ______________________________________________________________________________ This section provides a guide for the main campaign included with the game. If it has a name, I missed it. The story is based around Katherine von Breitenstein and a mysterious amulet. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.1 Nova Fora ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.1.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1. Found a city with 250+ Settlers. - 2. Find Katherine von Breitenstein and return her to your city. - 3. Find Mongols and trade 20t Salt. - 4. Equip a fleet with 4 Archers, 4 Swordsmen, Scout, 50t Wood, 100t Tools, 50t Food, and sail west. Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - Small Trading ship, with 17t Food, 100t Tools, 30t Wood, Scout. - 30,000 coins (20,000 with unpatched game). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' [ ] ', ,' ( ) ', ,' <1> ', ,' { } ', ,' ( ) (3) ', ,' @ ( ) ', W 4 ( ) ( ) [ ] (2) ( ) E ', ( ) [ ] [ ] ( ) ,' ', [ ] ( ) ,' ', [ ] ,' ', ( ) ,' ',( ) [ ] ( ) ,' ', ( ) ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Build colony here. Wine 50%, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 2 = Katherine von Breitenstein. * 3 = Mongols. * 4 = Exit point (at mission end). * @ = Starting position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.3 Objective: Found a city with 250+ Settlers Settle the island shown with a flag (marked "1" on the map above). You need 250 Settlers, not just 250 people. To gain Settlers you need to supply Food, Cloth and Leather, and provide access to a Chapel and Tavern supplied with Alcohol. Build relatively close to one of the two main mountainous areas on the southern side of the island, since this will allow you easy access to Ore and Salt later in the game. If you are struggling with the basics of colony building, or find yourself going bankrupt, please review some of the Getting Started strategies in the Strategies section. Common general gameplay questions such as Where do I get Tools from? and How do I build and operate Quarries and Mines? are covered in an earlier section. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.4 Why can't I settle an island? You can only settle the first island - the large one in the north-east of the map, as indicated at the start with an orange flag on the mini-map. You cannot and do not need to settle further islands: You do not need to develop your population beyond Settler level, so you do not *need* Tobacco or Spices, however much apparent demand there may be for these goods among your population. I suspect this limitation has been added to prevent one developing Large Warships during this mission, and using them immediately in the next mission to flatten everything. Hemp will grow on the first island - see Where can I grow Hemp? above. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.5 Objective: Find Katherine von Breitenstein and return her to your city She is standing in woodland on the northern coast of the island just to the south of your island (marked "2" on the map above). Stack notes: "I find that the niece shows up in the minimap as a green dot as soon as you get given the mission." Move your ship close to the coast where she is standing. Select her and load her onto your ship. Sail to your colony. Unload her to complete this stage of the mission. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.6 I lost Katherine von Breitenstein after rescuing here. Is that a problem? No. Once you have unloaded her onto your island, that part of the mission will be complete. Don't worry - you'll be seeing plenty more of her in the future. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.7 Objective: Find Mongols and trade 20t Salt If you have not already done so, construct a Salt Mine and Works and produce Salt. Settlers don't need to be supplied Salt, but they will buy it if available. You will have plenty to spare, since one Salt Mine/Works can supply about 3000 people. Load a Scout and 20t of Salt onto your ship, and sail to the island just to the south-east (marked "3" on the map above). Un-load your Scout, and transfer the Salt from your ship to the scout. Send the Scout inland and trade with the Mongols at their market place (tents with flags on). Once 20t are traded, this stage of the mission is complete. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.8 Why can I not find the Mongols with my ship? You need to search for them by off-loading your scout and exploring their island, because their settlement is inland. They are on the island just to the south-east of your island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.9 Objective: Equip a fleet with 4 Archers, 4 Swordsmen, Scout, 50t Wood, 100t Tools, 50t Food, and sail west Whatever your load onto your ships and sail west with in this mission, will be your starting fleet in the next mission. So take additional resources with you to make the next mission slightly easier. You are limited to a total of 4 ships and 9 ground units. You cannot advance past Settlers in this mission, so not all ship types can be researched. If you have not already done so, build an Ore Mine, Smelter and Tool Maker - you will need Iron to make weapons, and Tool production will be cheaper and faster than buying Tools from the Venetians. Ship construction requires a Shipyard. Ships and Bows will require rope, so you will need a Hemp plantation and Ropemaker. You need to research Swords, then Bows at a School. You may also research Medium trading ships and various civic improvements (notably Wells and Fire Brigades). Minimise upkeep costs by only training soldiers just before you intend to leave. If you need to, balance you finances towards the end by de-activating or demolishing buildings that aren't needed anymore. This is particularly useful for weapons shops, which are only needed for 4t worth of production. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.10 Suggested fleet Ground unit choice is probably determined by the mission restrictions - 9 units are specified, and under normal circumstances you can only have 9 units. Dobber notes that: "You can sometimes build extra units by commissioning them in the fortress before the limit is reached, there is bug I think that allows for completion of all commissioned units. When I completed that one I even had a catapult that I carried with me. I had 1 catapult, 4 archers, 4 swordsmen and a scout." Taking a Catapult into the next mission would certainly open up some interesting strategies for experienced players, but Dobber's trick is quite hard to use, and might be fixed in versions after 1.04.02. Dobber continues: "I built 3 merchant ships, then built 4 additional shipyards. Built up my supplies and gold to support building 5 ships. I then set each shipyard to building a medium merchant ship. It worked I wound up with a total of 8 medium merchant ships, more than enough space for my scout 4 swordsmen, 4 archers and 2 catapults (same method as ships, except with a fortress and a war machine shop). I saved the mission just prior to attempting the sail over, the first time only 4 or 5 I think made it, but they had gotten strung out. Once the required got inside the zone, it transferred. I loaded the saved misssion and bunched them up and kept them bunched as we approached the zone, and got all 8 over that time. You have to keep them tightly bunched." There are occassional reports of players being able to build almost unlimited numbers of units - something they do must side-step the mission specific restriction. Since players who experience this don't realise there is supposed to be a restriction and assume everyone can build large armies and navies, understanding precisely what allows many extra troops and ships to be built is still a mystery... Research Medium Trading Vessels, and sink your original small trading ship (unload the Scout first ;-) ). This will give more you more construction options. You will need at least one Small Warship, because 4 Medium Trading ships can only carry 8 ground units. Unless you are planning a highly militaristic strategy at the start of the next mission (not recommended for new players), you should try to carry as much cargo with you into the next mission. This means your fleet should contain 3 Medium Trading ships, each of which can carry 6x50t, in addition to one Small Warship. Unless you are planning a militaristic strategy at the start of the next mission, do not equip your new ships with Cannon. If you do, you will not be able to sail under the white flag, and may be forced into messy naval battles before you have had chance to build a shipyard and strip the cannons. You can still build ship Cannon (at a Gunsmith), and transport them as cargo into the next mission, to be equipped when you are ready to start fighting. For ease of building a new colony in the next mission, ensure one ship is carrying both Wood and Tools. Aside from the cargo required by the mission, fill up your ships with materials that will either help you get a new colony started more quickly or cheaply, or will be expensive or awkward to produce in future. Additional Tools are always useful. 100t of Alcohol can be used to supply your population until you get the 360 Settlers required for Hop production - this will remove the need for inefficient Small Farm/Potato production of liquor. Depending how you settle, Salt may be hard to find. Lastly consider items which you are only likely to need in small quantities, but which require a lot of real estate to produce - for example, Rope and Weapons. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.11 Why can't I train Archers and Swordsmen at my Fortress? How do I get weapons? GamersCloset writes: "You need to research Swords and Archery through the School. Then you can build the required buildings which will produce the weapons. When you have weapons, you can build the soldiers. Keep in mind that you can only build the required amount to fulfill the mission, and no more." It has been reported that killing your original Scout may prevent a new Scout being trained in addition to 4 Archers plus 4 Swordsmen. To avoid problems, simply retain your original Scout and train only the 4 Archers and 4 Swordsmen requested. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.1.12 Where is "Westward"? How do I finish? Wiles writes: "Triple check your cargo and passengers to make sure they are right. Then spin your map so that the 'N' on the map is pointed toward the top. Sail to the western (left) side of the map. When you sail west, you are not sailing for an island. You are sailing to the western edge of the map screen. Think of it as sailing off the edge of the world..." Sail into the 'corner' of the map - the most westerly point on the map is not part way along a straight edge, but in a corner. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.2 Barbarrossas' Throne ______________________________________________________________________________ This scenario follows on directly from Nova Fora, and cannot be replayed without replaying Nova Fora. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1a. Build Citizen level city. - 1b. Sell 25t Iron to Covana. - 2a. Covana's city must not be destroyed. - 2b. Destroy both of Ramirez's main cities. Rating: ** (?) War-o-meter: ***/**** Resources: - Whatever ships, cargo and ground units you left Nova Fora with. - 40,000 coins. Competitor: Ramirez (Purple). Ally: Covana (Olive Green). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,'@[a] ', ,' ', ,' {b} [c] ', ,' [d] ', ,'[e] {2} ', ,' <1> [f] ', ,' (g) [h] [i] ', W [j] [k] [l] E ',[m] [n] (o) [p] <3>,' ', [r] (s) ,' ', [t] [u],' ', [v] [w] [x] ,' ', ,' ', [y] ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Covana's city. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * 2 = Ramirez's primary city. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 3 = Ramirez's secondary city. Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * a = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone. * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * c = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * e = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * f = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * g = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * h = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * i = Ramirez supply island. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * j = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * k = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * l = Ramirez supply island. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * m = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * n = Spices, Wine, Stone. * o = Ramirez supply island. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore, Gems. * p = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * r = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * s = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * t = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * u = Ramirez supply island. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * v = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * w = Ramirez supply island. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * x = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * y = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * @ = Starting position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.3 Can I restart the mission from the menu? No. It follows on directly from Nova Fora, so the only way to completely restart Barbarrossas' Throne is to replay Nova Fora first. I suggest you save the game at the start of the mission (or the end of Nova Fora). All other scenarios in the campaign can be restarted from the campaign menu without re- playing the entire campaign. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.4 Objectives: Build Citizen level city; Sell 25t Iron to Covana Citizens will need to be supplied as Settlers, except also with Tobacco *or* Spices, and they will not buy Leather. Citizens also require access to a Church and School. To profit from Citizens, you should try to supply as many goods as possible - Food, Cloth, Salt, Tobacco, Spices, and Silk. To supply these goods you will need to colonise at least two islands, four islands to secure supplies of all. You may wish to consider capturing some of Ramirez's supply islands - this saves building cost, and his supply islands are poorly defended, so long as you hide from his navy - tactics are discussed later. You will be invaded by Ramirez occasionally, but he normally only lands three or four ground units at a time, which your starting army should be able to deal with easily. Naval conflict can be more dangerous - tactics are described below. Although you only need to trade 25t of Iron with Covana to satisfy the second part of the mission objective, you can sell him more (he'll stop buying eventually, but you should get 100+ t sold first). This trade can earn you extra revenue - which can help when you are preparing to develop Citizen housing, and have invested in various plantations, but have not yet sold any extra goods. Baco writes: "I make a profit buying food, cloth, and salt from Covana's warehouse at 22, 24 and 20 gold and selling these things in my markets at 45, 70 and 30 gold." Iron trade will also allow Covana to build extra military units, which should reduce the chance of Covana getting destroyed later in the game. Remember to trade Iron, not Iron Ore. During the first part of this scenario you may have no use for all those ships and units you brought with you - consider sinking/killing a few to save upkeep costs. Personally I found it more cost-effective to retain the trading ships than to build new ones, but the Small Warship was not needed. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.5 Island choice There are three viable choices for a first settlement: (1) The fairly large island in the north-west (marked "b" on the map above). (2) A settlement on the eastern side of Covana's island (marked "1" on the map above). (3) A settlement on an undeveloped part of Ramirez's southern island (marked "3" on the map above). All the options are "northern" islands, allowing Hops (and later Herbs) to be grown. Option 1 gives access to Ore and Salt, however there is not much space available for city building: Two mountain ranges and two small hills require some *very* careful town planning, and it is quite easy to find oneself without enough space to build a profitable Citizen level city. Option 2 gives a lot of space, but no access to mineral resources. However, the neighboring island (marked "b" on the map above) can be used for an early second colony to provide Stone, Ore and Salt (the Salt deposit is on the northern side). Option 3 is slightly more daring, because you settle the same island as your enemy right at the start. However, Ramirez does not station many troops on his southern island, so the threat shouldn't be increased significantly. Extra caution is needed against Ramirez's navy though. The main advantage of option 3 is that you are well placed to start invading him, and have both space to build, and mineral deposits. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.6 My Wood is in one ship and my Tools in another ship. How do I build my first warehouse? Balou answers: "Unload the scout on some island. Move the wood from your ship to the scout. Then get the scout to move this wood to the other ship, that has the other building materials. Now you'll be able to build a warehouse with this ship." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.7 How do I stop Ramirez destroying my fleet? Ramirez has a tendency to attack your fleet early in the game with three or four medium sized warships, which are almost impossible to destroy with your starting mix of four small warships/medium trading ships. De-equip your cannon (via a shipyard), and fly the white flag throughout. Ramirez's ships will ignore your ships if they are unarmed and flying the white flag. This should give you time to develop without losing your fleet. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.8 How do I get Merchants and Aristocrats? Where is the Marble? You do not need the higher levels of civilization to win. Citizens will be fine, since they allow Large Warships to be researched and a reasonable army to be built and supported. There no Marble on the map, which prevents building Bath Houses, and hence prevents Merchants. There is no Gold either. This applies to the first half of the campaign, none of the scenarios in which require development above Citizen. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.9 I accidentally insulted or attacked Covana, and now he will not trade with me. What can I do? Attempting to make peace, and then gaining a new trade agreement may take a long time. Even if you have something the AI player wants, it may take hours for them to calm down and forgive you. It may be better reload an earlier saved game if you make this mistake. Unfortunately if you have absolutely no saves prior to being aggressive towards Covana, you may find yourself restarting the entire campaign... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.10 Objectives: Covana's city must not be destroyed; Destroy both of Ramirez's main cities The first mission objective should be largely academic - Covana is rarely attacked, and if you have supplied a reasonable amount of Iron, Covana will be able to build a sizable army to defend himself. The second objective requires you to completely destroy all the Market places and warehouses on Ramirez's two main city islands (marked "2" and "3" on the map above). Zomby Woof writes: "Concentrate on the market buildings, if they fall all the other buildings within their influence area get destroyed too." You can capture his territory instead (by destroying those market place/warehouses and building your own in their place), but that is not required. You can also destroy/capture his supply islands, but that is not required by the mission description: There are some reports of the mission no finishing unless supply islands are destroyed too, but I've completed it without destroying all the supply islands. When the mission refers to "leveling", this applies only to Ramirez's colonies on those two islands - you don't need to flatten your own cities (I think this loses something in translation sometimes and gets players confused). You will need to research at least fire arrows and/or Catapults before invading, so that you can attack buildings: On one or two of his supply islands, it may be possible to destroy all the Market places and Warehouses using ship based cannon, but not on his city islands. Since naval supremacy tends to be important, you should research larger warship designs and build a Large Shipyard to build them. You can build a University and research land Cannon and various other military bonuses, but that is not strictly necessary. Don't start military operations until you have a solid economy. As a new player, aim to have more than 500 coins revenue coming in on the balance sheet before building up a military, and a stable economy (meaning one that you can ignore) before going to war. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.11 Naval strategy Three or four fully equipped Large Warships are almost unstoppable in this scenario. AlejandroElMagn comments: "I prefer medium warship: 5 of them. They cost a less of money, so you can have more and in the sea." Once you start building warships, Ramirez will send part of his fleet up to destroy them. This is only a problem if you have just *one* new warship: Either build several rapidly, or initially de-equip cannon and wait with a white flag up until you are ready. Use your navy as a pack, and slowly wipe out all the enemy shipping. Retreat heavily damaged ships for repairs at your shipyard if you need to. From balou: "Don't chase his ships all over the map - eventually they'll return to their home-harbor - just wait and see. Sink his ships and his shipyard. He'll continue to build shipyards and ships... keep destroying them as fast as he builds them." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.2.12 Invasion strategy Some general military tactics are contained in the Strategies section. From lisa simpson: "The smaller of Ramirez's two main islands can be easily destroyed with just one or two archers... He doesn't care about your troops as long as your army is small enough." If you managed to fool the game into letting you leave Nova Fora with a Catapult, you can conquer this southern island ("3" on the map above) with your initial forces. The only thing that stops you doing this with the default Swordsmen and Archers, is the lack of fire arrows - you don't have anything with which to destroy his buildings. If you are feeling daring, or settled this island initially, consider attacking Ramirez's city here as soon as you have fire arrows researched - you can do this at Settler level, which is why it might be advantageous. Capture some of his production facilities. You will need to manage your finances and resources well to succeed, which is why this tactic is not recommended for new players. If you wait until you have reached Citizen level before invading, you may not benefit from capturing Ramirez's facilities, because you have probably built everything you need already. In this case you are better destroying his cities, rather then wasting time and resources capturing them. Balou notes: "Destroy his fire-fighters, otherwise they'll save the damaged buildings over and over again." Although the enemy will build a lot of Fire Brigades, one can normally attack the Fire Brigade, then return to attacking the main market building. The second round of attacks on the market should destroy it before a new Fire Brigade appears. The quick way, from dutchanno1986: "I conquered Ramirez by using 3 warships (2 medium and 1 large), some archers and 8 cavalry. First I destroyed all his smaller islands (there was no resistance), and then I destroyed his mayor island using 1 cavalry to lure his army and then destroy it with my ships." Balou writes: "Use hit and run tactics. Unload some cavalry, wait for his units to close in on you (stay close to your ships), and re-board the ship once he is in striking distance of the ships cannons. Repeat as often as possible. If most of his military units are 'wasted' this way, start your invasion. ... On his biggest island, there's a whole bunch of mortars (close to his fortress), and they waste your soldiers very easily, if you're not quick enough to destroy them (or better, capture them) - use cavalry yourself here." Zomby Woof comments: "First I also tried the hit-and-run tactics. But soon I got annoyed of that because it seemed that his reinforcements came faster than I could defeat them. So I started a massive attack against his fortress (no fortress - no [new] troops). I had about 10 catapults, 5-6 conquered mortars and a group of about 20-25 fighters as escort. This group contained a mixture of cavalry, pikemen and archers and their only duty was, to keep away the enemy from the war machines as long as possible so they had enough time to deal with the fortress. I lost most of the fighters but had still some catapults and mortars left. After the fortress was destroyed there was almost no resistance anymore, maybe some single units. So the rest was just like a walk in the park, destroyed all market buildings and Ramirez was history. Also it's easier if you build a forward base on Ramirez' island, so you don't waste much time with transporting your troops." An alternative method from RoddyC: "What ultimately worked for me is training suicide squads of catapults and crossbows. I shipped them over to the enemy island and sent them directly to one of his markets. Most of the time, the market would fall and the army would die. Then I'd just train another army and do it all again for the next market building. I also ended up building over most of his markets so that I could get the land and he couldn't rebuild. Eventually I owned most of the island, with his tiny town trapped in the middle." Economic warfare is possible, but may take some time to see any result. From dutchanno1986: "I destroyed his church by letting my archers fire on it till his army arrived, getting the archers back in the ship just before they were attacked. Without the church the houses returned to pioneers and he was without money to train new soldiers." Cutting off his supply of 'luxury' goods by destroying his supply islands may not make a big difference, not least because Ramirez tends to just start a new colony whilst you are waiting for him to run out of supplies. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.3 Helter-Skelter ______________________________________________________________________________ This scenario is sometimes called "In a Muddle". ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1. Positive balance sheet and at least 100 Citizens. - 2. Get 20t Furs and 20t Medicinal Herbs and sail north with them. Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - 25,000 coins. - Large Warship "Veni, Vidi, Vici": Autotrade Feria to Hyperia with Tobacco products. - Large Trading ship "La Metier": Autotrade Narbos to Hyperia with Spices. - Large Warship "Silkassona": Autotrade Caetra to Hyperia with Silk Cloth and Alcohol. - Large Trading ship "Tapeia": Moored at Hyperia. - Small Warship "Vladimir": Moored at Hyperia. - Small Trading ship "Rosane": Moored at Hyperia. - Colony Caetra ("4" on map below): Warehouse, 3 Main Markets, 4 Cotton Plantations, 2 Sugarcane Plantations, 3 Silk Plantations, 2 Indigo Plantations, 2 Weaver's Hut, Distillery, Forester's Hut. - Colony Feria ("3" on map below): Warehouse, 6 Tobacco Plantations, 3 Tobacco Factories, 2 Forester's Huts. - City Hypatia ("1" on the map below: 1900 people, mostly Citizens; 2 Warehouses, 13 Main Markets, 8 Forester's Huts, 9 Hunting Lodges, 4 Tanneries, 2 Fishermen's Huts, 6 Grain Farms, 3 Mills, 2 Bakeries, 6 Small Farms, 5 Cattle Farms, 2 Butcher's Shops, 5 Sheep Farms, 2 Weaving Mills, 6 Hop Farms, 3 Breweries, Medicinal Herb Plantation, 3 Hemp Plantations, 2 Ropemakers, 2 Ore Mines, 2 Salt Mines, 2 Salt Works, Ore Smelter, Large Ore Smelter, Charcoal Burner, 2 Toolsmith, Quarry, Stonemason, 4 Tailor's Shops, Small Shipyard, Armorer, 2 Gunsmiths, 2 Large Weapon Smithies, 2 Bow Makers, 3 War Machine Builders, Cannon Foundry, Medium Fortress, 4 Fire Brigades, 3 Chapels, Church, 3 Schools, various stalls. - Colony Narbos ("2" on map below): Warehouse, 4 Spice Plantations, Forester's Hut. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' 9 ', ,' [a] ', ,' (b) ', ,' <1> ', ,' {c} ', ,' (d) (5) ', ,' (f) ', W (2) (h) [i] (6) (3) E ', (l) [7] [n] (o) ,' ', [p] (q) ,' ', [r] ,' ', (s) ,' ',(8) [u] (4) ,' ', (w) ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Hypatia. Your city. Wine, Spices, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 2 = Narbos. Your Spice colony. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 3 = Feria. Your Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 4 = Caetra. Your Cotton/Sugar/Silk/Indigo colony. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * 5 = Mongols. Buy Jewelry, sell Fur. Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore. * 6 = Native Americans. Buy Wine, sell Gold. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 7 = Africans. Buy Tobacco, sell Wine. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 8 = Aztecs. Buy Gold, sell Jewelry. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Gold. * 9 = Exit point (at end of mission). * a = Whales. * b = Whales, Stone, Ore. * c = Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore. * f = Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * h = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * i = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * l = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * n = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * o = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * p = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * q = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * r = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * s = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * u = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * w = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.3 Objective: Positive balance sheet and at least 100 Citizens This objective requires you to work quite quickly, so whatever strategy you adopt, set the game to half speed (F8) immediately. Although you start with plenty of cash, you will be bankrupt within ten minutes unless you work fast. Such a rapid loss of cash can be a bit daunting at first, but fixing the economy is not so hard. One of two and a half approaches may be adopted: (1a) Methodical removal of unneeded buildings, replacement with more efficient building types, correcting specific design flaws, tweaking trade routes, and generally making the empire sustain itself. (1b) As 1a, except you aim to remove certain population supporting facilities, and let your population drop down to Settlers. Once you have a stable economy, build up to Citizens again. (2) Delete almost everything except some existing Citizen level housing. The second option works because this first objective only needs to be met, not sustained. The second option also benefits from knowing what will be needed in the second half of the mission - in essence, which two or three production facilities need to be saved. Option 1b will take some time, and I personally don't see it is necessary to down-grade civilization level. Although option 2 sounds a lot easier, I'd suggest option 1a first time around because you will learn what types of mistakes AI governors make. This is important because you'll be back here in the future, when things will be somewhat harder... Fortunately, or unfortunately, depending on what strategy you adopt, changes made to your city during this mission will not be carried over to that future event. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.4 Colony redesign strategy The following suggestions are optimised for about 1900 Citizens, approximately the population you start with. The diagram below is a simple representation of the main city ("1" on the map above). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _ (_) .---. J B | A | -----+--- '---' I | .--- G K | | | .----+-' | E '-. | | | F--' '----- C | City | ~~H~~~~~~ .-' | ~ ~~ |D | ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sea ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ On this island: - A: Destroy everything in this area except the Main Market and Fortress. You can keep the Walls, War Machine Builder and Cannon Foundry if you like, since they have no upkeep cost, but they are not needed. - B: Destroy one Salt Mine and one Salt Works. Destroy one Ore Mine and the Charcoal Burner. Destroy most of the Hunting Lodges in this area (you only need to retain 3 in total). Destroy at least one Tannery. Thin out the Forester's Huts. Open the gate into the city. - C: Destroy the Hemp Plantation. - D: Destroy the Ropemaker, Tailor's Shop, Armorer and Tannery. - E: Add basic stalls to this area. Remove the remaining Tailor's Shops from the city. Once you have made the other (more time critical) changes below, optimise remaining stalls (remove duplicates close to one another, remove Jewelry stalls, add in a missing Tobacco/Spice stall). - F: Open the gate. - G: Destroy Hemp Plantations and Rope Maker. - H: Destroy both Fishermen's Huts. - I: Fix the road connection to the Medicinal Herb Plantation (it seems you cannot replant fields until you have researched the Doctor). - J: Thin out the Hunting Lodges and Forester's Huts. Retain only one Tannery for the whole city. - K: Destroy all the Small Farms. Build an extra pair of Hop Farms and a Brewery. On your Cotton/Sugar/Silk/Indigo island ("4" on the first map above): - Fix the Distillery's road connection. - Destroy the Forester's Hut. - Build 2 Dye Works. - Destroy one Indigo Plantation and replace it with a Silk Plantation. You may need to add an additional Silk Plantation later. - Destroy both Weaver's Huts, and build two new Weaving Mills. - Add some Wells. On your Spice island ("2" on the first map above): - Build a new Main Market close to the Spice Plantation with 'no road access' indicated. - Destroy the Forester's Hut. - Add some Wells. - You will eventually need a fifth Spice Plantation here to fully satisfy demand for Spices, but you will first need to ship Bricks in, so don't waste time on it immediately. On your Tobacco island ("3" on the first map above): - Destroy both Forester's Huts. - Fix the road connection to one of the plantations (it helps distribute Tobacco between factories). - You will eventually need a fourth Tobacco combine (2 Tobacco Plantations and a Factory) to fully satisfy demand for Tobacco, but you will first need to ship Bricks in, so don't waste time on it immediately. Assign a ship to auto-trade Cloth between Caetra ("4") and Hyperia ("1"). Keep an eye on the ship "Silkassona", because its autotrade route may get in a mess if stocks build up, but this will not be a problem to start with. By the time you have done all that, the first goods should be arriving from production islands. Once they are sold, your balance will turn positive. How far you optimise the finer points of the economy (such as building extra Tobacco and Spice production facilities, tweaking Food supply by adding an Grain Farm and Mill, researching and Adding Doctors to deal with plague) rather depends how long you wish to keep playing. Since the second part of the mission can be completed in under 30 minutes, it will probably be easier to ignore long term minor imbalances, and just get the game finished. As mentioned earlier you can adopt a more draconian style. Willemnes comments: "My tactic was further - go back to basic. Destroy: all military buildings on your island; big church, university; unnecessary factories such as tailors; a lot of other farm and alcohol produce facilities; all the produce facilities on all the other islands, and keep only a base industries with a base population. From then on you will have pretty good money output, and you can again build up your town." Others suggest tactics like abandoning Silk production to save cost, since Silk is not required to sustain Citizens. However, the profit from the sale of Silk far outweighs the cost, so Silk production should help balance your finances, rather than hindering. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.5 Total demolition strategy This strategy was suggested by Jini: "Train a Scout in the fortress and connect the herb plantation to the street grid. Tear everything down except the warehouse and some residential houses at the coast, the main market building near the herb plantation, and some tobacco plantations. The first goal (positive balance plus 100 Citizens) is now reached." Simple, huh? You have to have a sixth sense to know to retain some Herb and Tobacco production, and to know that you will need a Scout. Sometime after the first objective is reached, your colony will start crumbling, and the balance will begin to drop. Complete the second objective (see below) as fast as possible, and you will finish the scenario before this becomes a problem. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.6 Objective: Get 20t Furs and 20t Medicinal Herbs and sail north with them Medicinal Herbs are easy - you are already producing them. Furs are slightly harder to procure. Zomby Woof writes: "You can't build a trapper in this mission, although it seems that you were able to do that in the version 1.00." In patched versions at least, you must trade with the natives to secure Furs. This is the order trades should be conducted. I have noted the approximate volumes required for a successful trade, but these seem to vary slightly between trades: - Africans ("7" on map above): Buy Tobacco for Wine (~3 Tobacco = 1 Wine). - Native Americans ("6" on the map above): Buy Wine for Gold (1 Wine = ~4 Gold). - Aztecs ("8" on the map above): Buy Gold for Jewelry (~4 Gold = 1 Jewelry). - Mongols ("5" on the map above): Buy Jewelry for Furs (1 Jewelry = ~8 Furs). The Africans buy raw Tobacco, not processed Tobacco products. In most cases you will need to trade using a Scout, so build one at your fortress. You only *need* 3t of Jewelry to secure 20t on Furs, so long as you trade carefully. Start with at 15-20t of Tobacco, and you should have enough to trade everything you need. In most cases you can only exchange a maximum of 10t in one trade, so you may need to make a few separate runs to get everything. Trade small quantities to make sure you can load as much in exchange as the natives are prepared to offer. Once you have the goods, sail north (far top corner, indicated "9" on the first map above). Unlike Nova Fora, ships from this mission do not transfer directly into the next mission, so there is no advantage to loading additional cargo or sailing with additional ships. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.7 Why can't I get the Scout to leave the city? The gates are probably shut. Click on them to open them, or press CTRL + D to open all your city gates. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.3.8 Why don't the Mongols sell me enough Furs? Trade with them slowly over several minutes, only offering small quantities of Jewelry when you see they have a 'full' (~8+) stock of Furs. They will not stock 20t of Furs at one time, and you cannot exchange 20t in one trade, even if they could. Take part-loads back to your ship. Dobber asks: "Have you tried continuously clicking the load arrow? If you have the menu set to trade 1 ton, you click on the load fur button until they quit." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.4 Infernal Triad ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.4.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1a. Hire O'Reilly. - 1b. Hire Madrugada. - 1c. Destroy Peles' fortress. Rating: *** War-o-meter: *** Resources: - 9,500 coins. - Medium Trading Vessel, with 4 Cannon, Scout, 50t Food, 100t Tools, 50t Wood. - Colony Epona ("1" on map below): ~220 Settlers, Warehouse, 3 Main Markets, 3 Fishermen's Huts, 4 Small Farms (1 with Potatoes), 2 Hunting Lodges, Tannery, 2 Forester's Huts, 2 Sheep Farms, Weaver's Hut, Chapel, Food/Salt Stand, Cloth/Leather Stand. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.4.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' {1} ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' [2] ', ,' {b} [c] ', W [d] [e] E ', [f] [g] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', [h] [3] [4] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', [i] ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Epona. Your colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 2 = Palmira. Peles' fortress. * 3 = O'Reilly's colony. * 4 = Madrugada' colony. * a = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone. * b = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * c = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * d = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * e = Native Americans. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * f = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * g = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * h = Polynesians. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * i = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.4.3 Strategy overview This scenario can be confusing because the objectives are not very clear. One needs to explore, and then investigate what O'Reilly and Madrugada's 'colonies' need based on the diplomatic menu. Once you understand what is needed, one can complete the objectives without significant colony development, so long as the economy is carefully balanced. Your starting colony is reasonably well set up, albeit it is losing money. You should advance to Settlers almost immediately by placing a Tavern, and strip out some Food production (specifically the Fishermen's Huts). Land is in relatively short supply on this map, so you'll struggle to build the very large colonies that were possible in earlier campaign scenarios: they are not needed here. You do not need to develop to Citizen level. Pack as many Settler houses around as few facilities as possible, used Tools sparingly so as not to need any Iron production, and only build the facilities you absolutely need. This can give a balance surplus of more than 500, which is large enough to fund meeting the different objectives. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.4.4 Objective: Hire O'Reilly Explore the map and find O'Reilly's settlement. Open up the diplomatic menu, and see that he wants 10,000 coins tribute. Pay the tribute (click on the hand next to were "10,000" is displayed) to complete this objective. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.4.5 Objective: Hire Madrugada Again, find Madrugada's settlement and see that he wants 50t Spices in tribute. Settle one of the two Spice islands and grow Spices. Sail 50t to his warehouse, and trade the Spices to complete this objective. Once the objective is met, you can retain the plantations and sell the produce to your population, or tear down the colony to save money. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.4.6 Objective: Destroy Peles' fortress Your military does not need to be large, since Pele's forces are mostly fortified in towers and on walls, meaning they can be picked off one at a time at range. Four or five Catapults are all that is needed for a ground assault. Catapults are easy to produce as they require only simple research, one production building, and a small amount of rope production. You start at peace with Peles, so get your troops into position on the neutral part of his island before declaring war. You can use your starting ship to do this, meaning you do not need to build a shipyard or expand your fleet. Attack his towers and Archers at range, and once you have cleared a gap in his defenses, attack the fortress. It is theoretically possible to destroy his fortress by destroying his Warehouse and Main Market - both of which are within range of ships' guns. From dutchanno1986: "Make sure you only destroy Peles' fortress, not destroy his markets, because that would kill him and so you lose the game." Jini notes that in patched version 1.04.02, one can destroy Pele's warehouse and market place, and still complete the mission. In my opinion, Catapults are easier and cheaper to produce than warships, and are just as effective in meeting the objective. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.5 Pack-Ice ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.5.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1. Fill your colony's warehouse with Food (50t). - 2a. Expand Ulfilla to population 80. - 2b. Build a ship. - 3. Trade 25t of Medicinal Herbs for Whale Blubber. Rating: *** War-o-meter: * Resources: - 4,000 coins. - Scout (at Ulfilla). - Large Warship "Consissa", with 10 Cannons, 25t Medicinal Herbs (north of Ulfilla, trapped in the ice). - Colony "Ulfilla": 38 Pioneers; Warehouse, Food/Salt Stand, Small Shipyard, Trapper; ~32t Food, ~25t Fur. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.5.2 Strategy overview This scenario takes place on only two islands, so no map is provided. You will lose money throughout the scenario. You need to work as fast as possible and limit costs to a minimum. Towards the end you are required to build a ship, so you must retain at least 1500 coins for this purpose. It is tempting to sink your starting warship, which is trapped in the ice, and represents a useless money-sink. If you do this, ensure you have taken *all* the cargo off the ship first, since the Medicinal Herbs are required to complete the scenario. Jini warns: "Do not sink this ship in order to save maintenance costs. Otherwise the mission will maybe not proceed." I have sunk the ship and completed the mission, so it is possible, but perhaps fails on certain unpatched games or under certain circumstances. You can complete the scenario without sinking the ship, but you will come slightly closer to bankruptcy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.5.3 Objective: Fill your colony's warehouse with Food To the west of your colony you will find an Eskimo settlement. They will trade Furs for Food (this varies a bit, but you will need at least 1t Fur for 1t Food). You will need to make two runs with your Scout to fill your warehouse with Food. The warehouse capacity is 50t, however while you are procuring Food, your colonists will be eating it. Demolish the Trapper as soon as you have enough Furs to trade for the Food you need, to save upkeep: You will not need it after this objective has been completed - you will run out of money a long time before you run out of Food and want to trade for Food again ;-) . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.5.4 Why can I not trade for enough Food? Wiles writes: "The mission states to trade furs for food. So, filling your scout up with 20 furs, you should be able to trade for 20 food from the eskimos. If they don't have 20 tons of Food, do not leave. Let them fill up again, then continue clicking on the arrow to fill up the scout/mule with food until he is full. After a second trip like the first, you should have gotten a cut scene stating that part of the mission is over." Other problems have been reported at this stage that relate to editing bgruppen.dat - see How do I edit a game? below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.5.5 Objective: Expand Ulfilla to population 80, build a ship Population 80 means doubling the number of Pioneer houses - upgrading to Settlers is not a viable option because of the range of buildings and goods required. For house building you will need Wood. Ships additionally require Cloth, so you will have to set up a Sheep Farm(s) plus a Weaver's Hut. Place two Forester's Huts in the wooded area to the east. When the building materials become available, build two Sheep Farms and a Weaver's Hut in the grassland just to the north. Use further Wood build five new houses. This method should produce enough Cloth and Wood to build a small trading vessel, both at about the same time. Once you have the required materials, demolish the Sheep Farms, Weaver's Hut and Forester's Huts. In the meantime, you should use your Scout to travel north to where your original ship is trapped in the ice. Move the cargo off the ship and to your colony's warehouse in preparation for the next part of the scenario. You will need to make two trips. After this, consider sinking the ship to save upkeep costs - with the caveat contained in the overview, that doing this *might* evoke a bug which prevents the scenario from finishing. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.5.6 Objective: Trade 25t of Medicinal Herbs for Whale Blubber If you have not already done so, you will need to fetch the Medicinal Herbs from the hold of the ship trapped in the ice. The Mongols, who the Eskimos mentioned traded Whale Blubber, are on the large island to the south-east. Their settlement is on the south-west coast. Although the settlement can be seen from the coast, you will need to trade Medicinal Herbs using your Scout. Two trips are required. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.6 Toguldur's Stone ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.6.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Find and claim Stone of Toguldur. Rating: *** War-o-meter: ***** Resources: - 10,000 coins. - Medium Warship "Santa Maria", with 8 Cannon, loaded with 2 Mortars and 5 Archers. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.6.2 Objective: Find and claim Stone of Toguldur In this mission you have no base, and no way to replenish loses. You only have limited money, but your upkeep costs are small, so the mission is not a rush against the clock. The island immediately to north-east of your starting position contains a hostile Mongol settlement and the stone. No other islands are used, so I have not included a map. The stone is found in the middle of a circular mountain formation, just to the south of the Mongol settlement, close to where you start. There is a road leading from the Mongol settlement into this area, but it is blocked by rocks. Mortars must be used to attack these rocks and destroy them. Each rock needs to be hit several times. If you lose both your Mortars in combat before breaking into the area with the stone, it will be impossible to complete the mission, because Archers cannot attack the rocks. Once the rocks are cleared, send some Archers into the centre of the circular mountain formation to claim the Stone and complete the mission. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.6.3 Must I destroy the Mongols? How? Zomby Woof writes: "It's not necessary to eliminate the Mongols completely. The stone lies within the cirque, you can unload your troops at the southern shore. Destroy the Mongols' southern market building (the tent with the flag) or destroy directly their soldier training camp nearby (looks like a brown hut). This gives you the time to destroy with your mortars some rocks which block the road leading to the stone. If the path is clear send one of your archers inside and that's it." Although the Mongols will never stop sending troops against you while you are near their settlement, destroying some of their troop training buildings (directly, or by attacking the market) will reduce the threat somewhat. You are heavily outnumbered, notably facing a lot of fast moving Mongol cavalry, who will close on your Archers and Mortars very fast. In a stand-up fight you will die. Chefbartdast suggests: "Bomb and run. Stay close as you can to your ship. Do not lose your cannons." From Visualize.Raven: "Harass. If you hit a mongol building with a mortar, they will come to kill your mortar. Load your mortar to the ship and your ship will destroy the mongol army. Do this several times." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.7 New Acquaintances ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.7.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Destroy Galerius's colonies. Competitors: - Galerius (red) - aggressive. - Elagabalos (orange/yellow) - passive/friendly. Rating: *** War-o-meter: **** Resources: - 30,000 coins. - Large Warship "Silkassona", with 10 Cannons, autotrade Caetra to Hypatia with Silk Cloth and Alcohol. - Large Warship "Northern Hope", with 12 Cannons, autotrade Feria to Hypatia with Tobacco Products. - Large Trading Vessel "La Metier", with 6 Cannons, autotrade Narbos to Hypatia with Spices. - Large Trading Vessel "Tarpeia", with 6 Cannons, moored at Hypatia. - Small Warship "Vladimir", with 6 Cannons, moored at Hyperia. - 21 Archers on Hypatia's city walls. - 8 Cavalry, 2 Mortars, 3 Cannons, 4 Crew and Medic in south-eastern square of Hypatia city. - 8 Lancers in north-western square of Hypatia city. - Colony Caetra ("4" on map below): Warehouse, 3 Main Markets, Forester's Hut, 2 Sugar Plantations, Distillery, 3 Cotton Plantations, *4* Weaving Mills, 5 Silk Plantations, 3 Indigo Plantations, 3 Dye Works. - Colony Feria ("3" on map below): Warehouse, 2 Main Markets, 2 Forester's Huts, 7 Tobacco Plantations, 3 Tobacco Factories. - City Hypatia ("1" on the map below): ~1950 Merchants; 2 Warehouses, 13 Main Markets, Church, 3 Chapels (only 2 upgraded to Churches), 3 Large Taverns, Tavern, 3 Fire Brigades, 3 Doctors, 2 Schools, University, Library, 2 Public Baths, various stalls, 8 Forester's Huts, 2 Fishermen's Huts, 6 Grain Farms, 3 Mills, Bakery, 5 Cattle Farms, 2 Butchers, 8 Hunting Lodges, 4 Tanneries, 4 Small Farms (2 with Potatoes), 6 Hop Farms, 3 Breweries, 4 Sheep Farms, 2 Weaving Mills, 4 Tailor's Shops, 2 Hemp Plantations, 2 Ropemakers, Medicinal Herb Plantation, Small Shipyard, 3 Armorers, 3 War Machine Builders, 3 Gunsmiths, 2 Bow Makers, Large Weapon Smithy, Cannon Foundry, Medium Fortress, 2 Ore Smelters, Large Ore Smelter, 2 Toolsmiths, Charcoal Burner, 2 Ore Mines, 2 Salt Mines, Salt Works, Stonemason, Quarry. - Colony Narbos ("2" on map below): Warehouse, Main Market, Forester's Hut, 7 Spice Plantations. - All research known except Range of Crossbow. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' (b) ', ,' <1> ', ,' {5} ', ,' (d) (e) ', ,' (8) ', W (2) (6) [i] (j) (3) E ', (7) [m] [n] (9) ,' ', [p] (10) ,' ', [r] ,' ', (s) ,' ',(t) [u] (4) ,' ', (w) ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Hypatia. Your city. Wine, Spices, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 2 = Narbos. Your Spice colony. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 3 = Feria. Your Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 4 = Caetra. Your Cotton/Sugar/Silk/Indigo colony. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold, Gems. * 5 = Galerius's city. Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 6 = Galerius's Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 7 = Galerius's Spice colony. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 8 = Sabratha. Elagabalos's city. Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore, Salt. * 9 = Tanaquil. Elagabalos's Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * 10 = Gervasius. Elagabalos's Spice colony. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * a = Whales. * b = Whales, Stone, Ore. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore. * e = Mongols. Wine, Hops, Herbs 50%, Stone, Ore. * i = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * j = Native Americans. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * m = Africans. Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * n = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * p = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * r = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * s = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * t = Aztecs. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Gold. * u = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * w = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.3 Objective: Destroy Galerius's colonies This scenario is similar to Helter-Skelter, but you have a starting population of Merchants (who are harder to satisfy than Citizens, and unless you have played a complete endless game, will be entirely new to you), *and* you are invaded by a large enemy army at the start. As before, set half speed (F8) as soon as the game starts, to give you more time to think and act. The objectives are slightly vague as stated in the mission description. The description reads "Get your economy back on track, train an offensive army, and eradicate your enemy's cities." The first part simply means don't go bankrupt - you can have a negative balance, negative total cash, or zero population at the end of the mission and you can still complete the scenario. The first part is therefore a suggestion, not a requirement. The last part means destroy all three of Galerius's colonies, not just the island with houses upon it. You can adopt one or a combination of two approaches: (1) 'Fix' your economy so that you are making a profit, then deal with Galerius. (2) Destroy significant amounts of your own infrastructure to save operating costs, gather up your military, and destroy Galerius quickly before your economy collapses. Option 1 contains many variations. For example, one can let the population drop back down to Citizen level, saving many maintenance costs on civic buildings and production buildings, and potentially islands. Since this reduces the number of people, you need to expand the total number of houses in your city. Maintaining a Merchant level city is quite hard initially, and a profitable one will probably need Lamp Oil production to be started. Even with careful financial management, this variation can dip your cash into the red before you have had a chance to start making a profit. Option 2 is slightly more daring, because you must defeat Galerius fairly quickly. This is possible because you start with large stocks of weapons and unit production facilities, and almost all research completed. Galerius's colonies are not particularly well defended - no worse than Covana's colonies in Barbarrossas' Throne, and you should have more resources and units available. The final attack will not be the most difficult part of this scenario. Although this scenario allows you to build Aristocrat houses, you should not do this. Aristocrats are hard to satisfy, requiring many new facilities and goods; but more importantly you only have a finite amount of Marble available. I could find no Marble deposits on the map, so you are limited to the Marble you start with in Hypatia's warehouses. This will be enough for the odd new Public Baths, not a complete Aristocrat city. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.4 Defeating invaders At the start of the scenario Galerius's army is positioned on the northern side of Hypatia ("1" on the map above). This force contains 7 Crossbowmen, 8 Musketeers, 14 Lancers, 2 Catapults, 2 Mortars, 4 Cannon, 3 Medics, and 6 space Crew. After about a minute, they will start moving towards your city, attacking and destroying every building that gets in their way. Your ground forces are in three areas: (1) Archers scattered along the city walls, (2) the main army, including Cavalry, cannon and Mortars, lined up in the square on the south-eastern side of the city, (3) Lancers in the square on the north-western side of the city. Assign hotkeys (CTRL + 0-9) to important groups - at least the (faster) Cavalry, (slower) close combat units, and ranged units - since separating unit types out in the heat of battle is difficult. Open up the city gates, and send your units out into the fields on the northern side of the city. You won't be able to get all the Archers to leave the city walls, because some start in positions with no wall accesses. Wiles writes: "You can also attempt to build as many additional units as you want, but I found that capability to be limited as most of the heavier unit production chains (such as cannons and mortars) were broken because the Iron was not flowing, and the game does not give you quite enough time to fix those chain issues AND produce units before the attacking army gets to your gates." Mass production of basic troops such as Cavalry can be quite effective, particularly if you move the fortress's rallying flag closer to the front line. New Cavalry can also get to the front line fast enough to be useful. At this point several different strategies may be adopted. The first is to accept that you will lose several farms and production buildings, and let them attack you close to the city gates. From wiles: "I sent the archers to the walls close to the main gates to support the cavalry and other units that will be doing the hand to hand. So, now you have added archer support on the front walls, and you should have a pretty good army sitting outside the walls. Then let them come to you. I did not advance my units away from the walls. I let them destroy whatever in the field and chose to fight them on my terms. I lost maybe half of the units on the ground, but the attackers never made it inside, and I believe that was the more important objective." An alternative is to seek to protect your infrastructure, and rush your troops towards their army, specifically targeting Mortars, Cannon and Catapults, which are the only weapons they have with which to destroy your buildings. Jarrah writes: "I tried to take out the cannon and catapult crews (and their backups) with the cavalry. This got pretty messy and I had to build a few more cavalry. In the end I left the archers where they originally were on the walls and lost pretty much all the other men. But the enemy had only one 1 man left too - badly wounded - so I took an archer and shot him. Very messy and wasteful." A variation on this involves retreating all your troops back to the city as soon the enemy units that can attack buildings have been destroyed. The enemy's ground troops will follow. Position the remaining Archers on the walls near the main gate, and engage the enemy in close combat with your other troops near the main gate. If you have few remaining troops, simply shut the city gates until you have trained some replacements. Target enemy medics early, to prevent them healing their troops. Depending on the position you fight, you may also use your spare ships to give covering fire, as Dobber comments: "I moved the 2 ships sitting in my harbor up to the northern inlet beside the fishing hut. If things start to turn sour, move your troops east past your waiting ships and let their cannons help you." Unless you are planning to launch an attack against Galerius immediately, it does not matter how heavy your loses are, so long as you win the battle. You won't be invaded again with such force, you have plenty of weapons stockpiled to build a new army, and dead troops don't need to be paid (a slight advantage when fixing your economy). This is the reason why the second strategy (assaulting the enemy as quickly as possible) just about makes sense - you can afford to lose most of the army, while some of the farms and production buildings you save are useful. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.5 Economy strategies The following list of modifications are in part common to all the economy strategies that seek to establish a stable, working economy. Some strategies will ignore certain aspects, or demolish certain islands completely. These variations are discussed below. The following suggestions are optimised for just under 2000 Merchants, approximately the population you start with. Jarrah has some advice, particularly if you intend to not follow the list below line by line: "It's worth saving and then going slowly round each island to see what you need to change, making a few mental notes and then reloading." Dobber writes: "Be sure and do a savegame right after you defeat these forces, so you want have to do so again if your first attempt at straightening out the economy lands you in debtors prison. And most of us have wound up there on this one until we finally figured it out." Hakea writes: "There were unnecessary numbers of things all over the place. Just when you'd think you'd weeded them all out, you'd see another." Before starting, move your remaining troops to one side - the game can be a bit tetchy about demolishing and building things when soldiers are nearby. First, add your spare Large Trading Vessel ("Tarpeia") to the Caetra to Hypatia route, autotrading Silk Cloth and Cloth from Caetra to Hypatia. Add 2 50t slots for each. You can, and probably should edit the existing ship's autotrade route, adding an additional Silk Cloth slot. The use of two ships better balances the flow of goods and are more reliable (later, you will need to check these routes are performing correctly, in case over-stocking occurs and cargoes can not be unloaded). The extra Silk Cloth slot is needed to ensure there is enough of this material to sell to your Merchants early on. Without this change, many will downgrade to Citizens before you have had a chance to balance the economy. With this change, you can cash-in on Silk Cloth straight away, which should prove highly profitable. Although Merchants want both Silk Cloth and Lamp Oil, they will only downgrade if neither is available. The diagram below is a simple representation of the main city ("1" on the map above). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ _ (_) .---. B | A | -----I--- '---' | .--- | | | F----+-' | C '-. | | | E |--' '--H-- | | ~~G~~~~~~ .-' City | ~ ~~ |D | ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Sea ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ On this island: - A: Destroy everything in this area, except the Main Market, Tool Maker (the extra tool production is useful for development) and buildings that have no operating cost: Fortress, War Machine Builders and Cannon Foundry. You should have enough weapons stocked to out-fit a future army - if not, you can always rebuild certain buildings when your economy is more healthy. - B: Destroy one Salt Mine (you can also de-activate the second Salt mine for a while, since you have plenty of Rock Salt in stock). Destroy one Ore Mine, Charcoal Burner and both Tanneries, reduce the number of Foresters, and thin out the Hunting Lodges. How many Hunting Lodges you retain across the entire colony depends on what Food production facilities you lost in the first battle. If you still have a Grain Combine (4 Grain Farms, 2 Mills and Bakery - feeds just under 700) and a cattle combine (2 Cattle Farms and Butcher - feeds about 300), you only need retain around 4 Hunting Lodges in total (each Lodge feeds just under 250 people). If you lost all Grain and Cattle production in the first battle, you should retain all 8 starting Hunting Lodges until you can re-establish Grain/Cattle production. - C: This corner lacks Church, University and Bath access, and stalls. You may decide to abandon it completely, or reposition the Public Bath near the coast in a later city redesign. Initially provide basic facilities and accept a few houses will drop back to Citizen status due to the lack of baths. Replace the Chapel with a new Chapel (which upgrades it to a Church), destroy the Tavern (retain the Large Tavern nearby), and add basic stalls. Later you can upgrade the School to give University coverage by rebuilding it. - D: Destroy the Ropemaker, Armorer, Tannery and Tailor's Shop (Clothing is only needed by Aristocrats) from this area. - E: Destroy the Tailor's Shops and Library (you have all the research you need from it completed). Destroying the Fire Brigades is optional - they aren't needed for entirely Merchant/Citizen housing, but it is possible some of your housing will drop to Settlers at some stage, so you could be unlucky and be faced with a domestic fire. - F: Destroy both Hemp Plantations, Ropemaker, Tailor's Shop, and all 4 Small Farms. - G: Destroy Fishermen's Huts. - H: Destroy one Weaving Mill and one Sheep Farm. You will almost certainly have lost a Brewery in this area during the attack, so rebuild it. Similarly you probably lost some or all of the Cattle related production in this area. Balance whatever you have left by building an extra Cattle Farm or Butcher. - I: This area is often ignored by the invading army. Again, thin out the Forester's Huts and Hunting Lodges. Depending on personal preference, and what facilities you have after the attack, you may wish to add an extra Grain Farm (7 total), Mill (4 total) and Bakery (2 total), effectively creating a second Grain combine to provide Food. Alternatively consider Cattle Farms/Butchers. If you intend on dropping your population back to Citizen level: - E: Additionally destroy the University and replace it with a School, and destroy both Public Baths. - F: Build a new Hop Combine (2 Hop Farms and a Brewery - Citizens drink slightly more than Merchants). - H: You have the option of building 2 new Sheep Farms and retaining the extra Weaving Mill. An alternative is to expand Cotton/Cloth production on Caetra. Citizens require about 50% more Cloth than Merchants. On Caetra ("4" on the first map): - Destroy at least two of the Weaving Mills. For a Merchant population, you may destroy a third Weaving Mill and one of the Cotton Plantations. For a Citizen level population, retain two Weaving Mills, and add a fourth Cotton Plantation; unless you've already expanded the number of Sheep Farms on Hypatia (se "H" in the previous section). Whatever you do, make sure you remove the Weaving Mill that is too far from the nearest Main Market of Cotton Plantation to find any Cotton. - Destroy the Forester's Hut. - Build at least 2 more Silk Plantations. To support Merchants fully, you will need to add an extra Indigo Plantation and Dye Works, and a total of 5 extra Silk Plantations. If you start Lamp Oil production fairly early on, you may not need to fulfill all the demand for Silk Cloth. For Citizens, you have the option of reducing overall Silk Cloth production, because it is not needed. However, it is profitable, so I'd suggest keeping it, just not expanding production significantly. - Tweak the Main Markets. You can probably safely remove the Market between the Sugarcane and Indigo Plantations. Place an extra Main Market close to the Dye Works on the far side of the island, to allow the works to use materials from more than just the three plantations within its service area. On Feria ("3" on map below): - Destroy both Forester's Huts. - Destroy the Pioneer-level Main Market close to the Citizen-level Main Market. Rebuild it at the other end of the colony, which will allow you to work on the plantations close to the edge of your territory, and will ease the flow of carts. - Build an extra Tobacco Plantation and an extra Tobacco Factory. - Check road connections. Some plantations are missing connections completely. Adding them will help distribute Tobacco to the factories. On Narbos ("2" on map below): - Destroy the Spice Plantation which is out of reach of the Warehouse (don't rebuild it elsewhere, 6 Spice Plantations will be plenty). - Destroy the Forester's Hut. - Fix the road connection to the Spice Plantation near the source of the river. Return to your main city. Fine-tune the provision of stalls (you will not need Jewelry or Wine Stands, for example). Take out some of the beautification/squares and place additional houses. Consider removing some of the walls to allow extra houses to be placed. Consider repositioning the Public Baths from near the coast to a point closer to the Church, where it can serve more houses - be warned that you only have a finite amount of Marble, so take care when deleting baths that require Marble to rebuild. Dobber writes: "I also deleted the dock next to the shipyard - I had to reroute a trade route that was using that dock but that was no big deal." Consider redesigning the provision of Doctors so only two are needed. An extra Stonemason is quite useful at this stage, to provide Bricks. As time and materials allow, tweak your agricultural production across all islands by checking road links and field coverage, and adding wells. Limited exploration can bring benefits. From Dobber: "The computer player in the southeast: you can trade with him for emergency needs." Elagabalos will happily sign a trade agreement with you, and can make a useful occasional trading partner. If left alone, he will ignore you and let you get on with attacking Galerius. By this stage your should be turning a modest, if slightly variable profit. Add in any extra production your population need. To increase that profit, you should settle one of the Tundra islands and build a whaling outpost. Build the Whaler building first, then the Whaling ship. One Whaling ship will supply 2 Whale Oil Factories. The Whaler itself will not appear to go above 50% efficiency - don't worry about this, it's a bug. This, in combination with Lamp Oil stands, will allow you to sell Lamp Oil to your Merchants, at which point your finances will start to look very healthy. There are several different ways of dealing with the slow supply of Spices from Narbos. Make some further adjustments to your automatic trade routes. Edit the Narbos to Hypatia Spice route ("La Metier") to carry up to two 50t loads of Spices (100t in total). Jarrah suggests using two ships here instead as a way of balancing out the intervals between deliveries. One could make use of the spare Small Warship, but it is probably preferable to build a new medium sized trading vessel for the route. Add an extra Main Market on the spice island, to increase overall storage capacity. Jarrah writes: "You could also improve things by moving the whole spice production closer - by sacking your enemy's spice island and putting new buildings on his fields." Galerius's navy is only aggressive if you stray too close to his islands, where he has Small Warships patrolling. The solution to seemingly relentless attacks is to adjust the trade route on your Spice runs, so that they no longer go straight past Galerius's Tobacco colony - select the ship, and then pull the marker buoys to a new position. This should eliminate all naval combat until you decide to engage. As mentioned earlier, an alternative strategy is to let your population drop back to Citizens. The main advantage of this is you don't have to work quite as hard to make sure everything is supplied. In order to support a reasonable sized military, you will need to expand the total number of houses to retain about 2000 total population. An extreme variation is to destroy Caetra (your Cotton/Sugar/Silk/Indigo colony) completely. Although this reduces your operating costs dramatically and may save you from rapid bankruptcy, in the long term, Silk Cloth provides a good profit. The main difficulty is the time lag between the operating cost being expended on the island and the Silk Cloth being transported to the other side of the map to be sold. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.6 Immediate counter-attack strategy There is another way. This strategy skips the first two parts above, and jumps straight to invading Galerius. This is not recommended for the faint-hearted, but with a little cunning, one can complete the mission without bothering about the economy at all. Once you get the general idea, you will see that there are many variations and options in how to proceed. Use the following notes as a guide only, and alter the strategy to taste. Build some additional units that are capable of destroying buildings (probably Mortars). Depending on preference, you may build additional ground units and kill off your Archers (which I find aren't especially great in combat, but have the same upkeep as more capable units such as Marksmen and Lancers). Order all your ships back to Hypatia ("1" on the map above). Destroy all your Main Markets except a few in the city area of Hypatia - yes, this means abandoning all your other islands, and all your production facilities. The fastest way to abandon infrastructure is to delete the Main Markets and Warehouses - you don't need to delete everything individually. Destroy any remaining production buildings, and all civic buildings except stalls. Load all your units onto your ships. Don't worry about the invading army. Equip all available cannon on your ships. You may also wish to load stocks of weapons and basic building materials, so that you can set up a small military base on Galerius's island part way through your invasion - this rather depends on personal combat strategy. If you have more units than ship capacity, you can either build an extra Warship or two (which you may later sink to save cost), or move the excess units to the other side of the island, and come back for them later (the invading army will ignore them for a while). Since the secret to success with this strategy is being able to defeat Galerius with a small army, if you cannot fit the troops onto your ships you may need to evaluate whether you need them at all. Now commence your attack against Galerius's colonies. Attack quickly, and hope to get the scenario finished before you go bankrupt. This strategy is not as stupid as it sounds. For a short period your population will keep on buying goods, while your upkeep is only a few hundred coins, giving a net profit. The invading army will take much longer than you might expect to wipe out your city (they'll have lots of fun slowly destroying your walls first), by which time the city will have stopped earning you money and all the houses will be crumbling to dust. Later you will find you need to maintain your army using only cash reserves, but so long as you destroy almost all your infrastructure in the first few minutes of the game, you should have about 25,000 coins in reserve: You can keep a modest sized army in play for maybe an hour before going bankrupt. It is feasible to destroy Galerius in such a period of time, although nobody said it would be easy. Dobber writes: "I was in the negative when I took out his last marketplace - had been for several minutes. Was I glad when the cutscene played the completed mission video instead of the rats. I still feel more comfortable running a stable economy with income to support a drawn out war." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.7.7 Defeating Galerius It should not be hard to gain naval supremacy - I never saw anything more dangerous than a pair of Small Warships. If you are prepared to replace them on their trade routes first, the two Large Warships you start with should be adequate. Destroy his two supply islands first - they are defended only from the sea by a single Small Warship... and you have sunk that already ;-) . Head straight for the main town on the island. Destroy the shipyard. Now try to drag the majority of enemy forces that are close to the fortress within range of your ships' guns. Once the majority of the enemy troops in the area have been killed, destroy his fortress. With the fortress gone, the battles will get progressively easier. If you leave the fortress in place and destroy the rest of the colony first, he will constantly harass you with fresh troops. If you invade at the start of the game he will not have built many Main Markets, and you can destroy him quite quickly. If you delay invading, you may find Galerius has covered the whole island with Main Markets, and it can take quite a long time to clear them all. With careful use of troops, you don't need a large army. Jarrah writes: "I made 4 hot-keyed groups which seems like a handy way to go. The two main groups did a sort of left flank, right flank act and had a mixture of mortars and cannons in both groups (total of 8 or 9 units per group). They were backed up by a hotkeyed group of 3 medics and another roving band with 6 or 7 cavalry in case anyone got close enough to hassle the artillery. It all looked very smart and tactical, but in the end it went through the whole island with such ease that it might have been a bit of overkill (didn't lose a single unit)." You will know he has been defeated when you see a video awarding you an Arch of Triumph. You will not have a chance to build it before the scenario ends. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.8 Resistance ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.8.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Conquer fortress and free bookkeeper. Rating: *** War-o-meter: ***** Resources: - 140,000 coins. - 3 Small Warships with six cannon (one carrying 10t Wood and 10t Tools), 2 Medium Warships with eight cannon (one carrying 20t Wood and 20t Tools), Large Warship with 12 cannon. - 6 Cavalry, 12 Lancers, 15 Marksmen, 6 Archers, 16 Crossbowmen, 7 Mortars, 7 Cannon, 22 spare Crew, 9 Medics, 3 Scouts. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.8.2 Objective: Conquer fortress and free bookkeeper The objective is quite precise. You do not need to destroy the entire city, indeed destroying everything will fail the mission. To "conquer the fortress", you must have the fortress entirely within your territory. This territory is controlled by Main Markets. Should the fortress ever be in entirely neutral territory it will be destroyed, and you will fail the mission. The fortress is covered by three enemy Main Markets, which will need to be destroyed. You can either build a replacement Main Market over one of these in the short period of time between the building being destroyed (wrecked building graphic) and the building disappearing (no building graphic), or build your own Main Market covering the fortress first, and then destroy the remaining enemy Main Markets around the fortress. Build Main Markets using one of your Scouts - load building materials from your ships first. You can build a warehouse on the coast first, as Hakea describes, "I started a small settlement, got a Forester cutting wood, and when I had enough wood I built a short chain of markets until one of them had the fortress in its area of influence," but that is no need. Once the fortress falls within your territory, you will automatically free the bookkeeper and complete the scenario. There is no need to build a town for people to live in - and you lack the Tools and natural resources to build anything more than a basic settlement. You will lose money throughout this scenario, due to the operating cost of you military. You will not go bankrupt unless you spend *hours* invading. Here is a a simplified plan of the enemy city: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~ N ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~ _ . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .--- ~~ ~~ /| ~~ |m ^^^^^^^^^ ~~ / ~~ | ^ ~~ ~ |M^ m^ ~~ ~ 1 2 |^ F ----. ~ ~ |M^^^^^^ m | ~~ ~ ^ | 3M 4 m| ~ ~~ ^ '------. | ~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ^ '-------'~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~5~~~ ~ ~~~ ~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * ~ = Coast or river * ^ = Mountain ridge * - = City Wall * F = Fortress * M = Main Market that needs to be destroyed/captured * m = Other Main Market * 1 = Start position. * 2 = Various farms and production buildings in this area. * 3 = Large concentration of enemy troops. * 4 = Town/housing. * 5 = Your ships can attack the walls at this point. The fortress is in quite a well defended position, however you don't need to reach the fortress itself to claim the territory it stands on. Your army has a lot of backup (spare Crews and Medics) and plenty of ranged troops, but is thin on close combat units. All-out charges at the enemy are likely to fail. The most obvious strategy is to draw out small groups of enemy troops into an ambush. You won't have to try hard to draw out enemy forces: Just *slowly* advance up the field towards the city. Keep ranged troops behind a thin line of Lancers, and using your Cavalry to race towards anything that out-flanks the Lancers. The aim is to use your ranged troops effectively, by forcing the enemy soldiers into a killing-field, where all sorts of high explosive will rain down upon them before they can attack your Lancers. It gives you some time between battles to heal loses by pulling injured units back towards the Medics. Don't take your eye off the battle, or you may find your Lancers or Cavalry undertaking suicide attacks without ranged support. Although it sounds a bit lame, this is another scenario where the half speed setting is useful to give time to manage your army. Towards the end of the battle, enemy Mortars and Catapults appear: Charge at their crews with Cavalry and Lancers before they get in range. Once the majority of the enemy's troops have been destroyed, advance towards the city itself. Use your Mortars to destroy towers and buildings at range, while keeping the remainder of the army nearby to deal with odd troops the enemy sends against your Mortars. You cannot stop the enemy building fresh troops, but you can limit him by destroying some of the weapon production buildings and War Machine Builder in the area marked "2" on the plan above. The later will prevent Mortars springing up behind your lines and causing carnage. Keep your spare Crews out of the battle, but assign spare Crew to abandoned enemy war machines where possible. There are some reports of troops getting stuck on rocks, and effectively being lost. Pdxdavid suggests: "keep them away from that big rock pile in the middle of the southern field." An alternative or variation on the slow frontal assault is to use your ships to punch a hole through the walls next to the enemy town (shown "5" on the plan above). From this position you can fight with covering fire from your ships' cannons, and (arguably) attack the fortress area from the most weakly defended angle. The main disadvantage is you are on the opposite side of the city from all the Main Markets you need to capture/destroy, so you will tend to end up fighting all the same enemy troops regardless. If you don't use this strategy to invade, send your ships up to this area to destroy a few enemy troops that have been positioned on the wrong side of the wall. This will slightly reduce the number you need to fight in the field. The enemy tends to concentrate troops around the Main Market to the south-east of the fortress (labeled "3" on the plan above). It is very tempting to sneak a few Mortars up to just the other side of the city walls fairly early in the game, and flatten this group of units where they stand. This is a hard trick to get to work without losing your Mortars. Since the Mortars are about the most useful asset you have, this is a risky strategy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.8.3 How do I capture the Fortress? Why do I fail the mission after destroying the city? From Jini: "You have to bring the fortress inside you sphere of influence. Solution A: Build a main market building near the fortress and destroy all hostile market buildings in the area. Solution B: Destroy a hostile main market building near the fortress and immediately build your on market building over the ruins of the old one." Hakea writes: "You have to 'capture' the fortress by claiming the territory. To do this leave the fortress and one of the markets close to the fortress (the one just below it seems to work OK). Then fetch one of your scouts and load him up with tools and wood. Put him close to the market and then demolish it with your mortars/cannons or whatever. Now, BEFORE the picture vanishes quickly build in the rubble (the busted building graphic). You must use the scout's build icon." Pdxdavid adds: "My scouts would lay out the warehouse rectangle only in a north-south orientation, so I chose a north-south oriented market to be the last I destroyed, and it finally worked." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.9 Genesis ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.9.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Build 700 Citizen city. - 2. Trade 20t Medicinal Herbs to Native Americans. - 3. Destroy all houses on the Isle of the Dead. Rating: *** War-o-meter: **/**** depending on strategy. Competitors: - Waltharius (red) - aggressive. - Buccanon (blue) - passive. Resources: - 80,000 coins. - Large Trading vessel, with 6 Cannon, 50t Food, 100t Tools, 50t Wood, Scout. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.9.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,'(b) ', ,' [c] [d] ', ,' {e} ', ,' [f] ', ,' [g] ', ,' [h] (i) ', W @ {k} [l] E ', [m] [n] ,' ', [p] ,' ', [q] ,' ',[r][s][t] ,' ', (2)[v] {1} ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * @ = Starting position. * 1 = Native Americans. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * 2 = Island of the Dead. Waltharius town. * a = Stone, Ore, Whales (Polar). * b = Stone, Ore, Whales (Polar). * c = Stone, Ore, Whales (Polar). * d = Stone, Ore, Whales (Polar). * e = Stone, Ore, Whales. * f = Wahles (Tundra). * g = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * h = Waltharius Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * i = Africans. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * j = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * k = Spices, Wine, Stone, Ore. * l = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * m = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * n = Arakas. Buccanon Spice colony. Spice, Wine, Stone. * o = Waltharius city. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * p = Longen. Buccanon Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * q = Waltharius Spice colony. Spice, Wine, Stone. * r = Waltarius colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone. * s = Waltarius colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs. * t = Waltarius colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs. * v = Waltarius colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone. * x = Boulderhill. Buccanon city. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.9.3 Objective: Build 700 Citizen city By this stage in the game, you should have no problems creating a Citizen level settlement. The large island in the west ("j" on the map above) is ideally suited. The only difficulty is in avoiding Waltharius's warships - the best tactic is to hide your ship in a quiet corner of the map until you need it. It may be possible to trade Spices or Tobacco with Buccanon, but the trade route is long and runs past Waltharius's islands, so is not recommended. Instead settle some of the vacant islands on the western side of the map ("k" on the map above for Spices, "m" for Tobacco), and try and stay away from Waltharius's hostile shipping. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.9.4 Objective: Trade 20t Medicinal Herbs to Native Americans This is a straight-forward case of growing the goods, if you have not done so already - research the Doctor first. Trade them with the Native Americans on the island marked "1" on the map above. You will need a Scout to trade. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.9.5 Objective: Destroy all houses on the Isle of the Dead The mission description implies you should attack and destroy the colony on the Island of the Dead (marked "2" on the map above). If you listen carefully to the words spoken when you are given the mission, you will get an indication of the minimum required: removal of all houses and population from the island. The obvious strategy is to invade the island. One look at its 27 cannon towers and 10 watchtowers built liberally over the entire island and its heavily defended narrow channel approach to its warehouse, might reasonably lead you to conclude that you need some combination of several Warships and/or Mortars or similar before attacking. This will entail additional expense and military facilities, so you should seek to expand your population and/or supply additional goods such as Silk Cloth and Lamp Oil (both of which will require additional islands to be settled). There aren't any enemy ground troops on the island, so you should not need to bring anything other than Mortars, Cannon and/or Catapults. An alternative strategy is economic warfare. There is no Food or Leather production on the Island of the Dead, so it is feasible to completely eliminate all the housing by destroying its supply lines. Destroy Waltharius's weakly defended supply islands from the sea, using a single ship. Target the group of small islands around the Isle of the Dead - "r", "s" and "v" on the map above. You should also destroy the Warehouse on the remaining island ("t"), to stop him restarting Food/Leather production here. Dodge the occasional warship Waltharius patrols the area with - it normally patrols the Island of the Dead itself and is easy to avoid. Although Waltharius has food production on his larger island to the east ("o" on the map above) and has one ship running between the two colonies, he does not seem to be able to accommodate the new shortages you have just created on the Isle of the Dead. Simply wait for Food to run out: The houses on the island will disappear in a puff of smoke. There is no need to destroy the infrastructure, so you need never physically invade the island, so you never need to build an army or navy, or develop your colony beyond those first 700 Citizens. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.9.6 Single-ship strategy This strategy completes the scenario very rapidly, and only ever uses one ship. You will need the benefit of hindsight, but it is an interesting strategy to adopt if you are perhaps playing a second time. At the start of the scenario, off-load your Scout on the island you will be settling and let him explore. Head south and destroy the three or four islands required to complete the economic warfare strategy of the Objective: Destroy all houses on the Isle of the Dead. Now head north and settle a colony. Use your large starting capital to discount early loses and jump quickly to Citizen level. Once you have met the first population objective, grow and stock Medicinal Herbs. Once you have the herbs, ignore the needs of your colony and sail to trade with the Native Americans. By this time the Island of the Dead will have lost all its population, so you will complete both the last two objectives at once. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.10 Revenge ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.10.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Defeat de Freeren and destroy his city. Rating: *** War-o-meter: *** Competitors: - De Freeren (red) - hostile. - Masterson (blue) - passive. Resources: - 60,000 coins. - Large Trading Vessel, with 50t Food, 50t Wood, 100t Tools, Scout. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.10.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' [b] [c] ', ,' (e) ', ,' (d) [g] ', ,' (k) [l]', ,' [f] [j] (p) ', ,' [h] [i] [q] ', ,' [n] [o] ', ,' {m} [s] ', W <1> {u} @ {v} [w] E ', {x} ,' ', {y} ,' ', [z] ,' ', ,' ', [bb] [cc],' ', ,' ', (aa) (dd) ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', {ee} ,' ', ,' ',[ff] ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * @ = Start position. * 1 = De Freeren's city. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * b = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * c = Whales, Stone, Ore (Tundra). * d = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * e = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * f = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * g = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * h = Whales (Tundra). * i = Masterson colony. Tobacco, Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * j = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * k = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * l = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * m = De Freeren's Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * n = Reensbourgh. Masterson colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * o = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * p = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * q = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * s = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * t = St. Corazon. Masterson's city. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * u = Native Americans. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * v = Whales, Stone, Ore (Tundra). * w = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * x = De Freeren's Spice colony. Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * y = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * z = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * aa = Polynesians. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gems. * bb = Masterson's Spice colony. Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * cc = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * dd = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * ee = Whales, Stone, Ore, Marble (Tundra). May be colonized by Masterson as a Marble/Lamp Oil production outpost. * ff = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.10.3 Objective: Defeat de Freeren and destroy his city Mircea comments: "The problem here was to establish a base and not defeating Freeren. The fight and the conquest of the city was really piece of cake." There are no very large entirely vacant islands, but there are a few large enough to build a small Citizen level city, if one is careful. The largest vacant area on which to build is actually on de Freeren's main island. Masteron's territory is not well defended, so it is feasible to invade him part-way through the game to secure more land. There are several different strategies for empire building here. There is only one neutral Salt deposit at the start (island "dd" on the map above), and should you wish to develop Merchants, one Marble deposit. A Merchant civilisation is not needed. I have read recommendations to start on the Native Americans' island ("u" on the map above). This is not especially large unless one removes the natives - not possible initially and later risks the negative consequences of their curses. There are no efficient methods of producing Alcohol on such an island, which tends to slow down the first part of the game. The neighboring large Tundra type island ("v") has a similar problem with the efficient provision of basic goods, but does have slightly more land suitable for building. The Salt island ("dd") is the largest unoccupied 'northern' island, with the added bonus of a Salt deposit. However, city building here will be awkward because of the position of the river and mountain. Once you have reached a moderate stage of development (primarily ship cannon), you have the option of invading Masteron's main city, which he does not guard well. With care you can inherit some useful infrastructure in the form of Cloth, Alcohol and Silk production. You can use the same invasion forces to pick off some of his supply islands. The disadvantage of this strategy is it creates a diversion from your real goal - attacking de Freeren. I think the easiest overall strategy is to take the fight straight to de Freeren, and settle a part of his main island at the start. This is the largest single space for city building on the map. This island also has Hops (a good choice to help rapid early colony building) and is surrounded by one of each type of the other islands (Spice, Tobacco, Silk/Cotton, Lamp Oil). You will need to be moderately aggressive from the start, however de Freeren should not be especially dangerous, and a handful of units should be able to counter any attack - indeed, some players report that de Freeren forgets to open his city gates to let his troops out, so you might never be invaded. Mineral resources are potentially a problem. You can settle the northern part of the island away from his walls, and then ship Bricks, Ore and Salt in from elsewhere - this may be considered a significant disadvantage. Instead, you can build right up by de Freerden's city walls, which will secure some of the ore deposits on the southern side. There is a salt deposit here too, but that may be slightly too close to the enemy to use before you have a military, as Wiles notes: "The problem I ran into was that De Freeren had built his walls so close to the salt, I was not able to put a mine on the same one. My settlement constantly complained about salt, but salt is not required." You do not need to capture de Freeren's Spice and Tobacco colonies, but you may wish to either settle different parts of these islands, or capture one or both of his colonies. Destroying or capturing both his production colonies may be an effective form of economic warfare. The final attack against his city should be relatively straightforward. How far one develops before going to war is largely a matter of personal style. Consider developing and researching up to Mortar level to give you the edge against his inland cannon towers. You can probably succeed with Catapults and Cavalry if you are prepared to take a casualties. Similarly, if you have already settled on his main island, you may be able to succeed without a fleet of warships. Wiles writes: "When I had the ability to build cannon units, I deployed them into the enemy cannon towers as we all know that the AI regularly does not put troops in most of them. By deploying my units into their cannon towers, you essentially taking them over and the flag changes to your colors on the towers. Then, when I was ready, I had my ships take out all of the cannon towers along the sea-side wall and with cannon troops, I blasted a hole into the back wall of the fortress and began taking out the market buildings and eventually his fortress. If I ran into resistance, I drew back to the areas by the walls and let my newly claimed cannon towers assist me in defeating them. When only one market building remained, I took it over with my scout." As mentionned earlier, you can develop to Merchant level, but you may find yourself fighting Masterson first if he has already taken the Marble deposit. There is no need for Merchants in this scenario. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.11 Quentin's Reef ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.11.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Prevent de Freeren's flagship from escaping and save Katherine. Rating: *** War-o-meter: ***** Resources: - Lots of coins (the value is at least 8 figures so cannot be read - no need to worry about the cash ;-) ) - 4 Small Warships (with 6 cannon), 3 Medium Warships (with 8 cannon), Large Warship (with 12 cannon). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.11.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,'[ ]@ ', ,' [ ] [ ]', ,' ', ,' ! ', ,' + + ', ,' + # ', ,' + + ', W 1 [ ] +![ ] ! [ ] E ', # + + + # + 2,' ', + + ,' ', !+ + + # ,' ', # +! ,' ', [ ]+ # + ,' ', + + ,' ', ! ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * @ = Your start position. * 1 = De Freerden's start position. * 2 = De Freerden's destination. * + + = De Freerden's route. * # = Suggested interception point. * ! = Enemy ships. * [ ] = Island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.11.3 Objective: Prevent de Freeren's flagship from escaping and save Katherine De Freerden's ship starts at the point shown "1" on the map, and heads for point "2". Fortunately, he does this by zig-zagging all over the map (his route is shown using "+" characters on the map above). This allows you to intercept his ship in several places (shown "#" on the map above). This requires you to move your fleet quickly between interception points and avoid getting too close to groups of enemy ships (indicated "!" on the map above - fighting these ships will just slow you down). Don't worry if you cannot get to all the points, you can complete the mission using as few as three points out of the six suggested. I think the best combat tactic is to position your fleet in his path, stationary, in passive attack mode, with no specific orders. As he approaches, your ships will fire automatically. He will move straight through your line, taking damage in the process. Once he moves out of range do not follow. Instead move your ships to the next interception point. If you follow, you won't inflict much damage, and you will run into other enemy ships. Jarrah writes: "It may help to make your ships into a few groups, but if they are in the right spots they'll automatically shoot him as he goes past." As he takes more damage he'll move slower, and the 'chase' will get much easier. If you still have not caused him to surrender by the last intercept point, switch your attack mode to 'aggressive' - at this stage you have nothing to lose from not being able to break off the attack easily. There is some confusion about precisely what is needed to complete this mission, as mentionned in Why does De Freeren's ship keep escaping? below. If one completely ignores the fact you need to save Katherine, and attempt to sink de Freerden's ship anyway, he will surrender *just* before the ship sinks, and you will complete the mission. An alternative is to damage it heavily, and then sail with it to close to its destination. The later approach is harder to get right - it is easier in my opinion just to try and sink him. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.11.4 Why does de Freeren's ship keep escaping? Budgie writes: "There is one hostile battleship that is moving. That's the ship Katherine is on. The ship starts its voyage in the West of the map. Your task is to stop this ship which means that you have to sink it." Balou clarifies: "Just before the ship actually would sink, he surrenders - and Katherine's safe." It is often stated that the aim is not to sink the ship, and that if you attack it too much it will sink and you will fail the mission. Wargamerit writes: "The aim of this scenario is the challenge in ship's control, to take damage to your opponent without sinking it." Zomby Woof adds: "You can't wound him too much, if the ship still is sailing it's ok. But it seems to be important that you escort De Freeren's ship with your own ships (without shooting) till he gives up." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.12 Justice ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.12.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Destroy von Breitenstein's palace. Rating: **** War-o-meter: *** Competitors: - Von Breitenstein (red) - aggressive. - Durben (olive green) - passive. Resources: - 30,000 coins. - Large Warship, with 12 cannon; Scout, 11 Pikemen, 100t Tools, 50t Wood, 50t Food. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.12.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' {b} [c]', ,' ', ,' {d} (e)', ,' ', ,' [f] ', ,' {g} <1> (i) ', ,' ', ,' [j] {k} ', ,' {l} (m) [n] ', ,' [o] [p] [q] ', W [r] [s] {t} [u] [v] [w] E ', ,' ', {y} (z) ,' ', @ [aa] (bb) ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', (cc) (dd)[ee] [ff] ,' ', ,' ', (gg) ,' ', {hh} ,' ', [ii],' ', (jj) ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Big map =) * @ = Starting position. * 1 = Von Breitenstein's main city and palace. * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * b = Whales, Stone, Salt, Ore (Tundra). Von Breitenstein may place a Whaling outpost here early in the game. * c = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). Durben may place a Whaling outpost here early in the game. * d = Von Breitenstein's Spice colony. Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore, Gems. * e = Von Breitenstein's Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * f = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * g = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Salt, Gems. * i = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore, Gold. * j = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * k = Von Breitenstein's Silk Cloth colony. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * l = Whales, Stone, Ore, Salt (Tundra). * m = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * n = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * o = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * p = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * q = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * r = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * s = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * t = Mongols. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, ore. * u = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * v = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * w = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * x = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. Durben may settle a colony here early in the game. * y = Wine, Hops, herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. Von Breitenstein may settle a colony here early in the game. * z = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore, Gems, Marble. Durben may settle a colony here early in the game. * aa = Pirates. Wine, Hops, Herbs. * bb = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine Stone, Ore. * cc = Africans. Spice, Wine, Stone. * dd = Durben's colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * ee = Velabrum. Durben's Tobacco colony. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * ff = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * gg = Vindsal. Durben's colony. Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore * hh = Moretum. Durben's city. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, ore. * ii = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * jj = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.12.3 Objective: Destroy von Breitenstein's palace This is the final showdown in the campaign. The map is big, and all resources are present on it. This is the first (well, the first I noticed) time pirates are active. The most important difference between this scenario and most of those that went before is that the AI players will expand their territory rapidly. Key resources like Marble will disappear under other players' colonies unless you take them quickly. Island choice and rapid early development is quite important. Perhaps more than any other campaign scenario, there is no obviously superior way to proceed with empire building. Some suggestions are contained below. This section is not detailed because there are so many options, I have not tried all of the options myself yet, and the general style of play is much closer to that of one of the harder endless games. Von Breitenstein's palace is the impressive looking white, gold and green structure that sits on a ridged area just to the south-east of his main city ("1" on the map above). One can only approach it through the city. It is recommended that you destroy the fortress nearby before destroying the palace, to stop reinforcements appearing whilst you are mid-way through the palace attack. Each section of the palace must be attacked separately - there are about 20 in total. There is no need to destroy everything on the island, and you can ignore the gardens and squares around the palace. Jini writes: "I have settled on the enemy's island ["1" on the map above] and he never attacked me before I started to attack him. I have put all my military units (pikemen, ships, even the scout) on another island - maybe that's the reason why the AI didn't consider me as being 'dangerous'. However, other people reported they have been attacked on the enemy's island although they did not have any military units. So, there is no peace guarantee if you don't have military on the island. But I would say it at least enhances the likelihood for temporary peace." From pdxdavid: "I too settled in the eastern part of his island. I found that he attacked me early with a handful of troops, but I was able to stop them with pikemen and ship's cannons. After that, the only time he attacked me with troops was when I had placed some of my troops near his wall. Then his troops only went after my troops and did not attack my buildings." The Gamestar guide to this scenario suggests the option of settling the northern island in the west ("y" on the map above). This is not a bad choice because one secures Salt and rare Marble deposits early on, however the island has many mountains, which makes city design a challenge. It also considers the Tundra island in the west ("l" on the map above), primarily because there is more space, along with Salt and Ore deposits. In both cases these are close to the starting position, meaning they can be settled quickly. Cihnen writes: "You can settle on the island in the very east ["x" on the map above]. In this mission you have to produce a lot of needed things on other islands. And you can buy a lot from the pirates in the middle of the map." Zomby Woof comments: "You will be attacked from time to time in every case, no matter which island you choose. That's why you have a few pikemen at the beginning, they give you some protection. Use also the ship cannons to defend your island, those pikemen can't stand it very long." Pirates may settle a new base if you destroy their first colony, as Dobber notes: "After I destroyed the pirate base, he built a new base on a peninsula of a larger production island." From Visualize.Raven: "Until you want naval combat, don't put cannons on ships because they [Von Breitenstein] are very very stong on water. When you build one ship with cannons you will get attacked by about 10-15 warships." Dobber writes: "Everybody left my merchant ships alone, I did not arm them and flew the white flag on them and they were never bothered. I did not arm any ships until I started building large warships." Pdxdavid comments: "His ships constantly harassed my ships. The constant need to repair ships was a big drain on my cloth and rope supplies. I was finally able to build up enough to build a fleet of warships and went around ganging up on his ships, eventually eliminating them. Once I did that and built a nice sized force of lancers, cavalry, archers and mortars, I defeated him pretty easily." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.2.13 Good or Bad ______________________________________________________________________________ This scenario is sometimes referred to using its German name, Bonus aut Malus. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.13.1 Introduction Objective: - 1. Find the treasure (this is not clearly stated in the introduction, merely implied). Rating: *** War-o-meter: ** Resources: - 10,000 coins. - Large Warship with 10 cannon, 2 Scouts, 2 Crossbowmen, Medic, 4 Musketeers, 2 Pikemen. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.13.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' [ ] ', ,' @ ', ,' [e] [ ] ', ,'[p] [ ] ', ,' [ ] ', ,' [ ] [ ] [ ] [p] ', ,' [ ] [ ] [p] [ ] [ ] ', W [ ] [ ] [p] [ ] [ ] [ ] E ', [ ] [ ] [ ] [ ] ,' ', [ ] [ ] ,' ',[ ] [ ] [p] ,' ', [ ] [ ] [ ],' ', [ ] ,' ',[ ] ,' ', [ ] ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * @ = Starting position. * e = Eskimos. * p = Pirate colony. * [ ] = Island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.13.3 Objective: Find the treasure This is a bonus scenario, which is unlocked by completing the campaign. Once you have completed Justice, return to the single player campaign screen and select the scenario. The aim is to find a hidden treasure chest. You do this by moving a Scout to wherever you think the treasure is... or just move your Scout across every island. The Scout only needs to go within around 6-8 squares to spot the treasure chest. You cannot find the treasure by scanning the map by eye, it is only revealed by the Scout. Run away from the pirates. Maybe a skilled player could use the small starting force and ship to destroy all their colonies before running out of cash or troops, and still find the treasure, but this is not required. Just keep your ship moving at all times. Budgie writes: "If you don't want to explore all islands, have a look on the amulet map." The map inside the amulet can only be seen briefly during the introductory video. Make a mental note of the shape of the island - it is *very* distinctive. Don't worry about where the marker lines point - once you have the correct island, it will be easy to find the treasure. And that is the only hint I'll give... it is not hard to find the island with this hint. It is the last scenario anyway, so no harm done if you _still_ cannot find the treasure %-) . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.2.13.4 To be continued... "It seemed as if the secret of the amulet had been revealed, but as you find evidence of the presence of von Breitenstein and his fellow men, doubts arise. Although the heart of von Breitenstein's power has been destroyed, the chapter has not yet ended. To be continued..." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3 Scenarios ______________________________________________________________________________ This section contains guides to the ten stand-alone scenarios that come with the game. These scenarios can be played in any order. I suggest you try to match your level of experience with the game to star rating given. Some of the lower rated games can be quite mundane to a player that has already completed the campaign or has played a few harder continuous games. Likewise, certain higher rated scenarios are not suited to new players. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.1 Hobson's Choice ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.1.1 Introduction Objective: Build 3,000 Citizen city OR destroy all opponents. Rating: *** War-o-meter: **/**** depending on objective met. Competitors: - 3, all of which settle new colonies at the start of the game. - Pirates are active, and may settle one of the north-western islands late in the game. Resources: - Medium Trading ship, with 50t Food, 100t Tools, 100t Wood, Scout. - 25,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.1.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [b] ', ,' [c] [d] ', ,' ', ,' ', W (f) (g) [h] E ', [i] (j) ,' ', [k] {l} ,' ', {n} ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', [o] ,' ', @ ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Marble. * c = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * e = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. * f = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * g = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. * h = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * i = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * j = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * k = Spice, Wine, Stone, Gems. * l = Possible AI player colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * m = 2 AI player colonies. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt. * n = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * o = Whales, Stone, Ore (some Tundra). * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.1.3 Strategy overview LadyH writes: "You need 3,000 citizen. Not merchants, not settlers, just 3,000 citizen." You need at least one city that satisfies this criteria, not 3,000 spread across several cities. 3,000 Citizens is not an especially difficult target to reach. You will need about 118 houses. You do not need to sustain this population, just reach it - this allows one to over-stock slightly and low-ball on production facilities at the end. Starting cash is limited, so you may need to first build a profitable Settler colony, rather than developing Citizens straight away. I personally build two blocks of population, each housing about 1500 Citizens, each block clustered around a single set of population facilities. Once the first block upgrades, the second block is laid out. Denial of certain facilities like Chapels or Schools can be used to restrict population development to certain areas. Don't neglect construction material suppliers - 5 or 6 Foresters, 2 or 3 Stonemasons, and 2 or 3 Toolmakers will still struggle to keep pace with the population's desire to expand. The main difficulty is the competition for space. A 3,000 Citizen city cannot easily be built on one of the smaller islands, so it is important to secure a good spot for colony building at the beginning. The three competitors expand rapidly. Two will settle on the large 'northern' island ("m" on the map above) before you can reach it. The third competitor will attempt to settle the smaller 'northern' island ("l" on the map above), unless you race to settle it first. While this island will give very slightly less building space overall, you can build without antagonising the other players by building right up against their territories. This island should be sufficiently large to support the city, its construction materials, and its Food, Cloth and Alcohol production. If you cannot secure that smaller 'northern' island, the main options open to you are: (1) Settle the remaining southern part of the huge 'northern' island ("m"). (2) Settle the huge jungle island to the north ("e"). Option 1 is viable, but can become uncomfortable with three players on the same island. Option 2 is not as attractive as it may at first seem: Although the island is large, there are lots of rivers and mountain ridges which make city building awkward. There is also difficulty providing basic goods such as Alcohol efficiently during the first part of the game. Having raced to settle a suitable area for the main colony, you must rapidly secure secondary production colonies for Spice and/or Tobacco - particularly if you want one of the islands close to your own. Fortunately, the large Spice island ("n" on the map above) is large enough to sustain more than one production colony. The scenario gives you the option of eliminating all of the competitors. Their rapid expansion makes this quite hard in comparison to meeting the population objective. Your starting cash is too small to fund a large Settler level army without an economy to back them up. Consequently, there is a good chance that by the time you are ready for war, you will be well on the way to meeting the population criteria. Such a strategy may be required if you find yourself without enough space to expand. Indeed, you can develop your colony up to Merchant level to fund a large army with which to wage war. Different AI players have slightly different characteristics, varying from the militaristic (the player that settles the western side of the huge 'northern' island, "m") to one focused on city building (the player that settles the eastern side of the huge 'northern' island, "m"). These characteristics become quite important if you settle the same island as these two players. Pirates are active on the map, but relatively tame and rarely encountered, particularly is you stick to the south east corner of the map. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.2 Ruthless Richard ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.2.1 Introduction Objective: Build 2000 population city and destroy pirates. Rating: *** War-o-meter: *** Competitor: Pirates. Resources: - 20,000 coins. - Colony San Pero ("1" on the map below): Warehouse, Main Market, 2 Cannon towers, Small Shipyard; 20t Rope, 70t Tools, 70t Wood, 10t Bricks, 70t Food, 20t Leather, 20t Salt, 10t Alcohol. - 4 Cannon (in Cannon Towers at San Pero). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.2.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' [b] ', ,' [c] ', W (d) {1} [2] E ', ,' ', (g) ,' ', [h] [i] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = San Pero. Your 'colony'. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. * 2 = Pirate colony. Wine, Hops, Herbs. * a = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * b = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * c = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * g = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * h = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * i = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.2.3 Strategy overview The hardest part of this scenario is getting started, not defeating the pirates. You start on a Jungle island, which means you cannot produce things like Alcohol here efficiently early in the game: Alcohol requires Small Farms until you can build a Citizen population and access Sugarcane Plantations. Your starting cash is less than generous, and your colony would be better defined as "a nice stretch of wall with a shipyard" than a settlement. On the positive side, you have more goods in stock than you would if you had just founded a new settlement. You have a small initial supply of Tools, which may run out before you are able to start Tool production or trade unless you are careful. Venetians eventually appear, but not initially. If you are exceptionally careful, you can get Tool production running here using just under 60 Tools. This means providing only one of each thing needed to reach Settler level (i.e. some industries operating inefficiently, many operating unprofitably), upgrading only 8 houses to Settler level (just enough to reach 80 Settlers and no more), and building only one Brick and Tool chain. A variation on this strategy is to carefully use your initial inventory of Food, Leather and Alcohol to bump the population up to 80 Settlers without building associated production facilities (you only need basic Cloth and Wood production). You will not be able to sustain them for long, but you will be able to build a Tool chain quickly without running out of Tools. An alternative is to start some Cloth production, build one ship, and trade with the pirates at their warehouse ("2" on the map above). Trade with the white flag up to stop your ship being fired upon. Pirates can make good trading partners, not least because they are cheap. They sell Tools, Alcohol, Food and Bricks. They do not appear to replenish their supplies, so you cannot rely on them forever. The 2000 population objective should be met on your starting island. The other islands are too small for 2000 Citizens, and a lack of resources prevents attaining Merchants. Advance to Citizen level, if only to get access to Cotton and Sugarcane production on the starting island. Once you reach Citizen level, Jungle islands are a pleasure to work with because they can efficiently produce two basic items (Cloth and Alcohol), and (profitable) Silk Cloth as a bonus. Their underlying disadvantage is a tendency towards infertile areas of land. There are several possible strategies for dealing with early Alcohol demands. Small Farms are convenient, but place a strain on your finances if built in volume. Rushing up to Citizen level and staking a claim to Sugarcane production early might be a viable tactic for an experienced player, however the small startup cash makes this hard to do (my experience here was to reach Citizen level with so little cash and income, that further development became very slow). An alternative is to settle the Salt island ("g" on the map above) early in the game, and use it for Hop production. Salt and Herbs are useful items to have later, so settling a 'northern' island such as this is not a bad move, even if you intend to use Sugarcane for Alcohol production when it becomes available. There is not need to rush to build your colony - the pirates do not expand, so you can work up to 2000 population slowly on a small margin if you need to - just keep your cash-flow positive :-) . You are forced to build a few production colonies and ship their goods to your main island, in full view of several pirate ships. Pirates should logically be far more of a problem than they are. Sail your supply ships without cannon and with the white flag up. This prevents them being attacked. Consider paying protection money to the pirates if they become a problem - take an unarmed ship showing the white flag to the pirate settlement ("2" on the map above). You will need to pay protection money at regular intervals or piracy will restart. An alternative may be to research and build ship cannon, build a few small warships, and take them and your starting Cannon units to destroy the pirates fairly early in the game. You can then build up to the population objective in relative peace. This is difficult because your starting cash is so low - you cannot afford a navy until you have established your colony. You start with 4 Cannon units, which are initially a money-sink. I have noticed that they function more effectively when removed from their towers and placed on the dock, where they take pot-shots at passing pirate ships. They are a useful unit when assaulting the pirate base. Indeed, depending on how one fights, they may be the only land unit you need. You do not need to destroy all the pirate ships - just the warehouse and main market building on their island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.3 Friendly Neighbors ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.3.1 Introduction Objective: Build 1000 Merchant city. Rating: ** War-o-meter: ** Competitor: Pirates. Resources: - 25,000 coins. - Medium Trading Ship with 4 Cannon; 50t Food, 50t Wood, 150t Tools, Scout. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.3.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' (a) {b} ', ,' @ ', ,' ', ,' [c] (d) ', W [e] (f) E ', [g] ,' ', [h] ,' ', (i) (j) ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', {k} ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * b = Hops, Herbs, Wine, Stone, Ore. * c = Pirates. Hops, Herbs, Wine. * d = Hops, Herbs, Wine, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * e = Hops, Herbs, Wine. * f = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * g = Spice, Wine. * h = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * i = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * j = Spice, Wine, Stone. * k = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.3.3 Strategy overview Building a 1000 Merchant city is relatively straightforward. There is no need to sustain 1000 Merchants, however Merchants require too many expensive facilities and production chains to rush straight up to Merchant level. The modest startup cash and difficulty in obtaining Tools (see below), encourage slow, steady development. Pirate activity adds difficulty early on, but is not as serious a problem as it could be, so long as your supply ships operate without cannon and fly the white flag. There are no huge islands, and resources are fairly scarce. There is only one island well suited to city building, marked "b" on the map above. Fortunately, you are the only player expanding their colony, so there is no competition for resources. There are no Venetians in the scenario (at least I played the whole scenario and never managed to trade with any Venetian ship). This means you should get Tool production started as fast as possible. You start with 150t Tools, so this is not hard to do - Tool production can be started with half that number. At the start, pirates will attack your ship. You cannot raise the white flag and evade that way, because you have cannon mounted, and you cannot remove those until you build a shipyard. The best tactic is to run away - the pirates cannot catch you. It is tempting to try and destroy the pirate base at the start of the game. This is just about possible using the first ship. Avoid the pirate musketeer patrols, who can inflict a lot of damage on your ship. The warehouse and main markets (there are two main markets) may need to be destroyed several times before the settlement falls. Unfortunately, this does not stop pirate activities, and the pirates simply re-settle another island. There are few, if any, advantages to destroying the pirate base. Indeed, they have a habit of re-settling on one of the islands that contain resources you need, forcing you to evict them again; and again... Instead leave them, and later in the game consider trading with the pirates for items such as Tools - they offer them very cheaply. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.4 The Bet ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.4.1 Introduction Objective: Build 500 Merchant city and sustain it for 5 minutes. Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - Medium Trading ship, with 50t Food, 100t Tools, 50t Wood, Scout. - 20,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.4.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' (b) ', ,' ', W {c} [d] E ', @ ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', (e) ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * b = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * c = Wine, Herbs, Hops, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * d = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * e = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Gold. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.4.3 Strategy overview The map contains only the absolute basics required to build a Merchant level city. The only island large enough to support a city ("c" on the map above) will support a larger population than the other supply islands are capable of providing for at higher civilisation levels. For example, you will struggle to fit more than 3 or 4 Tobacco combines on the only Tobacco island ("d"), so you cannot effectively supply more than about 1500 people with Tobacco. Building up to Merchant level based on only 1500 people is possible, but denies you a large revenue base with which to fund things like Marble production, Universities and Public Baths. In addition, you have a very small starting capital. Expect to play this scenario quite slowly, without ever seeing very large profits. An alternative approach is to build a larger Citizen level city and supply them as best you can, accepting that you will never be able to fulfil all demand for goods such as Tobacco. Use the large colony for profit, and just before you are ready to advance to Merchant level, destroy some housing to in order that demand does not exceed supply. Use the 'northern' island ("c") for your city, and produce as many things there as you can (Cloth, Food, Alcohol, construction materials, etc) - try to keep secondary production colonies focused on producing what cannot be produced elsewhere. Distances between islands are small. If you manage your trade routes carefully, you can assign more than one trade to each ship without causing too many fluctuations in your economy from infrequent deliveries. Build up to Citizen level, with 1200-1500 people. Supply every good they want, but do not build the Public Baths or University until you are ready to advance. Wait until you have a small surplus of consumer goods. Particularly important is Silk Cloth, which Merchants consume 50% more of than Citizens. Then advance up to Merchant level. Once you get 500 Merchants prevent construction materials being used by your population. You should be able to ride out 5 minutes of extra demand based on stockpiles. You can get away with dropping one (or maybe two) goods at the end without losing your Merchants. If it looks like you won't make it, destroy some non-Merchant level housing to ensure shortage supplies get to the Merchants. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.5 Playing for Time ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.5.1 Introduction Objectives: - 1. Build 200 Pioneer settlement within 30 minutes. - 2. Build 350 Settler town within 30 minutes. - 3. Build 600 Citizen city within 80 minutes. - 4. Build 900 Merchant city within 80 minutes. Rating: **** War-o-meter: * Resources: - Medium Trading ship, with 2 Cannon; 20t Food, 150t Tools, 50t Wood, 2 Scouts. - 40,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a]@ ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' {c} (d) ', ,' [e] ', ,' [f] [g] ', ,' (h) ', ,' [i] [j] {k} ', W (l) [m] E ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', (n) [o] ,' ', [p] ,' ', ,' ', (q)[r] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * c = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt, Marble. * d = Spice, Wine, Stone. * e = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * f = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * g = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * h = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * i = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * j = Spice, Wine, Stone, Gems. * k = Spice, Wine, Stone, Gems. * l = Whales, Stone, Ore (Polar). * m = Spice, Wine, Stone, Gold. * n = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * o = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * p = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * q = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * r = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine. * s = Volcano. Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.3 Strategy overview This scenario deserves its four-star rating. It involves meeting a series of objectives within a time limit. Once the objective has been met, the clock is reset and a new objective set. Throughout this scenario one must carefully balance the economy and build a city as normal. What makes this scenario hard is the need to expand very rapidly, which may mean financing many more construction material supplies than you would normally. There are no Venetians, so you cannot buy Tools or anything else in. The initial objectives seem relatively easy. I think you should try to use the extra time they allow to prepared for subsequent objectives - primarily stockpiling construction materials and cash. An alternative strategy would be to rush through the first two objectives with the aim of getting profitable Silk and similar trades operating. The later may suit certain play styles, although leaves you with a lot of work to do during the second half of the scenario. Although the objectives are for relatively low population totals, I recommend you cluster as many houses around a single set of facilities as possible, so that your colony remains reasonably profitable throughout (well, at least out of the red until you are supplying Citizens correctly). There is no shortage of space, so it is tempting to build far more houses. The difficulty is that these houses need to be built and supplied within the time limit. Although ultimately more profitable, I doubt there is sufficient time to build up a large enough economy. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.4 Objective: Build 200 Pioneer settlement within 30 minutes The map is huge, and it will take half your allotted time just to sail across it. Don't waste time exploring the map first - settle the huge 'northern' island ("b" on the map above) immediately. Settle the southern part of the island, where you can get easy access to Stone, Ore, Salt and Marble later in the game. You will need at least 25 houses. Build 5 or 6 Forester's Huts. These are essential to rapid development - you should never have Wood over- stocked in spite of this apparent over-provision. Serve your population Food and Leather. Providing Cloth will help your balance sheet. Your starting capital is generous so this may not seem immediately important, but it will help later in the game. You should have 10 minutes or more to spare at the end of this stage, so consider delaying building the last house. Instead stock up on things like Alcohol, Wood or Cash in preparation for the next objective, and start exploring. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.5 Objective: Build 350 Settler town within 30 minutes Simply providing Alcohol and a Chapel, and allowing the Pioneer houses to upgrade will meet the objective. You should hold back full development until you have got Brick and Tool production started. Place two Toolmakers - just like Wood, you will need a lot of Tools quickly during this scenario. A pair of Stonemasons will ease the pace of further development. Also build a School and conduct basic civic research. During this phase start to explore the map if you have not already started. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.6 Objective: Build 600 Citizen city within 80 minutes Develop a few more Settlers, and then switch to Hop based Alcohol production. Now turn your attention to colonising other islands, including allied development such as ship production. I suggest you start with Spice production, simply because the Spice islands are closer to your city. Keep a careful eye on soil quality - there is a lot of desert out there (especially on the largest Spice island, "k" on the map above). Don't under-estimate the amount of time it will take to haul goods across the map. You can develop to Citizens by providing only Spices and Salt, but you should finish this stage of the scenario supplying Tobacco too in order to make the next objective possible to complete. When you are ready to develop, provide any extra production for essentials such as Food and Cloth, and drop a Church in. Remember that it will take several minutes for the houses to upgrade, so do not leave it until the last minute. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.5.7 Objective: Build 900 Merchant city within 80 minutes Stop further Citizen housing developing by cutting off the flow of construction materials. Otherwise you will need to spend the first part of this stage building up additional production facilities for the consumer goods you are already supplying (Food, Alcohol, Spice, etc), and it is important to get new production colonies started early, primarily because of the large distances ships need to travel. Increase Tool production again - an extra Ore Mine and Smelter (perhaps use a Large Ore Smelter and start Charcoal production), plus 3 or 4 Toolmakers in total. Prepare a ship to send south and start a Silk colony. You may wish to use the same colony for Cloth production, however space is not short on your main island if you prefer to retain Sheep based Cloth production. This southern island includes a Volcano, but eruptions are infrequently, and will not cause damage unless you build close to the volcano. By this time, you should have enough Tobacco and Spice to satisfy demand continually, which will provide just enough cash to fund everything. Increase Food and Alcohol production and attend to a few other Citizen requirements, such as the Doctor. Now let the colony develop fully to Citizen level. Next build up the Silk Cloth production which will increase revenue still further, and is essential to keep Merchants happy. The next move should be a Lamp Oil outpost. In the final 30 minutes, get Marble production started, and bolster existing consumer good production so that you have small surpluses. Finally drop in the University and Public Baths. Ensure you have enough construction materials and allow plenty of times for upgrades to occur. You will need at least 105t of Tools and Wood, and 84t of Bricks. It can be frustrating to be just a few Tools short as the final seconds tick away... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.6 Settlement Recipe ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.6.1 Introduction Objective: Build Citizen level city. Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - Small Trading ship with 50t Food, 100t Tools, 50t Wood, Scout. - 25,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.6.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [a] ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' [b] ', ,' ', W (c) [d] E ', ,' ', ,' ', {e} ,' ', ,' ', @ ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * b = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * c = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * e = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore, Gold. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.6.3 Strategy overview This scenario is a good introduction to building colonies in unfavourable circumstances. The map is small, and the only island suitable for city building is the large southern jungle island ("e" on the map above). In addition, there are no Venetians, so you must build up your own Tool production early in the game. Tool production can be started with as few at 60t of Tools, so 100t gives some flexibility, but care is still needed. Develop up to Settler level, providing only essential infrastructure. Once 80 Settlers have upgraded, stop supplying construction materials, and build a Brick and Tool chain. Once Tools are being produced, you can restart house upgrading and/or build additional facilities. Jungle islands mean that you either need to settle a second Hop growing island to produce Alcohol (which is inconvenient), or build many Small Farms (which are not very efficient). It is probably easier to stick with Small Farms than settle a Hop island. Starting capital is relatively tight, so you may not be able to jump straight to Citizen level before going bankrupt. Once your economy is stable, settle the Tobacco ("b" on the map above) and Spice ("c") islands. Build basic production facilities (just one plantation will be sufficient, plus a factory on the Tobacco island). Stockpile these two goods until you have about 10t of each. Build a Church and a Tobacco/Spice stand. The first house to upgrade to Citizen level completes the scenario. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.7 The King of Ore ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.7.1 Introduction Objective: Stock 170t Ore in each of your 6 cities within 180 minutes. Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - Medium Trading ship with 3 Cannon; 50t Food, 50t Tools, 150t Wood, 50t Bricks, Scout. - 80,000 coins. - Colony Brasil ("3" on the map below): Warehouse. - Colony Cape City ("5" on the map below): Warehouse; 5t Ore, 20t Tools, 20t Wood, 20t Bricks. - Colony New Delhi ("6" on the map below): Warehouse. - Colony Sao Paulo ("1" on the map below): Warehouse. - Colony Shanghai ("4" on the map below): Warehouse. - Colony Washington ("2" on the map below): Warehouse; 50t Ore, 50t Tools, 50t Wood, 50t Bricks, 50t Marble, 50t Food. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.7.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' {a} ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' {b} {c} ', ,' [1] ', ,' ', W <2>@ (3) E ', [g] ,' ', {h},' ', (4) ,' ', (5) ,' ', [6] ,' ', ,' ', {l} ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * 1 = Sao Paulo. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * 2 = Washington. Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * 3 = Brasil. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * 4 = Shanghai. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * 5 = Cape City. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * 6 = New Delhi. Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * a = Whales, Stone, Ore (Tundra). * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * c = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * g = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone. * h = Spice, Wine, Stone. * l = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Ore. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. * { } = Large island. * < > = Huge island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.7.3 What does the objective mean? Must I mine Ore on 6 islands? The in-game text is misleading - "Mine at least 170 tons of iron ore in each of your cities within the given period of time." It does not matter where you mine this Ore, but each of your starting islands must have 170t or more of Ore in stock by the end. You cannot destroy any of your starting colonies. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.7.4 Strategy overview Your first aim should be to build a Settler level city, since this allows Ore Mines to be constructed. The main difficulty thereafter is financing all the Ore production and storage capacity you will need. One Small Ore Mine will produce about 5t of Ore a minute, so you will need at least two, probably four to produce enough in the time available (depending how early mining is started, and whether some Ore is diverted to Tool production). Only one of your starting islands has an Ore deposit on it ("2" on the map above), so you may need to settle a further island specifically to mine Ore. At the time of writing, Ore deposits do not run out (which could potentially make this scenario far harder), the main limitation is on how many mines can be clustered around one deposit. Your main island ("2" on the map above) is huge, and your starting cash very generous. One strategy to generate the revenue needed to support Ore production, is to simply create a large Settler level colony. Settlers can be profitable in volume, and your main island has everything needed to support them. Since you have plenty of cash to start with, there is no need to make large profits - indeed you can happily operate slightly in the red for the whole scenario and still complete it. An alternative is to develop Citizens, primarily using your other islands to grow Tobacco. In order to see significantly more profit than you would get from Settlers, you need to supply Citizens with several other goods too. Provision of those goods is time consuming, and in my opinion distracts from the ultimate objective. The main benefit is that this can provide a large revenue stream with which one can fund many Ore Mines on several islands, allowing all the Ore to be produced and shipped in the final hour of the game. The last problem is where to put all the Ore. See How do I stock 170t - my warehouse only holds 50t? below for the final answer. Provision of extra storage facilities will increase upkeep costs quite dramatically, as well as requiring a lot of construction materials, so ensure you have budgeted accordingly. During the first part of the game, it is far cheaper to store Ore in ships. A Small Trading Ship can store 200t for an upkeep of only 10 coins. This compares to a minimum of 10 coins per Main Market/Warehouse. That makes naval storage of one good in large volumes about 10% of the upkeep cost of land based storage. Unless you manufacture all your Ore in a hurry at the end, it should be cost effective to build one Small Trading ship for storage for each of your outlying colonies. In order to complete the scenario, all the Ore must be landed, so ship storage is only a temporary solution. There is an alternative approach to building up a settlement, which is slightly counter-intuitive, but works quite effectively. Build a small Settler colony, but once you have 80 Settler (and got access to Ore Mines), destroy everything except Main Markets and a Forester's Hut or two. Open up the territory around the ore deposits on your main island, and place 4 Ore Mines around the mountain with the deposits in. Set each of your outlying colonies to buy enough Tools from the Venetians to build extra Main Markets and a Foresters Hut. Once you have tools, build one Forester's Hut on each island. Now haul Ore from your main colony to the outlying islands, building extra Main Market capacity as required. You will progressively lose more and more money, but you should be able to produce and haul enough Ore to meet the objective before going bankrupt. It is possible to complete the entire scenario within about an hour using this method. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.7.5 How do I stock 170t - my warehouse only holds 50t? You must increase the storage capacity on the island by building additional Main Markets or Warehouses. To reach 170t capacity, each island must have at least 9 Main Markets/Warehouses. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.8 Many Small Islands ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.8.1 Introduction Objective: Total empire population 1000 (may be split across different islands). Rating: ** War-o-meter: * Resources: - 2 Small Trading ships; one with 100t Wood, 100t Tools, Scout; the other with 100t Wood, 50t Food, 50t Tools, Scout. - 30,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.8.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' (a) ', ,' (b) ', ,' ', ,' [c] (d) ', ,' ', W [e] @ (f) E ', [g] ,' ', (h) ,' ', ,' ', (i) ,' ', [j] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore. * c = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * d = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * e = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * f = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Ore, Salt, Marble. * g = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * h = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * i = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Gold. * j = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.8.3 Strategy overview The map is characterised, as the scenario title suggests, by many small islands. In any other game you would not wish to settle a city on any of these islands. This leads to houses being clustered in smaller groups than normal, or with mountains or coastal areas filling gaps where houses might otherwise be placed. So, the same facilities can serve fewer people, which makes the economy harder to balance. There are many different strategies to completing this scenario, ranging from 125 Pioneer houses spread across many islands, to 24 Merchant houses crammed onto one island (your Merchants will always ask for Lamp Oil, which cannot be made on this map, but can be sustained without it). The Pioneer option sounds bizarre, but is quite easy to do because so few goods and facilities need to be provided - throw away almost everything you have learnt about colony development, and cover three or four islands in Pioneer housing, supported only by basic stalls, Hunting Lodges, Tanneries and Forester's Huts. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.9 Negative Influence ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.9.1 Introduction Objective: Total empire population 3,000 (may be split across different islands). Rating: **** War-o-meter: ** Competitor: Pirates. Resources: - Small Trading ship, with 50t Wood, 25t Tools, Scout. - Medium Trading ship, with 100t Wood, 50t Food, 100t Tools, 20t Rope. - 30,000 coins. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.9.2 Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ N ,' ', ,' ', ,' (a) ', ,' ', ,' [b] ', ,' [c] ', ,' (d) @ [e] ', ,' ', W [f] (g) [h] [i] E ', [j] ,' ', ,' ', [k] (l) ,' ', ,' ', [m] ,' ', ,' ', ,' ', ,' S ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * a = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * b = Wine, Hops, Herbs. * c = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * d = Wine, Hops, Herbs, Stone, Salt. * e = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Ore. * f = Tobacco, Cotton, Wine, Stone, Salt. * g = Pirates. Wine, Hops, Herbs. * h = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo, Stone, Salt. * i = Spice, Wine. * j = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * k = Sugarcane, Cotton, Silk, Indigo. * l = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * m = Spice, Wine, Stone, Ore. * @ = Start position. * [ ] = Small island. * ( ) = Medium island. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.9.3 Strategy overview This is a somewhat harder version of Many Small Islands (see above). The map is characterised by a lack of large islands suitable for city building. In addition, mineral deposits are rarer, pirates are active, and the population objective is far higher. I do not think it is possible to fit enough Pioneer housing (375 houses) on the map (although having said that I expect someone to prove me wrong - it will certainly be very tight). There is no Marble, so Merchant housing can not be reached. This leaves a choice between reaching the objective primarily with Settler housing (200 total) or Citizen housing (~110 total), or some combination of the two. On some islands, one can profitably build enough houses around the facilities Settlers need. This inevitably means shipping in Cloth and Alcohol from other production islands. Attempt to fit 360 Settlers into one city to allow Hop based Alcohol production. Cloth production will always be space inefficient using Sheep Farms. One of the main benefits to developing some Citizens is the ability to access buildings such as Cotton Plantations. The disadvantage to Citizens is the level of support infrastructure they require - both large items such as Churches on their island, plus some level of Spice/Tobacco/Salt provision. Consider using Fishermen to provide Food - expensive to operate, but require little land to build. Pirates should be far more annoying than they are. The scenario forces you to ship almost everything between islands, but pirates are rarely effective in disrupting this trade. Ultimately, the main benefit of destroying their colony is not to prevent piracy, but to claim the land it occupies (it is one of the larger islands available). ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.10 Siege ______________________________________________________________________________ 4.3.10.1 Introduction Objective: Do not let the enemy destroy your Cathedral. Rating: ** War-o-meter: ***** Time limit: 20 minutes. Competitors: - Wallenstein (blue). - Goerzenrick (green). - Ferdinand (yellow). - Degenhardt (olive green). - Maximilian (orange). - Hardtmut (white). - Ruprecht (pink). Resources: - 60,000 coins. - City and troops as described below. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.10.2 Battle Map ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ A B ~~~~~~~~~~ E ~~~~ C 1 D F G I~~~ J ~~ H K ~ .----. ^^^ ^ L ~ .-.2 | 3 |^^ # ^ ^ ~ | '-v-' ^ ^^ ~ | ^| ^-w-. ^ M ~ | ^ | $ ^ | ~~ | ^ |4 |^ .' ~ | # ^'--x--' | ~ ~~~ '-. 5 y ~~ ~~ ~~ '---. City | ~~ North ~ ~~ '-. .-.6.---. | ^ ~ .-- ^^^ ~ ~ '-' 'z' '-' ^ ~ |\ ^^ ~~~~ ^^ ^^ N ~ \ ~ ~ ~ Q ~~ ~ R ^^^ O ~ ~ S ^^ P ~~ ~~ ~ T U ~~~~~~~~ ~~ ~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ * $ = Cathedral. * # = Fortress. * v-z = City Gates. * -- = City Wall. * ^^ = Ridged area or mountains. * ~~ = Coast-line or river. Your main troop groups: * 1 = 10 Swordsmen, 6 Crossbowmen. * 2 = 6 Cavalry. * 3 = 3 Mortars, 6 Crossbowmen, Medic. * 4 = 9 Lancers, 2 Crossbowmen, Medic. * 5 = 5 Mortars, 3 Cannon. * 6 = 6 Swordsmen, 6 Crossbowmen, Mortar, 2 Cannons, 2 Medics. In addition, 37 Archers are positioned along the city walls. Enemy start positions: * A = Goerzenrick: Main army of close combat foot, Cavalry, Mortars and Cannon. * B = Maximilian: Small Mortar group with close combat foot support. * C = Hardtmut: Small Mortar group with Crossbowmen support. * D = Ruprecht: Small foot soldier group. * E = Ferdinand: Main group of close combat foot and Mortars. * F = Wallenstein: Small Cannon group with close combat foot support. * G = Goerzenrick: Close combat foot group with Mortar and Cannon. * H = Wallenstein: Small Cannon group with close combat foot support. * I = Maximilian: Small Cannon group with close combat foot support. * J = Ferdinand: Main army of close combat foot, Crossbowmen, Mortars and Cannon. * K = Ruprecht: Small Cannon and Crossbowmen group. * L = Degenhardt: Large group of close combat foot, Musketeers, Mortars and Cannon. * M = Degenhardt: Large group of close combat foot, Mortars and Cannon. * N = Hardtmut: Large group of Mortars, close combat foot and Crossbowmen. * O = Wallenstein: Small group of Cannon and close combat foot. * P = Hardtmut: Small group of Cannon and close combat foot. * Q = Wallenstein: Large group of Cannon, Musketeers and close combat foot. * R = Hardtmut: Small group of Cannon, Crossbowmen and close combat foot. * S = Degenhardt: Large group of Cannon and close combat foot. * T = Wallenstein: Large group of Mortars, Crossbowmen and close combat foot. * U = Ruprecht: Large group of Mortars, close combat foot and Cavalry. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 4.3.10.3 Strategy overview This scenario looks much harder than it actually is. Your troops are heavily outnumbered, and the enemy armies will specifically target the Cathedral you are supposed to protect. You have several advantages: (1) The enemy armies do not all attack at once - different players declare war at different times, and only once they have declared war do they start moving their troops. (2) You can train additional troops at your two Fortresses (one of which will always be behind your line). (3) The Cathedral is in a ridged area, and only has one main approach for invading troops. Use the time before the first declaration of war to arrange your troops, specifically moving the group by the coast ("1" on the map above) into the city, and repositioning Archers on the city walls. Remember to open certain city gates to allow your troops inside. Make some small adjustments to your economy: Open the gate ("w" on the map above) to allow Wood from Forester's Huts to be collected. Adjust the production of weapons at the Bow Maker and Large Weapons Smithy to taste - by default these produce Bows and Axes only. Gunter suggests you stop producing Tools and divert Iron to weapons production. You have a Cannon Foundry, but you have not researched Cannon or Mortar, nor can you rapidly build a University and research them due to lack of construction materials. Consequently, the Cannon Foundry is of no use. You cannot expand your defenses significantly, because of a lack of Bricks. Construction of a Quarry and Stonemason will require expansion of your territory first - by the time you produce enough Bricks the enemy will be inside your city, and building additional defenses where they are needed will be impossible. Depending on your strategy, you may wish to clear some of the houses around the approach to your Cathedral - this helps your troops move around, and helps you see enemy targets. Different groups of enemy units attack different gates on your outer wall. "A"-"C" on the map above, use gate "v". The remaining enemy on the north- eastern side attack gate "w". All the troops on the southern side approach gate "z". As mentioned above, different enemy players declare war on you at different stages of the game. Time from the start is as follows: - ~2 minutes: Goerzenrick, Ferdinand and Wallenstein. - ~7 minutes: Degenhardt. - ~9 minutes: Maximillian. - ~12 minutes: Hardtmut. - ~15 minutes: Ruprecht. There are two obvious battle strategies. The first involves staking out the ground in front of the Cathedral with all your troops. Abandon the outer walls completely. Let the enemy troops funnel up the narrow approach to the Cathedral. You will be able to train additional troops at the Large Fortress without a problem - just endlessly replace your loses. This strategy focuses all your firepower in the most critical position of all, and the one position the enemy will find it hardest to fight in. Since all the battles occur here, it is easier to control what is happening. The main disadvantage is that should the enemy break through your line, you will have no further chance to save your Cathedral. The second approach involves heading off specific waves of enemy troops as they arrive at different points on your city's outer wall. You will need to split your forces into at least two groups and move them between different parts of the city wall as fresh attacks start. Archers can be positioned on the walls, Mortars behind, and close combat troops just outside the wall. Although slightly counter-intuitive, your troops will move faster between battles if you demolish some of the housing and other buildings in your city first - you do not need most them. If you find your walls have been over-run retreat towards the Cathedral and use some of the tactics above. The clear disadvantage of this strategy is the amount of detailed troop management required. Even with the battle running at half-speed, it is hard to order all your troops as you would wish. It is quite easy to accidentally be out-flanked by one or more of the enemy groups, who then start attacking your Cathedral. Whichever strategy is adopted, keep on producing new troops throughout. You have plenty of money and resources available for this. Train additional crews to man abandoned enemy Cannon and Mortars. Allow Medics to heal injured units between waves of enemy attackers. During attacks target the enemy Cannon and Mortars - they are the only units capable of rapidly destroying your Cathedral. Use half speed during battles to help control your units, if you need too. If you only do half of these things, you will win quite easily. Although the in-game objective suggests you need to destroy all the enemy troops, all you need to do is protect the Cathedral. You will end up destroying most enemy units anyway, but you do not have to deal with odd units that get stuck or lost before reaching the Cathedral. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (While browsing through the game's files, I notice there are several extra scenarios listed. For example, 'Lessland', a goldrush scenario, one involving pirate hunting, etc. The actual scenario files appear to have been omitted, and only the text files associated with them can be found. I wonder what happened to these...?) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 5. STRATEGIES ============================================================================== ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.1 Getting Started ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.1.1 Common mistakes Budgie quotes "a former user", who lists five errors commonly made by new players (I've condensed and re-written the description of each). Consider each carefully, because some mistakes below you may not even realise you are making :-) : - Over-production: Your economy is finely balanced, particularly at the start of the game. You cannot afford to produce more than you need, however tempting it may be to stock your warehouse to the rafters, 'just in case'. Also try to keep industries running efficiently (80+% efficiency), with all buildings in the same production chain operating at about the same efficiency. Jini writes: "Personally I always try to have a small overproduction of food and alcohol because the inhabitants get very grumpy if there's not enough that. With all other consumer goods, (spice, tobacco, and so on) I'm trying to achieve a small underproduction because this makes sure that every bit of spice or tobacco will immediately be turned into cash." - Retaining obsolete or outdated facilities: Some starting facilities are inefficient and/or expensive compared to those you can build later. The most common mistake is to retain Small Farms/Potatoes for Alcohol consumption long after Hops/Breweries become available - the later are cheaper and more productive. - Meeting every demand: You don't have to give your colonists everything they demand immediately. It is important to differentiate needs (things that will make the colonists unhappy and leave if not provided), and demands (things that will allow colonist to develop civilization level or contribute additional sales revenue if provided). For example, Pioneers demand a Chapel in order to develop to Settlers. But they can remain as happy Pioneers without a Chapel, so only provide a Chapel when you can also meet the other needs for advancing to Settlers, otherwise you are wasting money. Pioneers do need Food, and if this need is not met their houses will collapse. SirGorash writes: "The key to wealth is to build as few supply units and buildings as possible, and to supply your people only with stuff that is absolutely required." Of course, it is often profitable in the long run to sell goods that are demanded and not needed, but don't feel you must meet such demands. - Rapid expansion: When learning the game, expand slowly. Wait until you have achieved a steady financial situation before trying to reach the next civilisation level. New civilisation levels (such as Settler to Citizen) require significant investments in new buildings and (often) new island colonies, but you will not see the revenue from these investments until your population develops to the new level - in the interim you will tend to lose money, so ensure you start such a process from a sound financial base. As you become more experienced, you will be able to expand much more rapidly. This 'mistake' is only a mistake for new players who don't yet instinctively know when to add or remove buildings. - Lack of preparation for civilisation advances: A continuation of the last point. When your civilisation advances a level, the population will increase dramatically (almost double). One needs to be ready to supply all the extra Food, Alcohol, whatever, associated with such a population increase. The reason many players come unstuck when jumping from Settlers to Citizens is they have not anticipated the need to (on average) *double* the size of their entire economy. Instead they see the jump as a simple case of supplying one or two extra goods, which is only a small proportion of the problem. I'd also add a caveat about military forces: Don't feel compelled to build up a large military at the start of the game. You probably don't need them, the buildings needed to make weapons will use resources better spent on civilian facilities and production, and troop upkeep will drain funds. Even if the scenario puts you at war with another player from the start, you can often survive with only a handful of units. Once your economy is booming, then make your military plans. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.1.2 Initial colony building There is no right or wrong way to build a colony, and many veteran players may be able to play through certain stages of the game far quicker than suggested below. This section is primarily aimed at those whose first attempts have ended in financial disaster, and want to learn how to make any progress in the game at all. Once you master the basics, many tweaks and changes will become apparent to speed up and optimise colony development. Even if you only start with a single ship, initially you will be losing money from upkeep. Remember game speed can be changed, using F5-F8. Half speed (F8) can be useful when laying out basic colony facilities. When learning the game, try to find a large 'Northern' island - one that can grow Hops, which will make Settler level easier to sustain. Acid (translated by Gunter) writes: "The button 'Stop supplying building materials' is very important and should be activated as soon as have built your first warehouse. It prevents your pioneers from an uncontrolled advance to settlers level." Roughly plan where you will place your housing and where you will place production facilities. Housing benefits from a large area of flat ground where it can be densely packed close to public facilities. Later production facilities will need mineral deposits, so consider opening up land towards mountains with mineral deposits. Expand your territory with additional Market Place(s), but don't over-expand, since each Market Place costs you building materials, cash and upkeep. Hakea comments: "Usually it pays to try for the maximum spacing of market buildings (which is a grid of 25x26 spaces) as markets get progressively more expensive to build and run as you progress." Construct 2-4 Forester's Huts, and plant forest around them. They don't need their entire service area filled with trees to be efficient. Connect them up to your Warehouse/Market Place with roads. Acid notes: "Be careful in the very beginning that the road connections fit to the green arrows of the buildings, otherwise the market wagons can't pick up the goods and a road symbol will appear above the building." Four Foresters' Huts places quite a strain on your finances. However, they mean basic construction materials are readily available early in the game, so colonies can grow quicker. Place a pair of Hunting Lodges near to the Foresters' area. Ideally give them a mix of trees and open land, and of course a road connection. A pair of Hunting Lodges will produce enough Food to feed about 400 people. Acid writes: "Fisherman's huts aren't necessary and too expensive, you can do well without them." Wood, Food and Hides are now being produced, which will be enough to keep Pioneers happy and will help you on the way to Settlers. Hakea writes: "There are two key elements in 1503 city planning: one is the 'reach' of the markets (you can't build anything outside its radial reach) and the other is the reach of the houses (they won't be able to get the benefit of goods or services outside their 'area')." When building residential areas, try to group houses in a circle around a central facilities district. The aim will be to get as many houses as close to the same set of facilities as possible. This maximises the population per facility, giving a better ratio of revenue to facility operating cost. You will not build all the facilities straight away, but you should leave enough space for them to be added later. Sample layouts are discussed under Colony Planning and Building below. Houses do not need road access, however, you may find it beneficial to place some roads, particularly around the central area, since this seems to help people find their way to facilities. Initially build 10-15 houses. Add a Food and Salt stall to your central facilities area - make sure it is within the service area of each of your houses. Build one Tannery to process Hides into Leather, and set up a Cloth/Leather stall in your town. You will now be selling Food and Leather, and will start to make some money to offset all your operating costs. Acid suggests selling excess Food and buying some extra Tools at this stage: "Either you do it passively via the warehouse or you look for a small flat island where the Venetians dwell. As you're also in urgent need of tools, you can put up a trading route with the Venetian island and your trading ship. 50t food vs 50t tools gives an approximately plus/minus zero balance. If the island isn't to be found, purchase the tools via your warehouse. Deactivate it after one delivery, it's too expensive." The Venetian island does not exist in the Citizen level endless game, or in campaign scenarios. Keep on building houses as materials allow. Expect to build about 40 houses around your central facilities district. Two further goods need to be supplied before your Pioneers will upgrade to Settlers: Alcohol and Cloth. Alcohol must initially be produced by planting Potatoes around Small Farms. Three Small Farms should be *just* about sufficient to get to (but not sustain) 360 Settlers, at which point more efficient Hop production can be used. Alcohol is sold from a Tavern, which is placed in the central facilities district. Cloth must initially be produced from Sheep Farms and Weaving Huts. Use a ratio of 2 Sheep Farms to 1 Weaving Hut (commonly known as a "combine"). Each Sheep/Weaver combine will cater for almost 300 people, so one combine is all that is needed to start with. Once Alcohol and Cloth are being sold, and you have a moderately large number of houses, you should find yourself in a financially stable position. Don't expect to make much money from Pioneers - hopefully you still have enough of your startup capital to move straight on to Settlers. Build a Chapel in the central facilities district, make construction materials available (if you shut them off to start with), and your people will develop to Settlers. Although Pioneers can be sold Salt, they don't need it to upgrade to Settlers. Mining Salt early in the game is not recommended, because the operating costs of a Salt Mine and Works exceed the profit from selling Salt in small quantities - one Salt Mine and Works provides for about 3000 people, and is not a profitable venture when selling to 100-200. The Pros and Cons of Salt mining are discussed in detail later - there are exceptions to this rule for experienced players. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.1.3 Settlers As Settler houses start to develop, you will start to need more production facilities to cater for the increased population. If Tools were not running short beforehand, they will be now, since each Settler upgrade uses Tools. Additionally, new facilities rapidly become available. This creates a situation where it is easy to over-spend, or run out of something critical just at the wrong moment, and the whole colony goes horribly wrong... Don't be afraid to turn off the supply of construction materials to your colonists, so only some upgrade to Settlers. This tactic is also useful when trying to build new facilities with volumes of limited materials. Early priorities for entirely new buildings, should be a Quarry and Stonemason, to provide Bricks. These are normally followed by an Ore Mine, Ore Smelter and Smithy (Toolmaker) to create Tools - these become available with 80 Settlers. One Ore Smelter will produce a lot of excess Iron - sometimes this excess can be traded, later you may wish to build a second Smithy. Once 360 Settlers are achieved, build a pair of Hop Farms and a Brewery. Once production of Alcohol has started from the Hops, destroy all the Small Farms. A School should also be built (again in the centre of the town) and research started into Wells, and then the Fire Brigade. Once this research is complete, build a Fire Brigade to deal with the house fires that will inevitably start. Also consider researching the Weaving Mill, which will almost double the output of Cloth compared with a Weaver's Hut, although you will need to build an extra Sheep Farm (ratio of 3 Sheep Farms to 1 Weaving Mill). Hakea writes: "It's not essential to always build exact numbers of farms, mills, etc in precise ratios to each 100 people - and in fact they rarely ever match perfectly. Just keep a regular watch on your stock levels and make sure that you are neither grossly overproducing (which will waste money when the chain jams up due to lack of storage) nor running too lean (which will cause your settlement to wither). Also check that each field and building is producing as close to 100% efficiency as you can manage." Watch how your city develops, including those small details that could cause problems if left unchecked. From Acid: "If people are queuing at the stands, build some more of them." Once your population have reached Settler level, you should once again be in a financially stable position. Do not start working towards Citizens while you are hemorrhaging cash: Unless the startup capital was very generous, you will go bankrupt before completing a Citizen level city. In order to develop your people to Citizen status, you will need to supply them with either Spice or Tobacco. These will almost certainly require a new production colony on a different island. This entails using your ship (and Scout if you also wish to be sure of revealing minerals and natives) to explore new islands. Once you have chosen an island, load up with construction materials and sail to the island. Build a Warehouse, and a several plantations (Tobacco will also require Tobacco factories - approximately in the ratio of 2 plantations to 1 factory). Don't add any houses to this new island - use it for production only. Set up a trade route with your ship to bring the new goods back to your main colony, and add a Tobacco and Spice stand to the centre of town. An alternative strategy is to supply both Tobacco and Spice, primarily as a means of generating extra revenue prior to developing Citizens. Once you start supplying a good from another island, you will find it hard to expand further without another ship, because your first ship is kept busy moving cargo. Further ships require shipyards, Hemp/Rope production, and cost upkeep, so there are good reasons to delay building additional vessels. By setting up two different production colonies (Spice and Tobacco), one can delay supplying goods until both supply islands are built. There are two disadvantages: (1) whilst you are building on these supply islands and not selling any of the produce, you will slowly be going bankrupt; and (2) due to a quirk in the automatic trade route system, transporting two different goods at the same time needs to be done with great care - see Why does my automatic trade route fail when I transport more than one item? above. The last facility to be added should be a Church. The Church can be in the centre of the town, instead of the Chapel. However, once the main Church is built each Chapel on the island is upgraded to a Church (albeit a smaller one). Consequently, it may be more space efficient to build the Church at the edge of your town, and retain the upgraded Chapel. The disadvantage is the increased operating cost - it is a trade off between higher cost and being able to get more houses clustered around a (slightly smaller) central facilities district. Before making the jump to Citizen level, ensure you have adequate supplies of things like Food. You will also need a lot of Bricks, so consider a second Stonemason (two can work in the same Quarry). Lastly, note that Citizens do not buy Leather, so those Hunting Lodges and Tanneries will start fill up with unwanted goods. Remember though that the Hunting Lodges may be providing a significant proportion of your Food supply - don't delete them without considering this fully. Moving to Citizen level requires a fine balance to be struck between building up the facilities you will need to support a Citizen population, and not being entirely able to finance them with a population of Settlers. You may need to restrict the supply of construction materials, if not ACid|88 comments: "Your Citizens count will go high too fast -> Food empty -> Panic -> build new farms -> no money." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.2 Colony Planning and Building ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.2.1 Island Choice From Jini: "In my opinion the best island is a northern one with salt, ore and the ability to grow hops. With such an island one can satisfy all needs of Settlers without having to build colonies on other islands." Samstein12345 adds: "The [Northern] island is good because it supplies everything to get you to the 3rd level. Once you need tobacco and spices you should have a good enough economy to either make an automatic trading route to import it from another civilization or make a settlement on an island that grows that stuff on it and then make an automatic trading route to your island." From largefry07: "I like an island where you can grow medicinal herbs, hemp, and wine, with an island or a another city close by to supply tobacco and spice. Set up a colony of your own for tobacco and spice, with just those farms on them. Have a middle class ship and set up trade routes to go from spice island to tobacco island and then have it drop off the goods at your main city." Gunter writes: "It will surely be easier if you got iron ore on your first island - but it's also possible to mine it on another one." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.2.2 Colony territory Acid's method of extending territory, whilst minimising upkeep costs of markets: "Build a market to expand your area - build a second one at its best location - demolish the first one." BaldJim comments: "Yes some market buildings can be deleted without losing anything. The key is that the service area of other, remaining market buildings must overlap a bit so the total service area of the city is not disrupted (broken into separate areas). So if you have a long string of market buildings built just to reach an ore supply (for example), about every other one can be 'pick-axed'. But to eliminate market buildings just to eliminate them may place a burden on the cartmen which will slow your production." From rnettnin: "I've deleted markets in the middle of the chain and had no problems. The only thing is, is that at 250 coins a piece, it can be an expensive move early on." Some will prefer to retain as many Main Markets as possible, to increase the number of carts on the island. From Jarrah: "What you can do is extend the effective area of your colony by building a chain of markets through the middle of it. Then, once you get near the coast you can put another warehouse on the shore. Or using that menu you could have 2 warehouses close to each other 'back home' for that matter. Also, the way the game works, everything you put into one market is immediately available in all others across that island. Some people apparently do this and then delete all the markets in the middle to save the running cost." Thunder_cowz adds: "Also you can use a scout to build a market building near the deposit and the construct a warehouse near somewhere else." Balou writes: "As long as there's no multiplayer (i.e. human players) there's really no need to build a 'secure' harbor. Actually it's rather a bad idea to build your warehouses in bays and such enclosed spaces, since it handicaps your trading (ships will turn around without unloading more often if they can't reach your warehouse well enough - or if it gets too crowded). And since you can build multiple warehouses in 1503 there's really no point in 'protecting' just one of them with a secluded location. I would not recommend building just one warehouse, there are just too many advantages of having multiple warehouses, at least on each coast of your main island to shorten your ships routes." BaldJim has a method of claiming territory early against expansionist AI players: "I thought of the Scout's ability to build an inland Market. Here's what I came up with (for a single outpost island): (1) Load your ship with 8 tools and 19 wood, and sail to a fertile outpost island. (2) Unload your Scout and load him with 8 tools and 10 wood. (3) Direct him inland to a point near the center of a good growing area. Click on the 'Build Market' icon in his Info screen. (4) Move the 'to build' figure so it both covers a good growing area and also overlaps a small piece of the coast where you can build a Warehouse later. Then click it. (5) Unload the 5 tools and 3 wood that the scout still has into the Market, and send him back to the coast near the ship. (6) Load the remaining 9 wood on the Scout and send him back to the Market to unload it there. You now have the material stored there to build the future Warehouse. (7) Send the Scout back to load on the ship, and sail back to your main island. You have laid claim to a useful piece of land at only the cost of one building plus some material. The building cost less than the usual warehouse and the area covered reaches farther inland. The maintenance is only 10 gold. Whenever you are ready to develop the outpost, simply load your ship with building material and sail out. While the ship is getting there, you can build the warehouse so it is ready for the ship to use." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.2.3 City design Most city designs are based on grouping the buildings required by population into a tight space, and placing houses in a circle around them. Sometimes this is done quasi-randomly, sometimes it uses strict modular city designs. Such an approach is well suited to small to medium sized cities. It becomes increasingly less important when building very large cities, in which facilities can just be evenly distributed across the city. The underlying problem with any city design is that the clusters of facilities and houses are inherently spherical in nature, and so whatever pattern is devised there will either be gaps in housing or overlaps of facilities. The optimum city may transpire to have production facilities in these gaps. Production facilities and similar buildings that do not need to be within the service area of housing, should normally be placed away from residential areas, to maximise the number of houses that can be built close to population related facilities. Road-less cities are possible, as Visualize.Raven comments: "Houses have streets, so you don't need to build roads near them." The catch with entirely road-less cities is that those internal streets are often not wide enough for large volumes of people to move along with ease. At higher levels of civilization development, a total lack of roads may cause housing on the fringe of the city to not be able to access facilities, even though those facilities are notionally within their service area. Since placing roads tends to reduce the number of houses, there is a fine balance to be struck between roads and buildings. Ravell writes: "I never cram my town from the beginning, when you settle an island there's heaps of room and no need to jam them in most cost effectively. Maybe that makes sense in the beginning, when the houses are still small, but once they upgrade and there's no room around for the quadruple amounts of people and everyone feels tightened to move around and its hard to get access to the sales stands its not fun anymore and some of them might leave oldtown and pack their mules and move on to new lands and discover and build another suburb with more space and less financial pressure." From Jarrah: "I tried putting 70 houses round one 'service centre' of stalls, tavern, church, Fire brigade, etc and it supported them fine at Pioneer level. But it started to struggle as the population per house increased. I've found 50 houses work OK all the way to Merchant level (with 2000+ people by then) but they might be able to find the goods more quickly later in the game if less houses were being serviced. I also tend to leave 'access space' for customers around each stall, rather than building tight rows, but I don't honestly know if this is just a personal 'cosmetic' preference, or whether it does allow them to serve more per minute." Budgie writes: "One stand of each will be enough to support a city with approximately 50 houses. Just put them into the center with the public buildings like tavern, school, etc. Keep some clear space around your market stands. Otherwise, you might get trouble when all people are rushing to the stands and some can't get access." Hakea comments: "I put the stalls bang in the middle for easy reach - plus I like the civic look of it. And I can find them easily if I want to click on one to see how its stock is." Later in the game I'm often tempted to add further stands when I see long queues forming for goods. In return for minimal extra upkeep, my goods get sold slightly faster, and my people spend less time waiting to purchase, so seem slightly happier. From Nacht: "In the case for a chapel for example I believe that the door should be in the houses service area, not just any part. The only way to be sure about what sides of the building actually counts is to test it in the game I'm afraid." Jini: "At the edge of a house's service area, everything can happen: Sometimes the inhabitants can reach a public building although it's curtly outside the house's service area. Sometimes they can't reach that public building, although it's curtly inside the house's service area." Hakea has some tips on laying out and developing planned cities: "Make sure you have some basic needs organised first. If you don't, and you spend too long messing about with house placement and road layout, the houses can collapse before you get round to servicing the occupants. Monitor your production chains regularly. Always keep a rough eye on the basics. The increases in demand always looks more sudden and huge if you have accidentally run low. Above all, don't rush it. Give your production chains a chance to stabilise so that you can get a feel for how much of each item is needed for a given number of people." Acid notes that, "the computer opponents will adapt their progress more or less to yours." In most situations there is no need to rush. Below is Hakea's modular city plan. I have attempted to show colony plans using ASCII 'art'. Each letter represents one square, even though a single building may cover multiple squares. I've tried to add lines to show the boundary between buildings. Hopefully these plans will make more sense when you try and re-produce them than they do on the screen. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...r _ _ _ Additional houses can be placed around the edges, ...r|M M M M| or additional modules can be built. ...r|M M M M| ...r|M_M_M_M| ...r_r r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r r_r... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r r_r_r_r r r r r r r r_r_r_r_r r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r|C C C C|r|S|r|S|r r|B B B B B|r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r|C C C C|r r r r r r|B B B B B|r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|r|C_C_C_C|r|S|r|S|r|S|B B B B B|r|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r|T T T T|r|F F F|r r|B B B B B|r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r|T T T T|r|F F F|r r|B B B B B|r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H H H H|r|T_T_T_T|r|F_F_F|r r|B_B_B_B_B|r|H H H H|r|H_H_.. .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|r_r_r_r r_r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|D D D D|r|L L L L|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|D D D D|r|L L L L|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|D D D D|r|L L L L|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|D_D_D_D|r|L_L_L_L|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. ...H H|r _ _ _ |H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r... ...H H|r|M M M M|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r... ...H H|r|M M M M|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r... .._H_H|r|M_M_M_M|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r... ...r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r... Square Key: * B = Public Baths * L = School * C = Chapel (Church) * M = Main Market * D = Doctor * r = Road or Square * F = Fire Brigade * S = Stand/Stall * H = House * T = Tavern ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hakea writes: "The maximum spacing of markets is a grid of 25x26 spaces. The module holds 25 houses, plus all the local support you need up to merchant level. The chapel will function as a church later in the game so long as you build ONE church (which can be anywhere on the outskirts and doesn't need to be within the local radius). Similarly just build one University somewhere else. The market at the left of the picture is not yet necessary here, but has been included just to give the feel for the spacing of the grids." The plan below is attributed to Nerle and diogenes. The city centre is surrounded by nine 12x12 blocks of housing. The entire plan needs to be repeated around each side before all those blocks can be filled. Here is the city centre part. Again, Chapels and Schools are placed in the residential area, and a large Church and University placed elsewhere on the same island: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|H_H_H_H|r|H_H_.. .._r_r r r r r r r r r_r_r_r_r_r r r_r_.. ...H H|r r r r r r r|B B B B B B|r|H H... ...H H|r|S|S|r|S|S|r|B B B B B B|r|H H... ...H H|r r_r_r r r r|B B B B B B|r|H H... .._H_H|r|C C C|r|S|r|B B B B B B|r|H_H_.. ...H H|r|C C C|r r r|B_B_B B_B_B|r|H H... ...H H|r|C C C|r r|M M M M|F F F|r|H H... ...H H|r|C_C_C|r r|M M M M|F F F|r|H H... .._H_H|r r_r_r_r r|M_M_M_M|F_F_F|r|H_H_.. ...H H|r|L L L L|r_r_r_r|D D D D|r|H H... ...H H|r|L L L L|T T T T|D D D D|r|H H... ...H H|r|L L L L|T T T T|D D D D|r|H H... .._H_H|r|L_L_L_L|T_T_T_T|D_D_D_D|r|H_H_.. .._r_r r r_r_r_r_r_r_r_r_r_r_r_r r r_r_.. ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|H H H H|H H H H|r|H H... Square Key: * B = Public Baths * L = School * C = Chapel (Church) * M = Main Market * D = Doctor * r = Road or Square * F = Fire Brigade * S = Stand/Stall * H = House (part) * T = Tavern ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The next city centre design is by LadyH. Again, houses are clustered around the edges, and the University and Church are placed elsewhere, with the School and Chapel being left to upgrade: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. _ _ _ _ _ r|H H... ..|B B B B B B|r|H_H_H H|._.. ..|B B B B B B|r _ _ |H H... ..|B B B B B B|r|F F F| |H H... ..|B B B B B B|r|F F F| |H H... ..|B_B_B_B_B_B|r|F_F_F| |H_H_.. .._r_r r r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r r_r_r_r r_r_.. ...H H|r|H H H H|T T T T|r|C C C C|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|T T T T|r|C C C C|H H... ...H H|r|H H H H|T_T_T_T|r|C_C_C_C|H H... .._H_H|r|H_H_H_H|r r_r_r r r_r_r_r|H_H_.. ...H H|r r r r r r|M M M|r|L L L L|H H... ...H H|r r|S|r|S|r|M M M|r|L L L L|H H... ...H H|r r r r|S|r|M M M|r|L L L L|H H... .._H_H|r r|S|r|S|r|M_M_M|r|L_L_L_L|H_H_.. ...r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r r... Square Key: * B = Public Baths * L = School * C = Chapel (Church) * M = Main Market * D = Doctor * r = Road or Square * F = Fire Brigade * S = Stand/Stall * H = House * T = Tavern ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The final plan is by Curley. Only the central area is shown. This is surrounded by housing. Main Markets are places around the edges. As with others, the large Church and University are placed elsewhere on the island, with Chapels and Schools upgraded. The plan omits Main Markets from the centre. Curley notes: "I try and center the town between 4 of those buildings to leave as much room as I possibly can for houses. Invariably the Tavern is within a couple houses of a Main Market building": ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..r r_r_r_r_r_r r_r_r_r r.. ..r|B B B B B B|T T T T|r.. ..r|B B B B B B|T T T T|r.. ..r|B B B B B B|T_T_T_T|r.. ..r|B B B B B B|C C C C|r.. ..r|B_B_B_B_B_B|C C C C|r.. .|F F F|D D D D|C_C_C_C|r.. .|F F F|D D D D|L L L L|r.. .|F_F_F|D D D D|L L L L|r.. ..r r r|D_D_D_D|L L L L|r.. ..r r|S|S|S|S|S|L_L_L_L|r.. ..r r r r r r r r r r r r.. Square Key: * B = Public Baths * L = School * C = Chapel (Church) * M = Main Market * D = Doctor * r = Road or Square * F = Fire Brigade * S = Stand/Stall * T = Tavern ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.2.4 Aristocrat cities From LadyH: "You need Aristocrats... when you want to see the great video about the chateau... when you want to build a beautiful chateau... when you want to see the great video about the cathedral... when you want to build the beautiful cathedral... when you like to build up great cities. You don't need them; as well as you don't need to play the game. In my humble opinion, it's a nice experience because of different requirements. Merchants are much better when you want to have much much much gold in your pocket." Gunter writes: "There's no real necessity in the game for this upgrade, it's just for fun - and you can get the cathedral and the palace. ... I guess also that you get more money from aristocrats because the goods which they buy are more expensive. But you should rather stick to merchants if you want more inhabitants, for example in the 'Metropolis' mission." Aristocrat houses contain fewer people than Merchant houses. Jini adds: "You only *need* Aristocrats if you want to build a castle or a cathedral. For every other purpose, Merchants are more suitable." Jarrah writes: "In 1503 (as in life) aristocrats are somewhat unnecessary baggage. But they offer a bit of a challenge later in the game, due to their finicky nature, and the requirement to set up some new production chains (nobody else buys most of what they want either)." Ravell comments: "Don't give up on the aristocrats, they bring in good money and the collapsing happened only in 3-5 houses out of 70, all others are happy and making me rich." From Jini: "(1) They don't need wine and jewelry, these are optional goods. (2) A 'park' actually only has to contain a Pavilion. Hedges are optional as well. (3) Aristocrats are lazy bastards. If they have to walk to far in order to satisfy their needs, they literally die during the walk. (4) There is a bug or at least strange behaviour in the Aristocrat's 'path finding routine'. Example: Lets assume there is Pavilion and a theatre south of an Aristocrat house and another Pavilion north of the house. One would expect the Aristocrats from that house are walking southwards, visit the theatre, the Pavilion aside and then go back home. Funnily enough, they sometimes first visit the theatre in the south and then the Pavilion in the north. This makes their way much longer. Together with all the other public buildings, it can happen that an Aristocrat is endlessly walking around and then starves. (5) On should therefore carefully watch the paths along the Aristocrats are walking. Paradoxically it can sometimes help to tear down duplicate public buildings or to block a certain street. (6) Aristocrat houses collapsing is a know problem which lots of people are facing." From Dobber: "You can fill your town with 'Aristo's only' and get rid of all production chains except food and cloth. The only production chains you have to add are fur and of course the tailor to convert cloth and fur to clothing. The wine and jewelry are nice things that they gladly spend their money on but you don't have to worry when those stocks run low. They do require a theatre and a pavillion to be happy. Just make sure you have done all your research at the university before going all Aristo for they do not go to school. They also quit going to the tavern. The only public buildings needed are: Theatre, Bath, Pavillion, Church (upgraded chapel takes up less room), Doctor and the necessary market stalls for the particular good they are buying. Also the excess goods that are no longer needed, spice, tobacco, lamp oil, silk and alcohol can be placed in the sell goods menu at the warehouse and the Venetians will eventually buy them all." Gunter's city planning suggestions for Aristocrats: "1 or 2 principles which I'm always observing: provided that there's enough building material, I start with building a 'center' consisting of a market, the stalls (food, clothes, wine, jewels) and the public buildings (church, public bath, theatre, pavilion, I add also a doctor since I saw that they are also attacked by the plague). Then I draw some streets and look where the houses fit in. Coming to the edge of the area covered by the market, I start to watch if every new house can well reach the center and all its facilities, otherwise I add what's lacking (the pavilion is often the first one)." Zomby Woof: "Basically my entire city is divided in rectangles, size 49 X 35 fields. The houses are built at the edge in 3x2 blocks, every block surrounded by streets. The center is for church, tavern etc [Tavern isn't strictly needed for Aristocrats]. This quarter contains 48 houses (1440 aristocrats) and usually I need only one theatre and one bathing house for that, but maybe two churches and pavilions. Market stands are at each side of the rectangle (inside)." Svar writes: "I built an aristocrat housing block with 990 residents and let the economy stabilize so I could record the lowest cash flow value I saw in about a 5 minute period. The value was 1254 gold. Next I added 2 jewelry combines (2 gold mines, 2 gem mines, 2 goldsmiths, 2 jewelry stalls, and 1 large transport to collect raw materials) and again let the enonomy stabilize before recording the lowest cash value in about a 5 minute period. What a shock it was to see that I was now making 1215 gold. I turned off the jewelry combines and expanded the aristrocrat population to 1350 which should be just over the 2 times capacity of the combines maximum of 1334. It took some time for the aristrocrat housing to indicate that I had met zero damand for jewelry before I could resume the test. When I did the cash flow value had risen to 1757 without the cost of the idle gold combines. Next I restarted the 2 jewelry combines and was pleased to see the initial jump in cash flow. When everything finally stabilized the new figure for the added jewelry sales was a cash flow of 1966. This was only about 200 gold higher than without jewelry sales so once the initial demand is satisfied jewelry sales don't contribute that much to the bottom line. By the way, jewelry sells for 195 gold at this level so the boost is greater at the lower difficulty levels. Also There was a real advantage to adding the aristrocrats since the city already 2350 merchants and they were generating about 800 gold per minute alone. So adding 1350 aristrocrats more than doubled the cash flow and the housing block was eventually increased to 1440 aristrocrats. My new strategy is to never over produce jewelry again when building aristrocrats housing." Svar continues: "I have noticed in the past that once I get large numbers of aristrocrats that the increase in cash flow isn't proportional to the increase in population. I now think that I overproduced jewelry. The maintaince cost for 1 jewelry combine is 170 gold so it is easy to overproduce and lose the small profit margin that you get at this level." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.3 Industry Planning and Building ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.3.1 General industry/farm design strategies Detailed data on industry efficiency is given in the appendix Production Efficiency, along with data on the number of people one industry is likely to sustain. Industries are often grouped in 'combines'. A combine attempts to match the output of material producers to the capability of processing industry. In most cases this works by building two material producers for every one processing industry. For example, one Butcher's Shop can service two Cattle Farms efficiently. There are exceptions to this rule (for example Whale Blubber and Stone, where two processing industries can efficiently work with one material supplier), and there are many cases where the precise ratio can be better balanced - particularly where there are more than a handful of the same farm/industry required. The basic 2:1 combine ratio is a good approximation in the majority of cases. In most cases, you should plant crops in all the squares that make up a farm/plantation's service area. Detailed data on field efficiency is given in the appendix Production Efficiency. Zomby Woof notes: "A big exception is the forester. I think he has 44 fields within his service area but he uses only half of them, so you can build two foresters directly next to each other. I do so and my foresters are working up to 100%, saves a lot of space." Budgie writes: "It's always good to have a main market building next to your farms or industries, because along with these buildings come market carts that transport your materials." From Hakea: "I've tried overlapping [farms and production buildings] and it works to quite a surprising degree. I tried squeezing Cattle Farms together, for instance, and putting a Butcher right between them to see if it would be more efficient. The little walkers certainly take less time, but I really couldn't say whether that's eye candy or whether it does speed things up." From vorosz: "I always overlap cattle and sheep as it never seems to affect production. I almost never overlap my crops, I would rather a few crops laying idle for when I run into a drought." LadyH writes: "You can also set one well for two farms the service area of the well only has to reach the farm to take affect like this:" ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # X # # # # # # # Square Key: # # # F F F # # # # # # F F F # # # F = Farm/Plantation # # # F F F # # # # # # F F F # # # X = Well # # # F F F # # # # # # F F F # # # # = Field area # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # # ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.3.2 Food production Bobbyrookie writes: "Here's what my computations have brought me to: - 5 hunting lodges will feed a population of 1000. Total cost=$100. - 12 fishing huts will feed a population of 1000. Total cost=$240. - 3 butcher shop chains (2 cattle farms and 1 butcher shop per chain) will feed a population of 1000. Total cost=$156. - 2 bakery chains (4 grain fields, 2 mills, and one bakery per chain) will feed a population of 1000, with much left over. Total cost=$174. - 13 small farms will feed a population of 1000. Total cost: $260. So based on my computations, hunting lodges are the most cost effective form of food production. They are not, however, the most space-consumption effective. They are the best way to feed your people only if you have a great deal of land. I have chosen to utilize the bakery chains to feed my population. Even though it is more expensive to feed 1000 people than butcher chains are, it is actually cheaper to feed a population of 3000 (5 bakery chains will feed 3000 people at a cost of $435. It takes 10 butcher shops to feed a population of 3000, at a cost of $520). Bakery chains also take up less space than hunting lodges." Visualize.Raven comments: "Important is cost/unit and the producing speed. Also you may be will be interested in building costs (resources because gold it's not so important). When you have 300-400 inhabitants use hunters. After than build 2 cattle farms and 1 butcher. Maybe later you will want to delete your hunters. However you should keep your cattle farms when you use grain." Bobbyrookie replies: "Once you get a colony up and running, the bottom line is what feeds the most people for the least cost. If it costs $520 to run 10 butcher chains, and it only costs $435 to run 5 bakery chains, and both are capable of feeding 3000 people, that pretty much tells you everything you need to know. Even if the building costs are more for bakery chains than they are for butcher chains, you easily make up the difference over time in the amount you save in production costs. If I'm correct on the definition of production speed being the amount of time it takes for an operation to reach 100% production, then production speed is only relevant if your stock is low. At first, utilize hunters, then progress to butcher shops (because like I said, butcher shops feed a population of 1000 for less cost than bakeries do). But once your colony is established, and you're able to work up a reserve of food, I suggest transferring food production to bakery chains, unless you have enough space for a dozen or so hunting lodges." Jini writes: "Grain is much more efficient concerning production cost ($/food unit) and ground (squares/food unit). I would therefore strongly recommend to feed your inhabitants with grains. Secondly, grain is the only food production which is really 'scalable'. Feeding 10,000 inhabitants with hunters or small farms is almost impossible - with grain no problem. Last but not least, 'bread-plants' are simply looking much cooler than those crappy small farms. I always build something like this: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ g g g g g g g r P P P r g g g g g g g g g g g g g g r P P P r g g g g g g g g g F F F g g r P P P r g g F F F g g g g F F F r r r P P P r r r F F F g g Square key: g g F F F g g r P P P r g g F F F g g * g = Grain field g g g g g g g r P P P r g g g g g g g * F = Grain farm g g g g g g g r P P P r g g g g g g g * r = Road g g g g g g g r P P P r . . . * P = Production building (Mill, g g g g g g g r . . . Bakery, or Narket) g g F F F g g r . . . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Such a 'production-street' can be expanded with almost zero effort." Jarrah notes: "Generally mono-cultures like all wheat farms are unwieldy due to being prone to droughts and variations in soil fertility, depending on where you are. Don't expect to get those figures always. They are also harder to balance as your population isn't always neatly going to divide by 600 or 667 (the figures vary after Pioneer level)." Wiles writes: "The only objection I would have for not using hunters for a vast population is that it seems to vary how much food you get at different times. For me, it seems that the AI forgets to repopulate the hunters area of influence with new stock from time to time if you have a lot of other things going, and it reduces the flow of food to the warehouses. I've watched as the hunter goes out, walks around, and comes back empty handed a lot more often." Jarrah comments: " Hunters can be overlapped with other enterprises like Foresters and Farms, and definitely don't need a lot of space to themselves. They will still run at 100% efficiency - but under any circumstances they seem to be prone to occasional slumps in animal availability." Hakea writes: "The Hunters seem to like a mixture of woods and open areas in their territory and will overlap OK with Foresters (share some space)." Hunters can work outside of your territory if their huts are placed on the border. From Curley: "I put Foresters and Hunters in the same areas. They seem to be able to overlap and get along well. Many times I blanket the entire area with trees ( no open spaces) and the animals seem to stay available for the Hunters to harvest." From vorosz: "I usually have 6 or 8 foresters running in a large clump. The resulting large forest produces a lot of game that I place my hunters (3-4 staggered around) across the road from my forest, using up more than half of his field of influence and rarely go below 100%. I also am not to concerned about leaving the rest of it's field of influence completely clear, as game always come to where the grass is to graze." Acid's conceptual plan for integrating Hunters and Foresters is as follows: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ HL T FH ----- MMB ----- FH HL Key: * FH = Forester's Hut * HL = Hunting Lodge * MMB = Main Market Building * T = Tannery * - = Road ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Zomby Woof comments: "I never produce food with those [Small] farms. I prefer to build a second hunter and later cattle and grain combines." Jarrah writes: "In my experience each food maker has its advantage and disadvantages and suits certain circumstances and play styles and not others. I like to see a bit of variety (which I'm sure my population appreciates) but it also seems a more flexible way to be able to respond to changing game circumstances. I think that a 'mono-culture' approach not only looks rather dull, but wastes some of the opportunities offered by other methods. I start with Hunters and work my way up without often deleting to switch over (although I do use Small Farms only for alcohol). I even sprinkle one or two Fisherfolk in as I like the look of them and they use space nobody else uses (ragged edges and ocean) so can be tucked in at any stage if you just want to balance up without the expense of opening up new territory with a fresh market. Hunters are good for that later in the game too, so don't forget your original 'best mates'." Additional numerical analysis of Food production by Stratgan is contained in the Production Efficiency appendix. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.3.3 Salt From Hakea: "Here are some figures (from the official tables): - Output from 1 salt works = 6 tons per minute. - Number of Pioneers that 1 salt works will supply = 3000 (i.e. 500 per 1 ton). - Cost of building salt mine and works = 10 tools, 20 wood and 1100 gold. - Running costs of Mine + Works = 55 gold per minute. - Selling price of salt at Stall = 30 - 38 gold per ton (which 500 pioneers use in 1 minute). So if you have only 500 Pioneers (and you quite possibly have even less) you are losing at least 17 gold every minute. (Unless you make a few tons and then shut the mine and works down.) You COULD make a profit, but only IF you could sell all the salt you are making (which is unlikely - usually you'd just end up knee deep in salt). If you also take into account the fact that you probably also built a couple of extra Markets, just to reach the salt mine, you are actually losing far more than that. And you don't even need to supply salt to Pioneers at all. They will progress to Settler without it." Jarrah comments: "After realising that Pioneers want Salt, but don't actually need it, and it never seemed to make me money, I skipped it until I happened to be building in that direction anyway - usually during the Settler stage." Ravell writes: "Salt is essential for a worthy life and don't withhold it from your people just because of economic reasons to make you richer." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.3.4 Iron related production Balou writes: "I always use 1 mine - 2 smelters - 4 toolmakers. You might need additional ore this way (if it's a small mine), but the Venetians usually sell lots of ore (if another player has a mine, that is). I would only add mines to production islands if I have major tool problems... usually it's just mines on my main island." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.3.5 Stone and Marble Fireball21 writes: "I would only put 2 masons to every quarry because on the quarry they only have enough room for 2 people to chip stone." Dobber comments: "Tis true only 2 will chip away at a time, but while those 2 are in the shop forming bricks, 1 or 2 others can be chipping stone. Thus they take turns at the quarry and not be in each others way. If there are 2 at the quarry, the other(s) wait in their shop until there is room for them. After the first wait they are synchronized." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.3.6 Alcohol Samstein12345 writes: "But if you don't have 360 Settlers, you could just use potato farms to start. Then, once you have 360 Settlers, build hops and or sugarcane." Budgie adds: "There are 2 [effective] ways to delirium: 2 hop farms + 1 brewery, or, 2 sugarcane plantations + 1 distillery." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.4 Colony Management and Research ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.4.1 General strategies Visualize.Raven writes: "In Anno 1503 you should build much more house as in Anno 1602. Try to provide your settlers many expensive resources they demand." Whitedog comments: "You don't really start making good money until you are fully supplying Merchants (with everything). You're immediate goal should be to get to that point as soon as possible." A profit objective, from Hakea: "I have a sort of rough figure of '1 gold from 2 inhabitants' that I shoot for at a Citizen level of a game, but it depends a huge amount on what the terrain is like and also what war goals you might have." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.4.2 Balancing demands and development From Spearthrower: "When houses upgrade you'll end up with more population anyway and each resident will be buying more valuable goods... in turn letting you improve your infrastructure and letting you have more population. So I vote for upgrading and keeping your actual house numbers down to 40-50." Jbmtneer writes: "It always seemed that I couldn't get the right amount of food circulating, I always ended up with overstocked food and salt in some cases. So here's what I did in the emperor endless game: I had 4 different 'subdivisions' to start out, with each subdivision having there own Food and Salt stand. I built them far enough apart to keep it organized at the beginning. I kept adding Hunters and houses. Then building a few tanneries and slowly adding a cloth stand to sell my hides to each subdivision as long as the stock stayed high. Then adding a tavern to 1 subdivision to reach the next level to start making my own tools. I think you see where I went with this. Keep each subdivision separate and build the stands as you have the stock. I ended up at one point, making 2 additional subdivisions and it worked out great for me." Curley warns: "Remember that when you make a Civilization advance your population can double. Best to have extra food in storage to handle them." From Snakeroot: "Running out of food brings very nasty consequences... and it takes time to get back a 'stable' economy. My strategy has been to fill the warehouse with food... then add new house (20) and then watch all commodity levels as those 20 houses mover to Merchant level." Jarrah writes: "If you still want to stockpile stuff at 'home' for some reason then build a spare merchant ship and use it for storage. It can sometimes also be handy for stockpiling wood, bricks, etc ready for the big rush when your population jumps to Settler, Citizen or whatever)." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.4.3 Research From Visualize.Raven: "I recommend to make how quick you can well, fire station and cloth." Hakea comments: "Quite a lot of the research topics are war related, but there are some useful civil ones too, like the ones Raven mentioned, plus bigger ships, a Doctor, etc. The cloth one he talked of allows you to build Mills to replace Weaver's Huts. These can use the output from 3 sheep farms (2 farms to 1 for Huts) and make woolen cloth for about 20 gold per unit instead of 24. They also make it faster. 1 mill can churn out 3 units of cloth a minute, whereas you'd need at 4 fields and 2 huts to produce slightly less than 3. But it's not that big a deal, as you're probably selling it at your Stalls for about 80. It's just a better option to allow a bit of fine tuning as your settlement develops." Once you have completed any research requiring a Library, destroy it to save upkeep. Your librarians will hate you ;-) , but you do not need to retain it once the research has been completed. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.5 Trade and Diplomacy ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.5.1 Mechanics of trade From Zomby Woof: "Selling something is a question of demand, if nobody demands tools you won't sell any." Ravell writes: "The AI never builds any aristocrats so there's no need for jewelry. In fact the AI never builds a goldmine or gem mine on his own islands." LadyH notes: "When you offer all interesting things for sale, first the Venetians will come and buy it. Later the AI will realize, that it's cheaper to buy directly." Balou writes: "I wouldn't recommend trading with other computer players via auto-routes. Their selling and buying preferences are just changing too often to be reliable. What I usually do: Once in a while, I check each of the computer players warehouses, load up my biggest trading ship (I always try to have/keep one ship for this purpose exclusively) with the (then) needed goods and finally set sail to that location. Hopefully their buying setting didn't change in the meanwhile and I'll be able to sell all - or at least most - of my stuff to them. ... You can have the Venetians do the shipping for you. Sell your product on one of your production islands, and buy them on your main island, but this tactics has some drawbacks. First, it's not very reliable, so I'd never count on it - but it might be a good way to support your own trading routes. Second, it's expensive, because in order to interest the Venetians in doing all the traveling, you need to sell at a low price and buy at a high price, loosing money (even if your buying price is below the price you're selling it to your people at your sales stands - you're still making less money)." From Gunter: "In the beginning I started with my habits of 1602 AD and made my ships take goods at various islands close to each other. But I quickly saw that the distances are much more longer here, and now I actually dedicate one ship to one island. No problem, I guess, to let it take 2 products there... Later on, when you need a more frequent supply you should send over a second and even a third ship to the island, - but with a different time schedule: while the first ship starts at the supply island with goods to be delivered, the second should have just delivered his cargo and should be ready to return there, and so on." KingBob's suggestion: "Build boats... and sell them. It seems that opponents (but not pirates and Venetians) buy them very quickly even if they don't use them (they are often waiting in their seaports). Maybe the costs of producing resources seems to be high but when you sell a few ships your money increases rapidly." Rayyvin comments: "In my case, the opponents bought 2 ships and then no more." Free Trader writes: "One trick I found is to make medium trade ships and sell them to the computer players. It costs 2500 gold coins, 25 wood, 10 cloth, and 7 ropes to make one, and the computer players (in my game at least) bought every ship I made for EXACTLY 4032 dollars." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.5.2 Benefits of trade Jarrah writes: "Selling on your own Stalls seems to get the best price, and it's predictable and doesn't involve the cost of ships etc." From Ravell: "When I start a game I try to get independent from the Venetians as soon as possible, the other AI's aren't much of a trading partner in the beginnings, I don't want to sail half around the world for 3 or 4 tons of some goods. But once I'm settled well and have a steady income in my own population, trade is becoming a good way to meet your neighbors and get a little salt or spice and sell some tobacco or silk, not much though but it increases the diplomatic bar with each visit. I don't think trade can make you rich in 1503. Trade has become a very good way to visit my neighbors, have a tea and a handshake and go back to our ships again." Dobber comments: "I'll take anybody's money, and I don't sell anything that contributes to the war effort, and I set my prices high. Everything they spend to help keep their economy flourishing means there is that much less for them to spend on the war." Monopolies, from Jini: "The only way to make reliable profits with the Venetians, is to have a monopoly on a good which everybody needs. If you have occupied all tobacco islands for example, you can make quite a lot of money by selling tobacco." Bobbyrookie continues: "Ever since I was able to corner the tobacco market, trade has made me extremely wealthy. I literally own all of the tobacco growing islands now. That means the two remaining computer opponents have to go through me for tobacco. The Venetians never produce enough of anything to satisfy a population of over 1000 people. I am only friendly with one of my computer civilizations right now. Their tobacco demand is constant. So I've set up a constant trade route from one of my tobacco islands to theirs. My periodic balance now goes between 4,000 and 8,000 in the positive. My operational balance (total revenue minus total expenses, not including trade) is only about +800. That means that most of my surplus comes from trade. So trade has definitely made me rich. It only makes you rich, however, if you have a trading partner who has a constant demand for a product." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.5.3 Diplomacy Jini writes: "Making the AI your friend can become very difficult. Try this: (1) Trade with the AI player as much as possible. (2) Never sail close to his islands with armed ships. The AI is rating this as an act of aggressiveness. (3) Be an ass-kisser. There is a chat option in the diplomacy menu which also contains a 'bootlick-option'. It may be schizophrenic to talk with an AI player, but it could help. However, AI players are often capricious and you maybe don't get a military treaty even if you are trying everything. It might also depend on the player's character profile which can chosen before starting an endless game." Vorosz adds: "The 'boot licker' does have effect on AI. I have started a game with aggressive AI. Initially they would not sign a trade agreement. I then used the boot licker, and my offer of trade agreement was signed." A cautionary tale from largefry07: "My ships were passing through another guys water and he declared war on me. I will quick offer a peace treaty and paid the tribute. He signed it to and we were at peace. But I did notice that my ships still weren't out of his waters and he declared war on me again. I offered another peace treaty and he didn't take it." Ravell writes: "You can sign alliance with the AI, but only when the green bar is up high after lots of trading. Iit worked 2 times for me so far, but not always." Balou notes: "If you have a military alliance you can see all his islands - even those you haven't traveled yourself yet... great advantage." From rnettnin: "I had an alliance once, but it didn't last very long because I went to war with someone else and the other AI cancelled the alliance right away. I guess it decided I was too warlike for his taste." Largefry07 writes: "The AI player always has at least a small standing army of some kind. But when you start building up arms so will he. If you don't build up an army he won't except for the small standing army that he has." Dobber adds: "Different AI players react differently: some are very much the pacifists and are very easy to defeat, and others a little more difficult. When you start the endless game, while selecting your banners color you can take a look at the personality of each of the computer opponents and then know somewhat what to expect from each." On settling the same island as AI players, Wilfried Reiter writes: "Whether an opponent gets upset or not depends on the AI's character. Some of these comrades are friendly and have nothing against it." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.6 Pirates and Natives ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.6.1 Pirates BaldJim writes: "I am surprised to find the Pirates to be a supplier of cheap goods - especially tools. Find their home base, and sail up with no ships cannon and the white flag flying. You will see what they have for sale - no doubt stolen from some poor sucker, maybe even you. One case, I came up to pay my protection money and their base showed zero population and would take no money or assignments, but there were still goods for sale. The food seemed to come out of a never empty supply. I noticed the AI ships visiting all the time; now I know why." Svar comments: "In my experience with pirates, eliminating their base dosn't do anything. They keep sending ships even without a base. They eventually build a new base anyway." From rnettnin: "If their settlement is to close to my island, I usually destroy their port and the whole settlement disappears. Later on the pirate ship relocates a new settlement on another island." Svar writes: "I have noticed that always flying white flags on all ships will keep the pirates from attacking any ships. They will still attack soldiers close to shore so I keep my troops well inland until I need them." BaldJim comments: "If you fly the white flag at all times (only possible on unarmed ships), they will leave your ship(s) alone until the very hardest levels. If they start firing on your ship and you raise the white flag, they will take the cargo (common or not)." From vorosz: "The pirate ships are very powerful, a large battleship on its own will have a hard time with the pirate ship. I always back away from the pirates unless I have a fleet of battleships at hand to sink him or am close to my shipyard to fight and repair at the sametime. If you choose to run he does not follow much at all and is easy to lose." Dobber writes: "I had a large warship sitting at my shipyard and a pirate ship attacked it, I let it get down to orange and repaired the ship, Pirate ship was in the orange also, so I figured fully restored ship against half destroyed ship, no problem, stareted checking other things. Next thing I hear is 'You have lost a ship'. sure enough it was that ship, pirate ship was still there barely. The ship was fully loaded with cannons." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.6.2 Natives Ravell writes: "I've never seen a reason to take on a war with some natives, I prefer to get my economy straightened and live on well with the africans/indians/native americans/polynesians/mongols and the Eskimos of course... they are all good trading partners once discovered." Largefry07 writes: "They rip you off. The eskimos want 30 tons of cloth for 10 tons of lamp oil. When I looked at how much both of them cost, the cloth runs around 55 coins per ton and the oil runs around 68 coins per ton." From Svar: "I think it was an Emperor game where I found 4 Polynesian villages and could trade 100 tons of salt for about 48 tons of silk. I tried to optimize the trades but never returned home after trading 100 tons of salt with more than 49 tons of silk. I could get 9 or 10 tons of silk at each village and would just go from village to village until I ran out of salt before returning home." Depending on the location, Silk Cloth sells for just over twice the price of Salt, while Salt production is hard to balance for small populations, so one is likely to have over-production. Ravell adds: "I've found out it varies, the amount what you get for your stuff isn't always the same. I looked at their warehouse and they had 16 tons of silk and wanted 25 tons salt for it. I unloaded 10 tons and loaded 7t silk, then I unloaded another 10t salt and received 6t silk only. I waited a while till they apparently were desperate of salt, I unloaded 10t and got 8t silk in return. Today I swapped raw tobacco against medicine, not sure what natives they are (not the native americans). I received between 7-9t of medicine for 10t tobacco, not a bad deal either." From pdxdavid: "It seems the natives have things that you don't need, especially by the time you acquire the thing they want." Bobbyrookie comments: "The strange part is that they're always on an island that is good for producing what they need. The Native Americans always demand tobacco, but they're on an island that's good for producing tobacco. It doesn't make any sense. They should be producing tobacco and trading it for cloth. Instead, they are producing cloth and trading it for tobacco." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.7 Military ______________________________________________________________________________ 5.7.1 AI players' troops are stupid From Visualize.Raven: "Put a cannon on one of your ships and go with all ships near his buildings. Unload your cannon and when the enemy army come load it back quick. Your ships will kill his army easily." This trick worked in 1602 too, and allows almost any AI army to be destroyed with a handful of units. You need naval supremacy close to the enemy's island. Some enemy troops can fire back at your ships, but even if they do serious damage (which is unlikely) one can normally retreat ships relatively quickly. This technique can be ineffective when the enemy produces replacement troops very rapidly, the main enemy settlement is some distance from the coast, or you are faced with many units that stay out of cannon range (Mortars mostly). Wiles adds: "I usually use cavalry if I am going to be baiting from a more inland point, as they are a little quicker." Jini writes: "When the AI attacks my island, it always unloads its soldiers on the same spot. It attacks with only 6 soldiers and often these guys just stand around instead of attacking my market houses." Ph.B. writes: "Sometimes it seemed that he wanted to fight against me but his City Gates were closed and his troops couldn't go out. ... It was not difficult to beat him." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.2 Ground unit choice Tables of Military and Ship Data can be found in the appendices. An analysis of ground unit strengths and weaknesses, from Mr Dude: "- Musketeer - Can kill: Swordsmen Pikeman and Crew. Loses against: Lancer and Cavalry. - Pikeman - Can kill: Crew. Loses Against: Everything Else. - Lancer - Can Kill: Everything. - Cavalry - Can Kill: Everything except for the Lancer. - Archer - Can Kill: Nothing. Loses Against: Marksmen and Crossbowmen. - Crossbowmen - Can Kill: Archer. Loses Against: Marksmen. - Marksmen - Can Kill: Everything. So basically the best combination of troops would be Lancers, Cavalry and Marksmen. All ranged testing was tested on flat open ground." Balou writes: "To be honest, there's way too many military units that are of no practical use... Best (and most useful) units are: Cavalry (fast and pretty durable) and Mortars (strongest unit, destroy everything, even with the 'move a little, fire again immediately' bug removed). If the other player has lots of cavalry, include some spearmen." From Gamestar (translated by Gunter): "Anno 1503 uses the 'scissors, stone, paper' principle for the different military types: artillerists beat swordsmen, these beat lancers, who do well against the cavalry, which kills the artillery. Defeat or victory are mainly decided by the artillery. Your infantry's task is only to stop the opponents' masses which will then be shot by the catapults and mortars." From Jini: "Mortars can destroy buildings and wreak fatal havoc among enemy soldiers. The only condition is that the enemy troops stand still because Mortars fail to hit moving targets. The advantage compared with cannons is that Mortars don't need line of sight with the target, because they shoot indirectly." Vorosz writes: "You can hunt game with your ranged units to gain stars [experience] over your ranged troops. I usually hunt wolfs as I don't like them eating my game. I think it has to do with how accurate they can shoot, but seasoned troops are better fighters then fresh recruits." Balou comments: "I never noticed any improvement (I think, ranged units are pretty accurate to begin with) by raising in ranks (gaining stars)." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.3 War preparation Samstein12345 writes: "When playing easier levels, the computer will rarely instigate war on you unless you have acted first by firing on their ships, putting soldiers on their land, etc. Even if you do go to war with the AI, the computer is very easy to beat so don't worry about having a huge military and wasting all that money to keep it maintained. I don't even put one military character or ship until my economy is rolling and even then, it's not a lot. There is no actually funding for war. However, every soldier, ship, war machine, etc, that you train, you pay an upfront cost and a cost to maintain it. So after a few years, you may have spent a good deal of cash keeping your fleet of 20 (or however many you have) warships sailing. The same goes for soldiers. My strategy is to keep a few soldiers on my turf at all times plus 2 or 3 warships just if someone declares war on me unexpectedly. Then, if you know that another civilization is gearing up for war with you or you just want to conquer someone, then you start training your ships and units. This way you will always have some kind of defense, plus when you do go to war, you won't have spent lots of cash maintaining your units while they were doing nothing. Just to let you know, the AI does not go to war very often when you are playing on pretty easy levels and even if they do, they are very easy to conquer. Don't build up your military until you are a few minutes away from going to war because you don't want to pay to keep your units if they're not fighting." From dcarlb: "Why go to war in the opening stages the computer will not attack you? He may have a small settlement on you island but if you watch him: He will not expand." From Hakea: "The easiest way to play the game seems to be to spend the first few days practicing building a good strong economic engine that will pretty much run itself without too much attention (you can then re-use this in later games). Understandably, some players are not so interested in this side of things, but want to get on with the conquest. However, if you don't nail the economic side the battles will probably always be a pain." From Ravell: "Before I start a war I try to have a balance of at least 1000/turn." BaldJim writes: "I usually build the Small Fortress even if all I plan on needing is a few more scouts. There is sometimes a problem with new units getting stuck in the building. In the right frame when you click on the building, near the bottom right there is a 'Rally Place' flag. Click on it and you get a marker at the cursor on the map. Click it at a place which is a small distance from the building. The flag will appear there. After that when units complete their training, they will march out of the building to group around the flag." From AntiPenguinGun: "When I have enough goods, I take a ship fill it with wood, tools and bricks and send it with a scout and put claims on islands that are already settled to have a area of which you can attack if this colony ends up an enemies colony. I put markets over all the islands and usually don't build anything unless need be. I put a claim on all lands and have a attack point on all islands to potential enemies." Jarrah writes: "A good supply of cloth and rope is handy (to repair your own ships) and (if you're rich) even an extra dock near the enemy island can be handy for repairs. Not essential though." Ravell writes: "I secure my auto-trade routes by circling the enemies fleet with my warships and destroying his ships first before landing my troops on his land. So normal life can go on my home islands and economy stays strong." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.4 Defense From samstein12345: "At easier levels, the only real defense you need (you really don't even need it, unless you are planning to be at war often) is a wall around your main city with a few cannon towers and places to put some sharpshooters or another long-ranged unit. Make sure you have plenty of wall entrances and when you put in your gates, to leave them open so your units can get through. Remember to put a few, and only a few units on your islands that aren't your main one." Double check this when reloading a game or taking over a new city in a scenario - the computer has a habit of shutting gates. Samstein12345 continues: "At harder levels, you will need more warships and units to keep your cities and settlements safe. You may want to consider completely surrounding your main city and some other important buildings like the Cathedral and Palace. Make sure you have plenty of cannon towers and watchtowers with units in them. To guard your warehouse, surround the ocean by a wall with many cannon towers and maybe put a few warships in front of it. Once an enemy ships comes near your ocean warehouse, take the 2 or 3 ships that are in front of the warehouse and surround the ship. Now you have the advantage." AntiPenguinGun writes: "I defend my lands until I have in place enough goods to be able to wage an all out war. I have had several boats and soldiers frozen in place which happens a lot, so I suggest you keep an eye on them and when it happens kill the soldier. This helps keep the recruiting ability in flow and allow you to not have half your army frozen in place but alive and useless. The ships that freeze I sink." From Balou: "The range of towers is lower than that of 'standard' cannons or mortars (and of ships, too, I believe)... Makes towers pretty senseless." BaldJim notes: "The data I have seen gives the range of cannons as 9 and the 'service area' of the cannon towers as 9." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.5 Naval DonCorn writes: "If you want to attack another ship, press 'Stop' so it fires automatically. If you attack the other ship by hand, only one cannon will fire." From samstein12345: "On harder levels, the AI will most likely attack your ships or your warehouse that is on the ocean. Thus, put your warships in 2s or 3s, so if you are attacked, you can fight back and maybe only have 1 damaged ship." BaldJim comments: "Trying to manage ships in combat is hard to do one at a time. I discovered that they work well in the 'Line' formation. I had three warships which the pirates decided to attack periodically. I would select all three (with the 'draw the square' with the cursor thing) and click on the 'Line' formation symbol - then give them the Pirate Ship as a target. They would line up nicely and blaze away, sinking the pirate. The pirate would generally be aiming at only one of the three - which one would suffer most of the damage. The best part is that they didn't bump into each other or get in each other's way - as when I tried to direct them individually. It seems the line formation works better than the '?' / 'Regular' formation." From Ravell: "Before I attacked I tried all the different formations, they work much better than the individual single-ship order, if they're send to a hot spot in a formation they probably take out the enemies ship(s) in a safer way, without much losses." Fireball21 writes: "Your ships don't automatically attack archers or towers, they just attack other ships. You have to direct them and attack the tower or archer with the ship yourself." Pdxdavid adds: "Archers can actually sink a battleship." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.6 Economic warfare From Hakea: "I tried positioning my ships to block the exit from enemy's harbour, but the enemy seemed to be able to sail right through my ships too." From Jarrah: "Blockading a harbour just means stationing some of your ships there and sinking the enemy ships as they come to unload and load supplies. It's much easier than trying to chase ships all over the map." Pdxdavid comments: "I like to send at least three ships of medium to large size. They just park there and wait for the enemy merchant ships to come by and load/unload goods. Then blast them and sink them. Since the enemy has only one warehouse, the ships have to come there to deliver the goods from the production islands." Jarrah continues: "There two good reasons to get control of the seas - one is to cripple the enemy's economy by stopping him trading, and the other is to sink his warships and prevent him from building more." DonCorn notes: "If you destroy your enemy's ships, he'll be weakened in a few minutes. Then war is no challenge at all." Jarrah again: "Demolish the enemy's main big church quickly if it's in a vulnerable spot. Without that he can't sustain his population at the higher social levels and within a few minutes his houses all start to downgrade back again, further weakening his economy." Largefry07 comments: "Destroy stands, markets and fire brigades - never houses or churches because it's just wrong." From AntiPenguinGun: "I start my wars by taking the spice and tobacco islands of the enemies settlement. I lay claim to any other suitable islands and cover them with the markets to increase the coverage of my lands. Without the spice and tobacco the population will go down and you will already have won part of the battle. Their colonies will always have less military presence and are an easy target." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 5.7.7 Invasions From Ravell: "When I attack I always go for the main island first. Sneak in some warships close enough to his warehouse without entering his sea territories. Then I bring in some troops on the backside of his island. I attack him from both sides, but more important is to sink his ships first and destroy his shipyard and stay there and shoot it down every time he builds a new one... control of the seas is essential in this game." AntiPenguinGun writes: "I expand my markets on the enemy's mainland to cover any land they don't control in their island. I clear a huge area of trees and make a place to place all my troops to sort them out. After unloading my ships I send all of them to attack the enemy's Ship builder, the main port, and at their ships. Inactive boats I leave in the main port. " From vorosz: "You have to take over his marketplaces, just destroying his plantations does nothing for you. If you take over his marketplaces you will get some of his infrastructure that is covered by your new marketplace and not by his existing ones." Curley writes: "The problem with this is that now all of the building in it's area of control now become yours. You might think that's a good thing but consider this... You are now paying for those buildings. The computer is unbelievable inefficient in it's layout and not your finely tuned supply system is being thrown way out of balance as uncontrolled production or housing demands start showing up. This game has such a fine balance of supply and demand it does not take much to upset it. You can't even make any money from selling the buildings that you just captured. Add in that you have to haul loaded Scouts around with your army and it just isn't worth it. When you start building vast armies usually your gold plummets. When you start going to war it's a one way trip to kill off whoever and then dispose of your troops as soon as possible if you are going to keep playing." From Jarrah: "Have a few spare crew ready to put any disabled mortars or cannons back into action. If you see enemy medics try and kill them so they can't heal their wounded troops. And conversely, make sure you have some medics to heal your own troops, but keep them safe, they're easily killed." From Svar: "I just keep advancing into the enemy territory by advancing my own markets and clearing the land as I go. For some reason the enemy doesn't advance very far into my new territory so I can always retreat and heal my troops." Visualize.Raven writes: "Organize your army good and stay as far away as you can from the towers. You kill towers with mortars without losing anything. Just let him to come at you and don't run into his units and towers." AntiPenguinGun continues: "The barracks I usually send a group of cannons or mortars to destroy as soon as the attack begins. Depending on how good it's going, sometimes I leave the barracks alone so I get a good battle and only attack the barracks last to have a fun time with the enemy. Depending on how I feel, I just split the enemies land in two and occupy the middle ground. With this, and possessing the enemy's colonies for tobacco and spice, you can make demands for all the money you can get from them and make constant threats of war. You are juicing the country before occupying the people that remain." From bobbyrookie: "In order to eliminate an opponent, you are probably going to have to hand him a beat down in 3 or 4 different places before you are finally rid of him. Once you are rid of him, you'll get the victory arch, and the video will kick in. If you beat him up, and the video didn't kick in, that probably means he has erected another settlement somewhere. So now it's a search and destroy mission." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 6. CHEATING ============================================================================== Note: I have not tried these cheats myself, but these questions are frequently asked, so I have included information on the topic. Most cheats require the game to be hacked in some way. Don't complain if they make the game crash or you suddenly encounter "bugs" after using them ;-) . Subsequent game patches have tended to remove cheats, and invalidate certain hacks and trainers. This will inevitably lead to confusion about what works in what version, while old hacks may have unforeseen negative results. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6.1 What are the cheat codes? Cheat codes may require a cheat enabler to be downloaded and installed. This utility can be found here (and many other places): http://www.actiontrip.com/cheats/anno1503thenewworld.phtml . The cheat replaces the existing annoframe.dll, and enables the codes. It seems one can also hex edit annoframe.dll, replacing the string 885E0C with 909090 . It has been reported that in certain versions one simply types "mastertag" and/or "ruamzuzla" to enable most of these codes. Codes are from Knoxi and Calmiche (ignore the leading asterisks): * Ctrl + T = +5 Tools * Ctrl + H = +5 Wood * Ctrl + Z = +5 Stone * Ctrl + M = +5 Cash * Alt + P = Build Everything [hehe, where have I read _that_ before**] * Alt + F = View AI players * Alt + C = Cloth * Alt + Z = Brick * Alt + K = Clothing * Alt + N = Food * Alt + L = Lamp Oil * Alt + G = Spices * Alt + A = Alcohol * Alt + R = Tobacco * Alt + W = Iron Ore * Shift + C = Cheat menu A further unconfirmed variation (may only apply to early German versions, or may have been confused with 1602), involves placing your cursor over a warehouse, entering a number between 1 and 53 and pressing enter, then pressing "+" to add 10t of a commodity to the warehouse stock. The number determines the commodity, with "1" being Iron Ore. Not all the numbers are used. [** That joke will only make sense to those who have tried to use Anno 1602 cheats ;-) .] ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6.2 How do I edit a game? The following has been anonymously posted on various cheat sites: Open the "bgruppen.dat" file in /1503AD/DATA in a text editor. Examine lines under "Bedarfsguter". You will find blocks of data starting with "Id". The values for Id refer to the German name of products - translations of names are available here: http://www.dorokult.de/anno1503/glossar/ . Edit the appropriate "Preis" value to increase the price charged for that item. For example, editing the "ALKOHOL" Preis value, increases the amount you charge your population to drink Alcohol in your Taverns. It is suggested that by increasing this to 900, your population will happily buy your liquor and increase your finances accordingly. *WARNING*: Some _interesting_ side-effects of editing bgruppen.dat have been reported. Many people complain that whenever they build a new ship, it is sold immediately, rendering the game effectively unplayable. Other problems are more subtle, as Kay Bennemann writes: "Changing the bgruppen.dat might look like a good way to make the game easier, but it can have a variety of strange effects since the changes you make affect the balancing. These effects range from strange AI behavior to complete crashes or lockups, so it's not a good idea to play around with the data in the bgruppen.dat unless you want to mess up the whole game." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6.3 Are there any trainers? There are some floating around the internet. I won't give specific urls, because many trainers are specific to one patched version only (whether their authors realised that or not). Since at the time of writing, the game is being patched every 1-2 months, there is a reasonable chance that a given trainer will be for an old game version, and will not work. Big Bad Jim warns: "I have come across a Trainer for unlimited money. Please be careful with this, as I have not been able to get it to work and it has caused my game to crash." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6.4 Can I skip campaign scenarios without completing them? There are two ways to do this: (1) Download another player's save game, saved just before the end of the scenario - files can be found here: http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/ (for information about how to copy save games, see Can I copy or rename save games? below). (2) Use a level unlocking utility such as one available here: http://www.icecheat.de/ - I have no idea if that works in non-German versions, but since I am told all versions are the same, it should do. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 6.5 Are there other gameplay 'cheats'? These are game features which can be exploited to make the game easier under certain circumstances. Whether these are cheats or legitimate tactics is rather in the eye of the beholder. Hatchmoe suggests: "Save the game in the beginning, then explore every island. After you have found an island worth settling, load the save game and settle on the island..." There are a lot of other 'features' which are regarded as bugs, and which might change in future patches, so I don't intend to list them all at the moment. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 7. CUSTOM SCENARIOS ============================================================================== 7.1 Is there a campaign or scenario editor? Officially, at the time of writing, no. An editor is likely to be included in a future expansion (likely to appear towards the end of 2003). There is a fan produced editor, written in German by Dieter Robert Kohler. One can find information about it in German at http://www.hjbomanns.de/ANNOTools/DRKScenes.htm . From drkohler [17 May]: "I have been asked to publish the program. I have neither forwarded the program nor the source (Borland Delphi) up to now due to several reasons, the key reason being that the software is, indeed, rather difficult to use. At this time, I can generate simple maps only - you can download examples 'DiePrinzessin' of what is do-able [available from previous url]. I am still busy working on the software - I have just rewritten it, actually, due to the fact that it was so complex I no longer could add additional stuff without losing track of what was going on." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 7.2 How do I install scenarios? Sunflowers has started making scenarios available from http://www.anno1503.com/ - these include English installation instructions and scenario descriptions. Should these not install, Kay Bennemann suggests two possible problems: "(a) You downloaded the wrong language version. (b) There's something wrong with the registry entries of the game in your Windows Registry." In the last case, reinstallation of the game is suggested. Five unofficial custom scenarios are also available for download here: http://www.hjbomanns.de/ANNOTools/DRKScenes.htm (this includes the GigaPol - an island world with many large islands on which to build huge cities...). Installation text for those scenarios is in German, however Maul provides some simple translations of important buttons: - Hiermit wird das [scenario] auf Deinem System installiert = This application will install [scenario] on your system - Zuruck = Back - Weiter = Next - Abbrechen = Cancel - Fortsetzen = Continue with installation - Setup beenden = Cancel installation - Anno 1503 starten = Launch Anno 1503 on exit - Fertig = Exit ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== 8. TECHNICAL ISSUES ============================================================================== Many current technical issues will (hopefully) be fixed by forthcoming patches, and Sunflowers/EA are still actively supporting the game, so I do not see a need for this section to be particularly extensive at the moment. Many technical FAQs are covered here: http://www.anno1503.de/english/support/ . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.1 How many bugs are there? Sir Henry maintained an unofficial bug list, a translation of which can be found here: http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/gamedata/bugs/bugs.html . The non-German release version (released with patch 1.04.02) contained more than 70 known or suspected bugs, most of which are either rare (only affect certain players sometimes) or just annoying (rather than fatal). The original German version has many more, including fundamental errors, such as many of the second (play) CDs being corrupted, and a map graphics issue affecting ATI cards. The later issues were thought to be fixed by patches prior to other versions being released. Of course, not *everything* that works differently to the way you expect is a bug: It's not a "bug", it's a "feature"... erm maybe ;-) . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.2 How do I take a screenshot? Press Shift + S. The image will be stored as a Targa (.TGA) format file, named screen001.tga (where 001 increments with each screenshot), in the main Anno 1503 directory on your hard drive. Targa format is not supported by all image editing packages. Ravell warns: "Move them to another folder because when you start a new game the numbering of the screenshots will start at screen001 again, so if there's any older pictures they'll be overwritten." The total number of screenshots in one session seems to be limited to about 30. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.3 Can I stop the statue video playing? Ravell writes: "Copy the folders music and videos from CD2 to the 1503 folder [on your hard drive]. Open up the video folder and rename 1002.bik to _1002.bik . The video won't play anymore (it can't play it from the folder AND its not loading it from the CD) ...BUT... the screen will go black for a second." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.4 Can I play without the CD? Tom Sailor writes: "You can copy the /music and the /video files [directories] to your hard disk [copy the directories into the main game directory on your hard drive]. Then you'll only need the CD to start the game." Bomi notes that this requires at least patch 1.01. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.5 Why aren't sounds played at non-normal game speed? From Kay Bennemann: "It's intentional that you only hear the ambient sound (swords clashing, people working, etc.) when you play in 'normal' game speed - if you choose different speeds, this sound is muted. And with good reason: While testing the sound playing at different game speeds we decided that it can become quite a nuisance, especially with the 'fast' setting." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.6 Can I turn auto-save off? Yes, from Lothark: "Change the attribute for the file lastgame.sav to read only." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.7 Can I play save-games from other language versions? Yes, there are no restrictions. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 8.8 Can I copy or rename save games? Save games are stored in the folder [Drive/.../Anno 1503]/SaveGame/[Profile] where "Drive/.../Anno 1503" is wherever you choose to install the game, and "Profile" is the name of the player. Files ending in .sav are saved games. "User.dat" appears to contain user preferences. All files except lastgame.sav use 'GUID' names (long hexadecimal strings). In single player mode, these can be renamed to something else and the game will still recognise them. Bomi notes that multiplayer games are expected to need the original GUID name to function. Bomi wrote a tool (in German) to manage save games. It is available here: http://www.bomibomanns.de/ANNOTools/ . ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ============================================================================== APPENDICES ============================================================================== ______________________________________________________________________________ A. Building and Industry Data ______________________________________________________________________________ The following tables are based primarily on my own observations, augmented by a .pdf document called "Production Overview", http://www.anno1503.de/english/home/show_news.php4?id=353&caller=archive , data from Wargamerit ( http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/ ) and Andj Pianto ( http://www.a-pianto.ch/Englisch/e_Anno1503/e_Index.htm ). The first table shows the requirements for different civilization levels. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ -------------+----+----+----+----+---- |Pion|Sett|Citi|Merc|Aris Requirement |eers|lers|zens|hant|toct -------------+----+----+----+----+---- GOODS Cloth | U | E | E | E | Clothes | | | | | E Food | E | E | E | E | E Jewelry | | | | | * Lamp Oil | | | ~U | ~E | Leather | E | E | | | Salt | * | ? | ? | * | Silk Cloth | | | ~U | ~E | Spice | | ^U | ^E | E | Tobacco | | ^U | ^E | E | Wine | | | | | * -------------+----+----+----+----+---- BUILDINGS Chapel | U | E | | | Church | | U | E | E | E Pavilion | | | | | E Public Baths | | | U | E | E School | | U | E | | Tavern | U | E | E | E | Theatre | | | | | E University | | | U | E | -------------+----+----+----+----+---- Notes: - Aristocrat houses become available once you have 1900 Merchants. Merchant houses don't upgrade in the way other houses do. - E = Essential in order to keep the population happy. - U = Required to upgrade to next level. Such goods can still be sold at this civilization level. - * = Bonus item. Not essential, but makes population happier and potentially increases profits. - ^ = Requires Spice or Tobacco. Both may be sold. - ~ = Requires either Lamp Oil or Silk Cloth. Both can be supplied for greater profit. - ? = Probably not required. However, it may be needed in small volumes to upgrade from Settlers to Citizens. For example, if Settlers are only ever offered Spices (never any Tobacco or Salt) they will not upgrade to Citizens. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Maximum population per house is as follows. Upon upgrading, population will slowly rise until the house is full. If the residents become dissatisfied the number will decline. If it declines to the maximum level of the previous house type, the house will downgrade. Except in the case of Aristocrats, where it will simply collapse. LadyH notes: "Merchant [and Settler/Citizen] houses can fall down when plague is coming and there is no doctor nearby. Then they don't downgrade, they fall down like Aristocrats houses do": - Pioneer = 8 - Settler = 15 - Citizen = 28 - Merchant = 42 - Aristocrat = 30 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The table below shows the materials required to upgrade houses. House upgrade cannot occur if materials are not available: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Upgrade Tools Wood Bricks ---------------------------------------- Pioneer to Settler 1 4 0 Settler to Citizen 2 2 4 Citizen to Merchant 5 5 4 ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ In the following table, operating costs are expressed as Active/Passive. Service areas are included for all buildings, shown as the number of squares radius from the edge of the building: This figure may vary by 1, because buildings do not create perfect circles. In some cases the building's service area has no discernable in-game meaning. For details of research requirements, please see the Research Trees in a later appendix. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ --------------------+-------------+--+--+--+--+----+------+---+---- | To Build |Opera-| |Serv | |To|Wo|Br|Ma| | ting |Siz|-ice Name |Requires |ol|od|ik|rb|Cost| Cost |-e |Area --------------------+-------------+--+--+--+--+----+------+---+---- Armorer |80 Settlers | 5| 8| 2| | 300| 30/15|3x3| 19 Aristocrat House |1900 Merchant|12|10|20| 5| 0| |4x4| 23 Bakery |200 Citizens | 5| 3| 5| | 300| 15/10|3x3| 15 Bow Maker |Research | 6| 4| 4| | 500| 30/15|3x3| 15 Brewery |360 Settlers | 3| 4| 4| | 300| 20/10|3x3| 15 Butcher's Shop |50 Settlers | 4| 5| 4| | 350| 22/12|3x3| 15 Cannon Foundry |Research |10|10|10| | 800| |4x4| 23 Cannon Tower |120 Settlers | 3| 8| 8| | 200| |1x1| 9 Cathedral |600 Aristocrt|40|30|60|30|12k.| 80|8x6| 22 Cattle Farm |50 Settlers | 5| 8| 4| | 300| 15/10|3x3| 3 Charcoal Burner |600 Citizens | 2| 2| | | 100| 12/5|3x3| 23 Chapel |125 Pioneers | 6|10| | | 700| 15|3x4| 19 Church |240 Settlers | 9|15|20| |1600| 50|7x6| 21 City Wall |50 Settlers | | | 1| | 50| |1x1| Cloth/Leather Stand | | 1| 1| | | 50| 5|1x1| 4 Clothing Stand |400 Citizens | 1| 1| | | 50| 5|1x1| 4 Cobblestone Square |120 Citizens | | | 4| | 40| |2x2| Cobblestone Street |50 Settlers | | | 1| | 10| |1x1| Cotton Plantation |120 Citizens | 5| 2| 4| | 380| 20/10|3x3| 3 Dirt Road | | | | | | 5| |1x1| Distillery |200 Citizens | 5| 6| 1| | 300| 20/5|3x3| 15 District Court |Research | 4| 3| 4| | 400| 40|3x3| 23 Doctor |Research | 4| 8| 5| | 500| 20|4x4| 23 Dye Works |400 Citizens | 7| 2| 8| | 500| 40/25|3x4| 15 Fire Brigade |Research | 4| 6| | | 200| 15|3x3| 23 Fisherman's Hut | | 2| 6| | | 180| 20/12|3x4| 6 Flower Bed |1500 Merchant| | | | | 20| |2x2| 1 Food/Salt Stand | | 1| 1| | | 50| 5|1x1| 4 Forester's Hut | | 2| | | | 150| 12/4|3x3| 4 Gallows |400 Citizens | 5| 9| | | 500| |3x3| 23 Gem Mine |750 Merchants| 8| 4|10| |1500| 80/30|3x4| Gold Mine |750 Merchants|15|12| 4| |1500| 50/20|3x4| Goldsmith |750 Merchants| 6| 7|11| | 300| 40/20|3x3| 23 Grain Farm |200 Citizens | 2| 3| 3| | 200| 10/5|3x3| 2 Grand Bridge |250 Merchants| | | 3| | 500| |1x?| Gunsmith |Research | 6| 3| 8| | 500| 40/15|3x4| 15 Hemp Plantation |25 Settlers | 2| 5| | | 200| 18/8|3x3| 3 Hops Farm |360 Settlers | 5| 3| 4| | 250| 18/10|3x3| 3 House | | | 3| | | | |4x4| 23 Hunting Lodge | | 1| 3| | | 140| 20/8|3x3| 7 Indigo Plantation |400 Citizens | 3| 2| 5| | 200| 40/20|3x3| 3 Jewelry Stand |1900 Merchant| 1| | 1| | 80| 5|1x1| 4 Lamp Oil Stand |600 Citizens | 1| 1| | | 50| 5|1x1| 4 Large City Gate |200 Settlers | | 2|10| | 200| |3x3| Large Fortress |250 Merchants|20|15|30| |2500| |8x8| 21 Large Ore Mine |Research | 8|20|10| |1700| 65/30|3x4| Large Ore Smelter |1100 Citizens|10|10|20| |1000| 75/32|3x3| 23 Large Shipyard |Research |20|20|18| |2000| |8x8| 21 Large Tavern |250 Merchants| 8|10| 8| | 900| 50|4x4| 23 Large Weapon Smith |Research | 5| 5| 3| | 300| 35/17|3x3| 23 Library |Research |20|12|24|12|2000| 100|5x6| 22 Marble Quarry |400 Citizens | 3| 3| | | 400| |3x4| Marble Stonemason |400 Citizens | 5| 4|10| | 300| 18|3x3| 11 Main Market Place P*| | 3| 7| | | 250| 10|3x4| 23 Main Market Place S*|~50 Settlers | 5|12| | | 500| 15|3x4| 23 Main Market Place C*|~220 Citizens|10| 8|12| | 800| 30|3x4| 23 Main Palace |1000 Aristoct|40|15|50|20|15k.| 100|7x4| 23 Marketplace 1 |25 Settlers | | | 1| | 10| |1x1| Marketplace 2 |25 Settlers | | | 1| | 10| |1x1| Medicinal Herb Plant|Research | 3| 5| 5| | 200| 15/5|3x3| 2 Medium Fortress |120 Citizens |10|15|20| |1000| |5x5| 22 Mill |200 Citizens | 4| 3| 3| | 300| 16/9|3x3| 16 Monument |Reward | | | | | | |2x2| Obelisk |500 Aristocrt| 3| | 5| |1000| |2x2| Ore Mine |80 Settlers | 5|15| | |1200| 40/15|3x4| Ornamental Entry |1500 Merchant| | | | | 20| |1x1| Ornamental Fence |Reward | | | | | 20| |1x1| Ornamental Hedge |1500 Merchant| | | | | 20| |1x1| Ornamental Square(s)|Reward | | | 1| | 10| |1x1| Ornamental Tree(s) |Reward | | | | | 20| |1x1| Ornamental Well |500 Aristocrt| 5| |10| |1000| |2x2| 20 Palace Arch** |1000 Aristoct|30|10|30|15|3000| 20|2x4| 24 Palace Corner** |1000 Aristoct|30|10|30|15|5000| 30|4x4| 23 Palace Wing** |1000 Aristoct|30|10|30|15|5000| 30|2x4| 24 Pavilion |1500 Merchant|10| 5| 6| 3| 600| 40|3x3| 3 Public Baths |600 Citizens |20|15|25|10|1600| 90|6x5| 22 Quarry |50 Settlers | 3| 3| | | 300| |3x4| Ropemaker |25 Settlers | 3| 5| | | 400| 16/6|3x3| 15 Salt Mine |125 Pioneers | 5|15| | | 700| 25/10|3x4| Salt Works |125 Pioneers | 5| 5| | | 400| 30/12|3x4| 15 School |50 Settlers | 5| 8| 6| | 400| 10|4x4| 22 Sheep Farm | | 2| 4| | | 220| 10/5|3x3| 4 Silk Plantation |400 Citizens | 5| 5| 6| | 300| 35/17|3x3| 3 Small City Gate |50 Settlers | | 1| 6| | 150| |1x1| Small Farm | | 2| 4| | | 250| 20/8|3x3| 2 Small Fortress |30 Pioneers |10|20| | | 600| |4x4| 23 Small Ore Smelter |80 Settlers |10| 4|10| | 800| 40/20|3x3| 23 Small Shipyard |25 Settlers |15|18|12| |1200| |5x5| 21 Small Tavern |80 Pioneers | 5| 9| | | 500| 20|3x4| 19 Small Weapon Smithy |Research | 4| 4| 2| | 200| 40/15|3x3| 11 Smith |80 Settlers | 3| 4| 8| | 500| 25/15|3x3| 23 Spice Plantation |80 Settlers | 4| 5| 8| | 390| 40/20|3x3| 3 Stonemason |50 Settlers | 3| 3| | | 250| 18/7|3x4| 11 Sugarcane Plantation|200 Citizens | 4| 4| 4| | 310| 18/12|3x3| 3 Tailor's Shop |1100 Citizens| 5| 5| 5| | 500| 30/15|3x3| 19 Tannery | | 2| 5| | | 300| 9/5|3x3| 15 Theater |1500 Merchant|35|15|30|20|2500| 200|6x7| 22 Tobacco Plantation |80 Settlers | 4| 5| 8| | 350| 30/15|3x3| 3 Tobacco Factory |80 Settlers | 4| 2| 6| | 300| 16/8|3x3| 15 Tobacco/Spice Stand |80 Settlers | 1| 1| | | 50| 5|1x1| 4 Trapper |1100 Citizen | 5| 6| | | 100| 20/5|3x3| 11 Triumphal Arch |Citizen and defeat another player | | University |400 Citizens |25|30|32| |2500| 150|8x8| 21 Wall Access |50 Settlers | | | 1| | 70| |1x1| War Machine Builder |Research | 8| 6| 2| | 500| |4x4| 15 Warehouse | | 5|12| | | 350| ***|4x4| 22 Watchtower |50 Settlers | 2| 8| 5| | 100| |1x1| 9 Weaver's Hut | | 3| 4| | | 300| 15/10|3x3| 15 Weaving Mill |Research | 4| 2| 8| | 500| 30/10|3x3| 15 Well |Research | 4| 2| 3| | 100| |1x1| 4 Well (Deep) |Research | 5| 2| 3| | 150| |1x1| 4 Whaler |600 Citizens | 5| 5| 5| | 500| 20/10|4x4| 60 Whale Oil Factory |600 Citizens | 5| 5| 5| | 500| 20/10|3x3| 19 Wine Stand |1900 Merchant| 1| 1| | | 80| 5|1x1| 4 Winery |750 Merchants| 5| 5| 8| | 400| 45/20|3x3| 3 --------------------+-------------+--+--+--+--+----+------+---+---- Name |Requires |To|Wo|Br|Ma|Cost|Opera-|Siz|Serv | |ol|od|ik|rb| | ting |-e |-ice | To Build | Cost | |Area --------------------+-------------+--+--+--+--+----+------+---+---- Notes: - All fields (including forest) cost 5 coins per square to plant. - * = Main Market Place P is that built when the colony has Pioneer level civilisation (or no population at all). S indicates Settler level, C is for Citizen or higher. - ** = With 1000 Aristocrats and 1900+ total population, 4 palace extensions are available. At 3000 Aristocrats another 4 appear, at 5000 further parts appear. - *** = Warehouse operating cost also depends on civilization level: 15 for Pioneer, 25 for Settler, 35 if higher. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The next table shows what new buildings can be constructed at each level (the information is the same as in the previous table): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Prerequisite New Building ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- None Cloth/Leather Stand, Dirt Road, Fisherman's Hut, Food/Salt Stand, Forester's Hut, House, Hunting Lodge, Main Market Place, Sheep Farm, Small Farm, Tannery, Warehouse, Weaver's Hut. 30 Pioneers Small Fortress. 80 Pioneers Small Tavern. 125 Pioneers Chapel, Salt Mine, Salt Works. 25 Settlers Hemp Plantation, Marketplace 1, Marketplace 2, Ropemaker, Small Shipyard. 50 Settlers Butcher's Shop, Cattle Farm, City Wall, Cobblestone Street, Quarry, School, Small City Gate, Stonemason, Wall Access, Watchtower. 80 Settlers Armorer, Ore Mine, Small Ore Smelter, Smith, Spice Plantation, Tobacco Platation, Tobacco Factory, Tobacco/ Spice Stand. 120 Settlers Cannon Tower. 200 Settlers Large City Gate. 240 Settlers Church. 360 Settlers Brewery, Hops Farm. 120 Citizens Cobblestone Square, Cotton Plantation, Medium Fortress. 200 Citizens Bakery, Distillery, Grain Farm, Mill, Sugarcane Plantation. 400 Citizens Clothing Stand, Dye Works, Gallows, Indigo Plantation, Marble Quarry, Marble Stonemason, Silk Plantation, University. 600 Citizens Charcoal Burner, Lamp Oil Stand, Public Baths, Whaler, Whale Oil Factory. 1100 Citizens Large Ore Smelter, Tailor's Shop, Trapper. 250 Merchants Grand Bridge, Large Fortress, Large Tavern. 750 Merchants Gem Mine, Gold Mine, Goldsmith, Winery. 1500 Merchants Flower Bed, Ornamental Entry, Ornmanetal Hedge, Pavilion, Theater. 1900 Merchants Aristocrat House, Jewelry Stand, Wine Stand. 500 Aristocrats Obelisk, Ornamental Well. 600 Aristocrats Cathedral. 1000 Aristocrats Main Palace, first 4 Palace extensions. 3000 Aristocrats Next 4 Palace extensions. 5000 Aristocrats All Palace extensions. Research Bow Maker, Cannon Foundry, District Court, Doctor, Fire Brigade, Gunsmith, Large Ore Mine, Large Weapon Smithy, Large Shipyard, Library, Medicinal Herb Plantation, Small Weapon Smithy, War Machine Builder, Weaving Mill, Wells. Rewards Monument, Ornamental Fence, Ornamental Squares, Ornamental Trees. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Below is a list of alternative names. These highlight some of the inconsistencies between names used in the game: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Name Alternative ------------------------------------------------------------------- City Wall Wall. Distillery Rum Distillery. Fisherman's Hut Fishing Hut. Fishering Hut Fisherman's Hut. Grand Bridge Ornamental Bridge, Pomp Bridge. Herbs Plantation Medicinal Herb Plantation. House Pioneer House. Large Ore Smelter Ore Smelter. Medicinal Herb Plantation Herbs Plantation. Ore Mine Small Ore Mine. Ore Smelter Small Ore Smelter OR Large Ore Smelter. Ornamental Bridge Grand Bridge, Pomp Bridge. Pioneer House House. Pomp Bridge Grand Bridge, Ornamental Bridge. Rum Distillery Distillery. Small Ore Mine Ore Mine. Small Ore Smelter Ore Smelter. Small Tavern Tavern. Smith Toolsmith, Tool Maker. Sugar Plantation Sugarcane Plantation. Sugarcane Plantation Sugar Plantation. Tavern Small Tavern. Tobacco Factory Tobacco Manufactory. Tobacco Manufactory Tobacco Factory. Tool Maker Smith, Toolsmith. Toolsmith Smith, Tool Maker. Wall City Wall. Whale Oil Factory Whale Oil Manufactory. Whale Oil Manufactory Whale Oil Factory. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ B. Production Links ______________________________________________________________________________ These diagrams are based on chains found in the manual. I've re-arranged them slightly, to make links clearer, and added omissions such as ships and troops. Buildings in the chain are shown as straight text. Fields, materials and goods are shown in square brackets. Buildings or units shown in normal brackets indicate the product is also used to supply part of a different chain - the other part of the chain is shown elsewhere on the diagram. Curley brackets ("{}") indicate a ground unit trained at a fortress. Goods can be taken/stored via a Main Market or Warehouse at any stage in the chain, unless indicated with a tilda ("~"). *** Indicates materials are primarily stored for general construction work and house upgrading. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ALCOHOL CHAINS [Sugarcane Field]~>Sugarcane Plantation->[Sugarcane]->Distillery-. | [Hop Field]~~~~~~>Hop Farm------>[Hops]------>Brewery---->-. v | | [Potatoe Field]~~~~~~~~~~~~~>Small Farm---->------------->-+-<---' | [Alcohol] | v Tavern BRICK CHAIN [Mountain]~~>Quarry~~>Stonemason-->[Bricks]-->(Main Market)*** CLOTH AND CLOTHING CHAINS [Cotton Field]~>Cotton Plantation->-. +->[Wool]->-+------------. [Grassland]~~~~~>Sheep Farm------->-' | | v v Weaver's Hut Weaving Mill | | '--->-+-<----' | v [Cloth] | v [White furred animals]~~>Trapper-->[Furs]--->-. .-<-+->Cloth/Leather Stand | | +->(Large Shipyard) | | '->(Small Shipyard) | | v v Tailor's Shop | v [Clothing] | v Clothing Stand Trappers also skin Leopards. FOOD CHAINS [Grain Field]~>Grain farm->[Grain]->Mill->[Flour]->Bakery->-. | [Grassland]~>Cattle Farm->[Cattle]->Butcher's Shop-------->-+ | [Sea]~~~~~~~~>Fisherman's Hut-------->-. [Food] | | [Grassland]~~~~~~~~>Small Farm------->-+-->---[Food]----. | | | | [Wild Game]~~~~~~>Hunting Lodge------>-' v v Food/Salt Stand IRON AND CHARCOAL CHAINS .~>Small Ore Mine->-. [Iron Ore Deposit]~>~+ +->[Iron Ore]->-. '~>Large Ore Mine->-' | v (Wood) (Wood)->Charcoal Burner->(Charcoal)->+->-------. .---<-+->-. | | | | | | v v v v v | Large Ore Small Ore | Smelter Smelter | | | | '->-+-<-----<-' | | | v | [Iron] | | v v (Cannon <----------+->(Armorer) Foundry) +->(Gunsmith) +->(Large Weapon Smith) +->(Small Weapon Smith) '->(Toolmaker) JEWELRY CHAIN [Gold Deposit]~~>Gold Mine-->[Gold]->-. | [Gem Deposit]~>Gem Mine->[Gems]->-. | | | v v Goldsmith->[Jewelry]->Jewelry Stand LAMP OIL CHAIN (Wood) (Rope) | | v v Whaler Building->Whaler Ship->-. +->[Whale Blubber]->Whale Oil Factory->-. [Whales]~~~~>~' | v [Lamp Oil] | v Lamp Oil Stand LEATHER CHAIN [Wild Game]~>Hunting Lodge->[Hides]->Tannery->[Leather]->-+->(Armorer) | v Cloth/Leather Stand MARBLE CHAIN [Marble Deposit]~~>Marble Quarry~~>Marble Stonemason-->(Main Market)*** MEDICINAL HERB CHAIN [Medicinal Herb Garden]~>Medicinal Herb Plantation->[Medicinal Herbs]->-. | v Doctor ROPE CHAIN [Hemp Field]~>Hemp Plantation->[Hemp]->Ropemaker->[Rope] | v +->(Bow Maker) +->(Large Shipyard) +->(Small Shipyard) +->(War Machine Maker) '->(Whaler) SALT CHAIN [Salt Deposit]~>Salt Mine->[Rock Salt]->Salt Works->[Salt]->Food/Salt Stand SHIP CHAIN .->Small Shipyard->+->{Small Trading Vessel} (Cloth)->. | +->{Medium Trading Vessel} | | +->{Small Warship} (Wood)-->+->+ +->{Medium Warship} | | '->(Ship Repairs) (Rope)-->' | '->Large Shipyard->+->{Small Trading Vessel} +->{Medium Trading Vessel} +->{Large Trading Vessel} +->{Small Warship} +->{Medium Warship} +->{Large Warship} '->(Ship Repairs) SILK CLOTH CHAIN [Indigo Field]~>Indigo Plantation->[Dyes]->-. | [Silk Field]~>Silk Plantation->[Silk]->-. | | | v v Dye Works->[Silk Cloth]->Clothing Stand SPICE CHAIN [Spice Field]~~>Spice Plantation-->[Spices]-->Tobacco/Spice Stand TOBACCO CHAIN [Tobacco Field]~>Tobacco Plantation->[Tobacco]->Tobacco Factory->-. | v [Tobacco Products] | v Tobacco/Spice Stand TOOLS CHAIN (Wood)->-. +->Toolmaker->[Tools]->+->(Main Market)*** (Iron)->-' '->{Scout} WEAPONS CHAINS (Tools)-->{Scout} (Leather)->Armorer------------>[Armor]--------------->-+-->{Swordsman} ^ | ^ | v | .->+->Small Weapons Smithy->[Swords]---->-+->]|[->-' | | | | v '-->-+->--. ^ | | v | .->[Axes]-->]|[->--->]|[->{Cavalryman} (Iron)-->+----->Large Weapons Smithy->+ | v | ^ '->[Lances]-]|[->--->{Lancer} v | v | (Wood) .---->{Musketeer} | | .->[Muskets]----->+ | v | '->{Marksman} +->--->Gunsmith->+->[Ship Cannon] | '->Cannon Foundry->+->{Cannon} ^ | (Charcoal)->-' '->{Mortar} (Wood)-->-+->{Pikemam} | .->[Bow]->{Archer} +->-->Bow Maker->+ | ^ '->[Crossbow]->{Crossbowman} v | | (Rope) | | | v .->{Catapult} '---->War Machine Maker->+ '->{Seige Tower} WINE CHAIN [Vineyard]~~>Winery-->[Wine]-->Wine Stand WOOD CHAIN [Forest]~>Forester's Hut->[Wood]->+->(Main Market)*** +->(Bow Maker) +->(Charcoal Burner) +->(Gunsmith) +->(Large Shipyard) +->(Large Weapon Smithy) +->{Pikeman} +->(Small Ore Smelter) +->(Small Shipyard) +->(Toolmaker) +->(War Machine Maker) '->(Whaler) ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ C. Production Efficiency ______________________________________________________________________________ The following tables are based on a .pdf document called "Production Overview", http://www.anno1503.de/english/home/show_news.php4?id=353&caller=archive , with several adjustments made to reflect inaccuracies in those tables. Cost data is based on that contained in the Building and Industry Data appendix. "Consumption" is the consumption in tons of raw materials per ton end product. "Prod Time" is the time per ton of end product, in seconds. "Cost per unit" was erroneously labeled "Cost per Minute" in the original. "Base price" is the "internal game base price in gold per ton". Hakea notes: "It is for the Price we get, but the basic Stall items get modifiers applied. Things like Spice have three levels (0,5,10) plus additional bonuses depending on where your main island is. For example, Spice fetches a bit more on North Islands (two +5 bonuses), etc." All times are based on normal game speed. Kay Bennemann writes: "To give you an example of how to read the data [for a Bakery]: the value 0.98 means that the Bakery consumes 0.98 tons of raw material (flour) to produce 1 ton of bread. The 'production time'-value represents the time (in seconds) needed to produce 1 ton of the final good. The bakery consumes 0.98 tons of raw material to produce 1 ton of bread, which takes 10 seconds." Narcissus X queries: "If I understand correctly then, a Sheep Farm will consume 15.29 tons of grass to produce 1 ton of wool in 45 seconds." Kay replies: "As far as I understand it - yes. Sheep consume LOTS of grass." Kay provides a translation of parts of the original method: "To measure productivity a statistic continually keeps track of the amount of goods produced by the workshop in question over the last five to ten minutes. The mean value is then calculated and taken for the average amount of goods produced per minute. This amount is then compared to a value set by the programmers. The following rule applies whenever productivity lies under this value, e.g. the mean value is lower than the reference value: Effectiveness = Mean Value / Reference Value; otherwise: Effectiveness = 100%. This method's limitations are best shown using the hunter, whose reference value lies at 0.6 units of food per minute. Hunters well supplied with game can also produce 1.5 - 2 units or more of food per minute. This would represent an effectiveness of 250 - 333%, yet 100% is all that is shown. On the other hand, some workshops, such as tobacco plantations, can never reach 100% as their reference values are set just a tiny bit higher than the best possible productivity value. This therefore means that the productivity display is not particularly expressive in the 90 to 100% range. In the end, these values mean nothing more than that the workshop is producing approximately as much as the game designers expected it to. However, if productivity lies markedly under this value there is obviously a problem which you should do something about." A test environment was created where other factors affecting the balance sheet were removed (sales to population, new construction, etc). Production times were related to the time taken for operating costs to be deducted. This method discounts the differences created by playing at different game speeds. This has one limitation: "The measurement of time in terms of balance period doesn't work for game stands with very small balance amounts (less than 50 pieces of gold). Since operating costs are deducted in many small steps rounding errors may occur in the players favor, resulting in less gold actually being deducted from the players account than theoretically required. In as much as these rounding errors (on the order of around 10 pieces of gold) themselves fall into the realm of very small balances this can result in misinterpretations." "Although using more workshops increases the universality of the results, it doesn't do anything towards reducing errors in measurement, which increase with each new workshop added. When testing agricultural workshops (farms, etc.) it is especially important to make sure that the test phase runs significantly longer than the re-growth period of the produce in question. This is the only way to take variations in harvest yields into account in the mean values." Tests were typically run until 50-100 units had been produced by a workshop, after which a comparison of starting and finishing balance and stock were made. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------------+-----------+-----+--+-----+-----+--------+----+----+-----+---- | | |Pr| Raw | Raw | |Max |Prod| | | |Con- |od|Mater|Mater| |Out-|uctn|Cost |Base Farm/ |Raw |sump-|Ti|-ial |Cost | |put | T/ | / |Pri- Industry |Material |tion |me|T/Min|/Min |Product |100%|Min |Unit | ce ---------------+-----------+-----+--+-----+-----+--------+----+----+-----+---- Armorer { |Leather | 0.94|40| 1.41|30.75|Armor |1.35|1.5 |59.69| 65 { |Iron [3] | 0.94|40| 1.41|28.8 | Bakery |Flour | 0.98|10| 5.86|67.01|Food |6 |6 |13.67| 45 Bow Maker { |Wood | 0.94|30| 1.68| 8.42|Bows |1.8 |2 |34.97| 60 { |Rope | 0.47|30| 0.94|31.51| Bow Maker { |Wood | 0.94|30| 1.68| 8.42|Crossbow|1.8 |2 |34.97| 80 { |Rope | 0.47|30| 0.94|31.51| Brewery |Hops | ?| ?| | |Alcohol |2 |2 |26.07| 50 Butcher's Shop |Cattle | 1.33|20| 3.98|25.99|Food |3 |3 |16 | 45 Cattle Farm |Field | 5.86|25|13.48| |Cattle |2 |2.3 | 6.52| 15 Charcoal Burner|Wood | 0.78|10| 4.69|23.44|Charcoal|6 |6 | 5.91| 9 Cotton Plantatn|Cotton Fld | 5.86|30| | |Cotton |2 |2.1 | 9.52| 21 Distillery |Sugar | 1.88|30| 3.75|34.09|Alcohol |2 |2 |27.05| 50 Dye Works { |Silk | 1.09|20| 3.28|76.56|Silk Cth|3 |3 |50.15| 85 { |Indigo Tree| 0.47|20| 1.41|33.89| Fisherman |Fish | 4.04|15| 3.23| |Food |0.85|0.8 |25 | 45 Forester's Hut |Forest | 2.25|18| | |Wood |2.05|2.4 | 5 | 8 Gem Mine | | | | |30 |Gems |2 |2 |40 | 52 Gold Mine | | | | |30 |Gold |2 |2 |25 | 50 Goldsmith { |Gold | 0.94|30| 1.88|46.66|Jewelry |2 |2 |80.94|190 { |Gems | 0.94|30| 1.88|75 | Grain Farm |Grain Field| 2.19| 7| 4.2 | |Grain |1.8 |1.92| 5.21| 12 Gunsmith { |Wood | 1.48|20| 4.15|20.76|Muskets |2.6 |3 |36.12| 90 { |Iron [3] | 0.94|20| 2.81|57.59| Gunsmith { |Wood | 1.48|20| 4.15|20.76|Cannon |2.6 |3 |36.12|110 { |Iron [3] | 0.94|20| 2.81|57.59| Hemp Plantation|Hemp Field | 3.4 |30| | |Hemp |1 |2.08| 8.65| 32 Hop Farm |Hop Field | 4.45|30| | |Hops |2 |2.1 | 8.57| 19 Hunt Lodge [5] |Wild Game | 1.34| 6| 2.74| |Food |0.6 |2.05| 9.76| 45 Hunt Lodge [5] |Wild Game | 1.34|10| 2.74| |Hides |0.6 |2.05| 9.76| 41 Indigo Plantatn|Indigo Tree| 6.4 |39| | |Dyes |1.5 |1.66|24.1 | 36 Large Ore Mine | | |~7| | |Ore |9 |8.97| 7.24| 15 Large Ore Sm { |Ore | 1.05|~8| 8.44|61.13|Iron |8 |8 |20.48| 45 { |Charcoal | 0.59|~8| 4.69|27.69| Marble Stonemas|Raw Marble | 1.03|12| | |Marble |1.8 |1.5 |12 | 22 Medic Herb Plnt|Med Herb Fd| 1.37| 5| | |Med Herb|2 |3.05| 4.92| 30 Mill |Grain | 1.17|20| 3.52|18.31|Flour |3 |3 |11.44| 24 Ore Mine | | | | | |Ore |5 |5 | 8 | 15 Ore Smelter { |Ore | 1.23|15| 4.92|39.38|Iron |4 |4 |23.65| 45 { |Wood | 0.76|15| 3.05|15.23| Ropemaker [4] |Hemp | 2.34|50| 2.81|24.34|Rope |1.2 |1.2 |33.62| 99 Salt Mine | | |10| | |RockSalt|6 |6 | 4.17| 8 Salt Works |Rock Salt | 1.02|10| 6.09|25.39|Salt |6 |6 | 9.23| 30 Sheep Farm |Grass |15.29|45| | |Wool |1.1 |1.4 | 7.14| 21 Silk Plantation|Silk Field | 6.86|39| | |Silk |1.5 |1.5 |23.33| 33 Small Farm |Field |13.67|70| 9.84| |Food |0.7 |0.72|27.78| 45 Small Farm |Potatoes |10 |20| | |Alcohol |0.56|0.55|36.36| 50 Small Weapon Sm|Iron [3] | 0.59|30| 1.41|24 |Swords |1.8 |2 |32 | 65 Smith [2] { |Iron | 0.88|28| 1.88|44.35|Tools |2 |2.14|33.46| 60 { |Wood | 0.22|28| 0.47| 2.34| Smith [3] { |Iron | 0.88|28| 1.88|38.39|Tools |2 |2.14|30.68| 60 { |Wood | 0.22|28| 0.47| 2.34| Spice Plantatn |Spice Field| 6.09|40| | |Spices |1.4 |1.4 |28.57| 60 Stonemason |Raw Stone | 0.49| 6| | |Bricks |3 |3.3 | 5.45| 12 Sugarcane Plant|Sugcane Fld| 4.8 |30| | |Sugar |2 |1.98| 9.09| 22 Tailor [1] { |Cloth | 0.94|20| 2.81|63.7 |Clothes |3 |3 |32.77|130 { |Furs | 0.23|20| 0.7 | 4.61| Tannery |Hides | 1.69|36| 2.81|27.44|Leather |1.5 |1.67|21.86| 70 Tobacco Factory|Tobacco | 1.99|30| 3.98|62.91|Tob Pdts|2 |2 |39.46| 75 Tobacco Plantat|Tobacco Fld| 4.81|30| | |Tobacco |2 |1.9 |15.79| 25 Trapper [5] | | 0.1 |10| | |Furs |1 |3.05| 6.56| 30 Weapon Smith { |Wood | 0.94|40| 1.26| 6.28|Axes |1.34|1.5 |46.72| 63 { |Iron [3] | 0.94|40| 1.41|28.8 | Weapon Smith { |Wood | 0.94|40| 1.26| 6.32|Lances |1.34|1.5 |46.74| 60 { |Iron [3] | 0.94|40| 1.41|28.8 | Weaver's Hut |Wool | 1.85|43| 2.58|18.42|Cloth |1.4 |1.4 |23.95| 65 Weaver's Hut |Cotton | 1.85|43| 2.58|24.55|Cloth |1.4 |1.4 |28.35| 65 Weaving Mill |Wool | 1.33|20| 3.98|28.46|Cloth |3 |3 |19.49| 65 Weaving Mill |Cotton | 1.33|20| 3.98|37.94|Cloth |3 |3 |22.65| 65 Whaler |Whales | 0.94|10| | |Whale Bl|6 |6 | 3.33| 13 Whale Oil Facty|Whale Blubr| 0.94|20| 2.81| 9.38|Lamp Oil|3 |3 | 9.79| 85 Winery |Vineyard | 5.94|39| | |Wine |1.5 |1.6 |28.13| 70 ---------------+-----------+-----+--+-----+-----+--------+----+----+-----+---- Farm/ |Raw |Con- |Pr| Raw | Raw |Product |Max |Prod|Cost |Base Industry |Material |sump-|od|Mater|Mater| |Out |uctn| / |Cost | |tion |Ti|-ial |Cost | | T/ | at | Min | / | | |me|T/Min|/Min | |Min |100%| |Unit ---------------+-----------+-----+--+-----+-----+--------+----+----+-----+---- Notes: [1] = Figures assume use of Cotton Production. [2] = Figures assume use of Small Iron Works. [3] = Figures assume use of Large Iron Works. [4] = Assumes 3 Hemp Plantations to 2 Ropemakers. [5] = Output variable. Depends how far hunter needs to go to find wild animal. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The second table shows land and workforce requirements for primary industries (farms, plantations, mines). Growth per second is the time from harvest until a new crop is available. "No. Fields" is the number of fields that can be placed within the farm's service area; "Max Effec Field" is the maximum number of fields that are used. "Max Trnspt" is the maximum weight each worker can carry, in tons. "Time" is the time needed to harvest one field, in seconds. "Workers" more accurately means figures, so a worker on a cattle farm is actually the cow figure. On most farms these figures are humans. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ------------------+---------+---+---+-----+--+---+----- | |Gro|No.| Max |Wo|Max| |Field |wth|Fie|Effec|rk|Trn| Farm |Type |/s |lds|Field|er|spt|Time ------------------+---------+---+---+-----+--+---+----- Cattle Farm |Meadow |204| 52|45.8 | 3| 2 | 7 Cotton Plantation |Cotton |270| 52|52 | 2| 3 | 6 Fisherman | | | | | 1| 3 | 11 Forester's Hut |Forest |480| 84|43.2 | 2| 1 | 4 Grain Farm |Grain |310| 36|21.7 | 1| 3 | 9 Hemp Plantation |Hemp |330| 52|38.9 | 2| 3 | 11 Hop Farm |Hops |310| 52|48.3 | 2| 3 | 9 Hunting Lodge | | | | | 1| 1 | 4 Indigo Plantation |Indigo Tr|300| 52|52 | 2| 3 | 7 Marble Stonemason |Marble Qy| 20| 1| 1 | 1| 1 | 10 Medicin Herb Plant|Med Herbs|300| 34|20.85| 1| 3 | 8 Sheep Farm |Meadow |204| 88|72.8 | 5| 3 | 9 Silk Plantation |Silk |300| 52|52 | 2| 3 | 6 Small Farm |Meadow |204| 34|33.5 | 3| 3 | 11 Small Farm |Potato |272| 34|24.9 | 1| 3 | 7 Spice Plantation |Spice |330| 49|46.9 | 2| 3 | 8 Stonemason |Quarry | 20| 1| 1 | 1| 1 | 10 Sugarcane Plantatn|Sugarcane|330| 52|52.3 | 2| 1 | 6 Tobacco Plantation|Tobacco |330| 52|50.2 | 2| 3 | 11 Trapper | | | | | 1| 1 | 4 Whaler | | | | | 1|20 | 0.5 Winery |Vines |330| 49|49 | 2| 3 | 7 ------------------+---------+---+---+-----+--+---+----- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ The final table in this series shows the number of people each industry can support. In most cases, these values assume 'combines'. Combines attempt to balance the provision of industries in a way that tends to make them operate efficiently. Usually they provide 1 processing building per 2 raw material suppliers. For example, a Cattle Combine, is 2 Cattle Farms and a Butcher, because a Butcher processes Cattle into Food at about twice the speed that one Cattle Farm produces Cattle. Suggested combines are: - Cattle = 2 Cattle Farm + Butcher. - Charcoal = 2 Forester's Hut + Charcoal Burner. - Clothing = Trapper + 4 Weaving Mill + 4 Tailor's Shop [Values are based on Cotton for Cloth, so I assume 8 Cotton Plantations are also needed, but that is not stated]. - Cotton/Weaving Mill = 2 Cotton Plantation + Weaving Mill. - Grain = 4 Grain Farm + 2 Mill + Bakery [Dragonling suggests the optimum (double) combine is 7 Grain Farms + 4 Windmills + 2 Bakery]. - Hop = 2 Hop Farm + Brewery. - Jewelry = Gold Mine + Gem Mine + Goldsmith. - Lamp Oil = 1 Whaler + 2 Whale Oil Factories. - Marble = Marble Stonemason + Marble Quarry. - Ore (Small) = Ore Mine + Ore Smelter + 2 Forester's Hut. - Ore (Large) = Large Ore Mine + Large Ore Smelter + Charcoal Burner. - Rope = 3 Hemp Plantation + 2 Ropemakers [1:1 ratio also suggested]. - Salt = Salt Mine + Salt Works. - Sheep/Weaver Hut = 2 Sheep Farm + Weaver's Hut. - Sheep/Weaving Mill = 3 Sheep Farm + Weaving Mill. - Silk = 2 Silk Plantation + Indigo Plantation + Dye Works [LadyH's suggestion (for a double combine) is 5 Silk Farms + 2 Indigo Farms + 2 Dye Works]. - Stonemason = 2 Stonemason + Quarry. - Sugarcane = 2 Sugarcane Plantation + Distillery. - Tannery = Figures are for one Tannery. 3 Hunting Lodges + 2 Tanneries is an optimal combine, however often settlements will reach Citizen levels and never need more than one Tannery, so I have left the figures as one Tannery. Hunting Lodge output is variable, so use the values with caution. - Tobacco = 2 Tobacco Plantation + Tobacco Factory. Aristocrats are widely considered not to require Cloth, just Clothing. The original table included Cloth figures for Aristocrats, so I have left them in for now. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- |Pion|Sett|Citi|Merc|Aris Product/Industry |eers|lers|zens|hant|toct ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- ALCOHOL Small Farm (100% Potatoes) | 138| 110| 110| 138| Hop Combine | 500| 400| 400| 500| Sugarcane Combine | 500| 400| 400| 500| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- CLOTH Sheep/Weaver Hut Combine | 349| 279| 279| 465| 215 Sheep/Weaving Mill Combine | 750| 600| 600|1000| 462 Cotton/Weaving Mill Combine | 750| 600| 600|1000| 462 ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- CLOTHES Clothing Combine | | | | |1716 Tailor's Shop | | | | | 429 ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- FOOD Hunting Lodge | 205| 228| 228| 228| 228 Fisherman | 80| 89| 89| 89| 89 Small Farm (100% Food) | 72| 80| 80| 80| 80 Cattle Combine | 300| 333| 333| 333| 333 Grain Combine | 600| 667| 667| 667| 667 ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- JEWELRY Jewelry Combine | | | | | 667 ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- LAMP OIL Whale Combine | | |3000|3000| Whale Oil Factory | | |1500|1500| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- LEATHER Tannery | 417| 556| | | ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- SALT Salt Combine |3000|3000|2400|2400| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- SILK Silk Combine | | | 750| 500| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- SPICES Spice Plantation | | 350| 350| 350| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- TOBACCO Tobacco Combine | | 500| 500| 500| ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- WINE Winery | | | | | 320 ----------------------------+----+----+----+----+---- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Stratgan analysed food production using the figures in the tables above: ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------------+----+-----+---------- |Cost|T/min|Cost/T/Min ---------------+----+-----+---------- Hunting Lodge | 20 | 2.05| 9.76 Fisherman | 20 | 0.8 | 25 Small Farm | 20 | 0.72| 27.78 ---------------+----+-----+---------- Cattle Farm(2) | 15 | - | - Butcher(1) | 22 | 3 | - Combo | 52 | 3 | 17.3 ---------------+----+-----+---------- Grain Farm(4)+ | 10 | - | - Windmill(2)+ | 16 | - | - Bakery(1) | 15 | 6 | - Combo | 87 | 6 | 14.5 ---------------+----+-----+---------- Notes: "You will notice that the cost/minute of the .pdf file is not the same as mine for some items. These are the butchers/windmill/bakery costs. From what I have gathered, they include the price of raw materials in their base cost/minute, which 'could' be sold on the market instead, which considerably raises the price tag. I have factored that out of my equations, using only operational cost/tons produced. That should help explain the discrepancies." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------+----+-----+---------- |Cost|T/Min|Cost/T/Min ----------------+----+-----+---------- Cattle Farm(9)+ | Butcher(5) | 179| 15 | 11.9 ----------------+----+-----+---------- Grain Farm(11)+ | Windmill(6)+ | Bakery(3) | 251| 18 | 13.9 ----------------+----+-----+---------- Notes on Optimal Combos: "As per the production table .pdf files, I have calculated different combo's to maximise efficiency. Since cattle farms produce 2.3 cattle per farm, and butchers eat 3.98 cattle per shop, with the standard ration, you basically produce 4.6 cattle, and the butcher eats 3.98 of them. The leftovers are put in the warehouse. Instead, using those values, make 9 cattle farms (20.7 cattle/minute), and 5 butcher shops (eats 19.9 cattle/minute), thus, you save 1 cattle farm's worth of operational cost, hence the much lower cost of this combo, while still putting in 0.8 cattle/minute in your stock. For grain, its the same. Using the .pdf file as a reference, I put 11 grain farms x 1.92 grain = 21.12 grain/minute, 6x windmills x 3.52 grain consumption/minute = 21.12 (exact amount needed). Because the conversion ratio of a bakery is nearly the same as the output of a pair of windmills (5.86 consumption for the bakery, vs 6 tons of production from 2 windmills), I use 3x bakery x 5.86 = 17.58 grain/minute consumed, with .42 t/grain/minute going in reserves." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Stratgan continues: "It is important to compare another factor when deciding on which food chain to produce... space, or 'fields' used. The following table list how many field each food production chain uses, and their averages (I had to manually count all the squares for each type of building... took a while): ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------+------+----------+----------- |Fields|Production|#Fields/Ton ----------------+------+----------+----------- Fisherman | 9 | 0.8 | 11.3 Hunting Lodge | 221 | 2.05 | 107.8 Small Farm | 45 | 0.72 | 62.5 Cattle Combo I | 131 | 3 | 43.7 Cattle Combo II | 594 | 15 | 39.6 Grain Combo I | 207 | 6 | 34.5 Grain Combo II | 576 | 18 | 32 ----------------+------+----------+----------- Note: "The fishermen take only 9 spaces on the mainland, their fields being water! Thus, although they are incredibly expensive to maintain for their production, they can be a life saver when you have limited space on an island. The Cattle combo II is the best cost wise, but it takes up more fields than the grain combo. This can be especially important when strapped for space on a small island." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ D. Military and Ship Data ______________________________________________________________________________ The following tables are based on information found at http://digilander.libero.it/anno1503/ and http://www.a- pianto.ch/Englisch/e_Anno1503/e_Index.htm . Some of this information exists in the in-game help, but the statistics seem to have been mixed up - for example, Swordsmen are listed as "Damage: 1 Square, Range: 8", which does no sound particularly logical. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ----------------+----+----+---+----+-----------------+---- |Dam-|Arm |Ran| To Build |Upkp Unit |age |-or |-ge|Cost|Materials |Cost ----------------+----+----+---+----+-----------------+---- Archer | 6 | 35 | 9 | 150|Bow | 2 Cannon | 40 | 55 | 9 | 350|Iron + 5 Charcoal| 5 Catapult | 55 | 75 |10 | 300|12 Wood + Rope | 5 Cavalryman | 8 | 90 | 1 | 200|Axe + Armor | 3 Crossbowman | 7 | 40 | 9 | 200|Crosbow | 2 Lancer | 17 | 80 | 1 | 150|Lance + Armor | 2 Marksman | 20 | 45 | 7 | 220|Musket | 2 Medic | 9 | 25 | 1 | 350| | 5 Mortar | 60 |110 |10 | 400|Iron + 5 Charcoal| 5 Musketeer | 14 |100 | 1 | 150|Sword + Musket | 4 Pikeman | 6 | 50 | 1 | 90|Wood | 2 Scout | 3 | 25 | 1 | 50|Tools | 1 Seige Tower | 0 |250 | 5 | 700|12 Wood | 10 Swordsman | 8 | 60 | 1 | 150|Sword + Armor | 2 War Machine Crew| 3 | 30 | 1 | 100| | 1 ----------------+----+----+---+----+-----------------+---- Damage indicates offensive strength. "UpKp Cost" is the upkeep or operating cost. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ---------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+---- |Car | |Can-|Spe-| To Build |Upkp Ship |-go |Unit|non | ed |Cost|Wood|Clth|Rope|Cost ---------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+---- Large Trading | 8 | 3 | 6 | 40 |3500| 35 | 15 | 10 | 15 Large Warship | 4 | 12 | 12 | 27 |4000| 40 | 15 | 10 | 25 Medium Trading | 6 | 2 | 4 | 35 |2500| 25 | 10 | 7 | 15 Medium Warship | 3 | 8 | 8 | 25 |2500| 25 | 10 | 7 | 15 Small Trading | 4 | 2 | 0 | 30 |1500| 15 | 8 | 5 | 10 Small Warship | 2 | 6 | 6 | 30 |1500| 15 | 8 | 5 | 10 ---------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+---- Small Pirate | 4 | 4 | 6 | ? | | | | | Large Pirate | 8 | 8 | 8 | ? | | | | | ---------------+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+----+---- "Cargo" indicates number of cargo holds. Each hold can contain up to 50t of one item. "Unit" shows the number of ground units than can be carried. War machines with an assigned crew count as a single unit. One Scout (including mule) likewise counts as a single unit. "Cannon" is the maximum number that may be mounted. Upkeep costs of all ships are included under military expenditure. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ______________________________________________________________________________ E. Research Trees ______________________________________________________________________________ The diagrams below are based on in-game screens. The first line contains the name of the research, which is also often the name of the thing the research produces. The second line gives the Knowledge Point (K) and Gold coin (G) requirement. Where the research requires a University, this is indicated *U*. The third line contains the name of any building that this research makes available, or a short description of what the research does if this is not obvious from its name. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ WEAPON PRODUCTION .--------------------. .-------------------. .-----------. |Swords |--->|Catapult |--->|Siege Tower| | 7K/ 100G | | 15K/ 200G | | 5K/ 100G | |Small Weapons Smithy| |War Machine Builder| '-----------' '--------------------' '-------------------' | | | \ .--------------------. .----------. | '---->|Lances |--->|Cavalry | v | 10K/ 200G | | 7K/ 100G| .----------. |Large Weapons Smithy| '----------' |Bow | '--------------------' | 8K/ 120G| |Bow Maker | '----------' | v .---------------------. .---------------. .----------. |Hardened Arrowheads |--->|Feathered Shaft|--->|Crossbow | | 10K/ ???G | | 10K/ 250G | | 15K/ 150G| |Increase arrow damage| |Increase Range | '----------' '---------------------' '---------------' | | v v .-----------------. .------------------------. .------------|Range of Crossbow| |Flaming Arrows | / | 20K/ 150G | | 20K/ 250G | | '-----------------' |Archers attack buildings| v '------------------------' .----------. .----------------------. |Musket |--->|Wheellock | | 30K/ 500G| | 40K/ 500G | |Gunsmith | |Increase musket damage| '----------' '----------------------' MILITARY ENHANCEMENTS .--------------. .-----------------------. |Armor Infantry|--->|Stronger Armor Infantry| | 25K/ 100G | | 50K/ 300G | '--------------' '-----------------------' .-------------. .----------------------. |Armor Cavalry|--->|Stronger Armor Cavalry| | 25K/ 100G | | 50K/ 300G | '-------------' '----------------------' .--------------. .---------------------. |Cannon |--->|Standardized Caliber | | 60K/1000G *U*| | 70K/1500G *U* | |Cannon Foundry| |Increase Cannon Range| '--------------' '---------------------' | v .----------------------. .--------------. .----------------------. |Explosive Projectiles |--->|Mortar |--->|Mortar Powder | | 80K/1800G *U* | | 80K/1200G *U*| |100K/2000G *U* | |Increase Cannon Damage| '--------------' |Increases Mortar Range| '----------------------' '----------------------' NAVAL .-----------. .--------------. .--------------. |Ship Cannon|--->|Medium Warship|--->|Large Warship | | 18K/ 300G | | 40K/ 600G | | 60K/1000G | '-----------' '--------------' |Large Shipyard| '--------------' .---------------------. .------------------. .-----------------. |Medium Trading Vessel|--->|Large Trading Ship|--->|Strengthened Hull| | 25K/ 400G | | 50K/ 800G | | 70K/1000G *U* | '---------------------' |Large Shipyard | '-----------------' '------------------' Large Shipyard may be gained from either trading or war ship research. CIVILIAN .----------. .--------------. |Well |--->|Deep Well | | 5K/ 50G| | 20K/ 200G *U*| '----------' '--------------' | v .------------. |Fire Brigade| | 5K/ 50G | '------------' .------------. |Weaving Mill| | 20K/ 300G | '------------' .------------. |Stone Bridge| | 30K/ 200G | '------------' .-------------------------. .--------------. |Doctor |--->|Fast Healing | | 50K/ 200G | | 60K/ 500G *U*| |Medicinal Herb Plantation| '--------------' '-------------------------' .------------------------------. |Library | | 60K/2000G *U* | |Adds 10 to Max Research Points| '------------------------------' .--------------. |Large Ore Mine| | 40K/ 500G | '--------------' .---------------. |District Court | | 30K/ 200G *U* | |Not implemented| '---------------' ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ [End]