History
Welcome to History!
A community dedicated to sharing and discussing fascinating historical facts from all periods and regions.
Rules:
-
Post about history. Ask a question about the past, share a link to an article about something historical, or talk about something related to history that interests you. Discussion is encouraged.
-
No memes. No ads. No promos. No politics. No spam.
-
No porn.
-
We like facts and reliable sources here. While sources like Quora/Reddit/Wikipedia can be great tools for quick searches, we do not allow such user-generated content as primary source. What’s wrong with Wikipedia?
NOTE: Personal attacks and insults will not be tolerated. Stick to talking about the historical topic at hand in your comments. Insults and personal attacks will get you an immediate ban.
view the rest of the comments
It is pretty difficult at first! Like many other city builders there's a sort of, objectively-correct build order that you have to follow, and I find that building a trading post as soon as possible is pretty essential because you need to replenish on tools.
I'll go into the other stuff I've learned in the spoiler section if anyone is interested.
spoiler
Most territories give you access to Furs or Salt which are goods you don't need (salt is used in tanning later on) so it's best to just sell these at a trading post. If you have a route selling these or wooden products (machine parts / shields), you don't face any money problems.Since raising an army is impossible without iron, and very hard to do early on in the game, i believe the game expects you to utilise mercenaries quite early on. This is pretty easy to do when you have one of the afforementioned trade routes - you don't need as many mercs as you expect.
So to clarify, the build order is basically:
Some tips from previous updates that I think still stand:
There are many things i still haven't grasped with manor lords - beer economy and the farms (i don't get why the workers do nothing for winter, it's a bad system to have to reassign them all). I revisit it for about 4 days every 6-12 months.