Beginner's Guide: Difference between revisions
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*<sup>1</sup>Preferred [[Complex Food]] = [[Complex Food]] they gain [[Resolve]] from. | *<sup>1</sup>Preferred [[Complex Food]] = [[Complex Food]] they gain [[Resolve]] from. | ||
{| class="wikitable sortable mw-collapsible" | |||
|+ Table ofComplex Food Preference and Resolve Bonus | |||
!rowspan=2| Species !!colspan=6| Complex foods | |||
|- | |||
! {{rl|Jerky|med}} | |||
! {{rl|Porridge|med}} | |||
! {{rl|Skewers|med}} | |||
! {{rl|Biscuits|med}} | |||
! {{rl|Pie|med}} | |||
! {{rl|Pickled Goods|med}} | |||
|- | |||
! {{Species link|Beavers|med}} | |||
| — | |||
| — | |||
| — | |||
| +5 | |||
| — | |||
| +8 | |||
|- | |||
! {{Species link|Foxes|med}} | |||
| — | |||
| +4 | |||
| +5 | |||
| — | |||
| — | |||
| +8 | |||
|- | |||
! {{Species link|Harpies|med}} | |||
| +4 | |||
| — | |||
| — | |||
| +5 | |||
| +5 | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
! {{Species link|Humans|med}} | |||
| — | |||
| +4 | |||
| — | |||
| +5 | |||
| +5 | |||
| — | |||
|- | |||
! {{Species link|Lizards|med}} | |||
| +5 | |||
| — | |||
| +4 | |||
| — | |||
| +5 | |||
| +8 | |||
|} | |||
== Break Time == | == Break Time == |
Revision as of 14:34, 4 January 2024
Greetings, Viceroy!
Newcomers are encouraged to read this article before exploring the main articles and the rest of the information on this wiki. There are deep systems and mechanics that compound and can feel complicated quickly. So let's start with the absolute basics.
If you have just started the game for the first time and want to get everything out of the first tutorial with clear, step-by-step instructions and explanations that will jump-start your understanding of the game without overwhelming you with depth, head over to the Tutorial Walkthrough and come back to this after you finish the first mission.
Winning and Losing
A mission is won when the entire blue Reputation Bar is filled.
A mission is lost when the entire red Queen's Impatience Bar is filled, or when all villagers leave or die.
Reputation Points
- Main Article: Reputation
Gaining a Reputation point lowers the Queen's Impatience, granting you more time to complete the mission. Reputation, Impatience and Hostility are linked. When you gain Reputation, your Impatience goes down, and your Hostility will go up. You can earn Reputation Points several ways:
- Completing Orders: Each completed Order grants 1 Reputation point. This will likely be the source of the first Reputation point you earn each mission.
- Solving Glade Events: Your choices when solving Glade Events may reward you with Reputation. You will earn more from solving events in Dangerous and Forbidden Glades than you will from events in Small Glades.
- Villagers Resolve: Once a species' Resolve reaches the Resolve Threshold (indicated by a blue mark around their portrait), they will start to generate Reputation. Larger populations generate more Reputation per minute. With time, the villagers will become accustomed to their living conditions, raising their threshold and requiring more complex needs to be satisfied before they will again generate Reputation (This is called Decadence). This will likely be your primary source of Reputation in most of your missions.
- Earning Perks and Cornerstones: Some Cornerstones grant Reputation when you accomplish something, like trading a certain amount.
- Forest Mysteries: Some Modifiers and Forest Mysteries grant extra Reputation when you, for example, solve a Dangerous or Forbidden Glade Event while the modifier is active, for example, during a particular season.
It is Important to understand you cannot rely on only orders to win the game, you have to work towards stocking up on things that will make your Villagers happy at the end of the game to "push" you through those last few Reputation Points.
Food
Villagers need to eat, or their Resolve drops with every Hunger stack (each time they went on break and could not eat), and eventually they starve to death or leave.
Food Preference: Villagers eat 1 unit of any prefered*1 Complex Food per break. If the preferred Complex Food is not available, they will eat a random unit of Raw Food instead. Viceroys can force their Villagers to eat a specific Complex Food every break to stretch food stores. This can be done via Consumption Control.
"Food" includes:
- Raw Food - Mushrooms| Roots| Vegetables| Meat| Eggs| Insects| Berries
- Harvested from camps or farms
- Can be turned into Complex Food, which multiplies it.
- Does not add additional Resolve
Ideally, Viceroys want to rush making Complex Food to stretch Raw Food and use those workers collecting Raw Food in other departments instead. This can most easily done by making Porridge , using Lua error in Module:ResourceLink at line 41: No resource found with name: Wheat. Please see the template documentation for how to use the parameters. and Rainwater, or any mix of ingredients valid for that recipe. Jerky is another easy starter Complex Food to make.
Once you start making Complex Food, turn off all raw food consumption and force your Villagers to eat that Complex Food.
- 1Preferred Complex Food = Complex Food they gain Resolve from.
Species | Complex foods | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Jerky | Porridge | Skewers | Biscuits | Pie | Pickled Goods | |
Beavers | — | — | — | +5 | — | +8 |
Foxes | — | +4 | +5 | — | — | +8 |
Harpies | +4 | — | — | +5 | +5 | — |
Humans | — | +4 | — | +5 | +5 | — |
Lizards | +5 | — | +4 | — | +5 | +8 |
Break Time
Every few minutes, Vilalgers will go on break to eat, and fulfill a Complex Need.
Orders
- Main article: Orders
There are two types of Orders, but you will only unlock the 2nd type later in the game as you unlock more Upgrades in the Citadel. These are:
- Typical Orders
- Timed Orders
Typical Orders will reward you with 1 Reputation Point each, and some sort of rewards like Goods, Villagers or Building blueprints. These can be completed in any timeframe.
Timed Orders are just that - You will have only a certain amount of time to complete these orders. It is thus advised to only open the Orders tab starting year II when you're better established so you can position yourself to complete them in time. The rewards for these Orders are often very high, and could include Cornerstones and Perks, as well as Delivery Lines for Goods.
Glade Events
- Main Article: Glade Events
Glade Events are diverse challenges that are found in the Glades uncovered by cutting through The Forest. These can be divided into 3 categories:
Small Glades may contain:
- A Small Glade Event
- A Dangerous Glade Event
- A Small or Medium Abandoned Cache
- Ruins of some sort.
- A Forbidden Glade Event
- A Medium or Large Abandoned Cache
- Ruins of some sort.
When opening a Dangerous or Forbidden Glade, it is essential you click on the event and check the timer and consequences of not completing the event in time. All have negative effects if you leave them alone for too long. Remember to take into account how long it will take your villagers to solve the challenge! Building a Small Warehouse next to the event will help your Villagers haul goods to and fro faster.
- The Cursed Royal Woodlands is a biome haunted by ghosts that make challenging requests of you. If you fulfill their requests, they reward you with opened caches.
- Seals can be found in the Sealed Forest Biome, always in a Dangerous [[Glade], they create Plagues!
Seasonal Conditions
- Main Article: Seasons
The three seasons are displayed in the top middle of the screen, to the right of the time controls. You'll face fewer beneficial and more and increasingly dangerous modifiers at higher difficulties.
There are 3 season, namely:
- Drizzle - 04:00
- Drizzle Water rains during this time.
- Positive Forest Mysteries are active.
- Sowing takes place on Farms, yield chances are calculated now.
- Clearance - 04:00
- Clearance Water rains during this time.
- Harvesting takes place now. Place Small Warehouses near farms to minimize hauling time.
- Storm - 02:00
- Storm Water rains during this time.
- Negative Forest Mysteries are now active.
- Plowing takes place on Farms, +10% yield chances.
Negative modifiers often reduce Resolve based on the level of the Hostility of the Forest. These can be avoided entirely as long as the modifier's conditions are met or as long as you manage Hostility so that it doesn't activate in the first place.
Beneficial conditions are only active during the drizzle period while harmful ones only activate during the storm.
Hostility of the Forest
- Main Article: Hostility
Unsurprisingly, the Forest hates being cut into. Your Villagers feel its Hostility towards them, and this will lower their Resolve. The longer you linger in a settlement, the higher your Hostility will become. The higher the Queen's Impatience, the lower your Hostility will become.
Hostility levels trigger negative Forest Mysteries during the Storm Season. The higher your Hostility, the more will trigger.
At the top center of the game window, Hostility is displayed as a number. For every 100 points, the Hostility level increases. Hover over the big red to see what is influencing your Hostility level.
Hostility is affected by the following:
- ↑ Increases for every year passed.
- ↑ Increases for every villager in your settlement.
- ↑ Increases much more if your villagers are assigned as woodcutters in Woodcutters' Camp - Take Woodcutters off furing the Storm
- ↑ Increases for every opened glade, with a smaller increase from Small Glades than from Dangerous and Forbidden Glades.
- ↑ Increases from the negative effects of Glade Events you are working on, sometimes by as much as 500 (5 whole levels)
- ↓ Decreases from building more Hearths.
- ↓ Decreases from removing Woodcutters from the Woodcutters' camps.
- ↓ Decreases from completing certain Glade Events that decreases Hostility.
- ↓ Decreases from Killing off Villagers.
- ↓ Decreases from driving up the Queen's Impatience.
- ↓ Decreases from assigning a Fox to the Hearth
Resolve
- Main Article: Resolve
A villager's Resolve represents their willingness to stay in the village. Below the species' portrait is one or sometimes two numbers. Always shown is the current Resolve value. If their Resolve is changing, a second number will show the Resolve value that the species will end up with if conditions stay the same. Even though villagers have individual values for resolve, only the average shown in the Species UI affects gameplay.
Villagers Leaving from Low Resolve
When the Storm arrives or when interacting with Glade Events, villagers face significant penalties to their Resolve. If their Resolve reaches or falls below zero, a random villager of that species will leave the settlement. Once it reaches zero, a red timer indicator will sweep around their portrait, indicating the time until a villager leaves. This timer repeats: If Resolve stays at or below zero long enough, more villagers will leave. When each villager leaves, the Queen's Impatience also increases by a fraction of a point. Resolve mismanagement can snowball into a complete mission loss if, for example, the villagers who leave were gathering food or fuel, were providing critical functions like keeping the Hearth fueled, or were solving a Glade Event with a powerful negative effect.
It takes time for species' Resolve to drop to zero due to the Storm and other penalties, and then the red timer has to finish sweeping around their portrait before a villager leaves. Therefore, if your villagers start the Storm with high Resolve, you may have enough time even after the Storm starts to make any quick adjustments to keep your villagers from leaving before the end of the Storm.
Gaining Reputation from High Resolve
As mentioned above in the introduction to Reputation, if a species' Resolve exceeds a certain threshold, the Viceroy gradually earns Reputation. The amount earned depends on the species, population, Perks and Cornerstones, and more. When a species' Resolve is earning you Reputation, their portrait lights up light blue.
Bonuses and Penalties to Resolve
The following affect Resolve:
- Increases slightly when species' need for Shelter is satisfied
- Increases when species' need for their Species-specific Housing is satisfied
- Increases when their need for Complex Food is satisfied
- Increases significantly when their need for Services is satisfied
- Increases or decreases from certain Perks and Cornerstones
- Increases for one species when they are favored by the Viceroy (but keep reading)
- Decreases for the other two species when the other is favored by the Viceroy
- Decreases significantly from negative Forest Mysteries that are active during the Storm
- Decreases significantly from being hungry (when they go to rest at the Hearth and there is no food available), especially because this effect stacks for every missed opportunity to eat
- Decreases from Glade Events that have temporary penalties while they are being worked on
- Decreases from Glade Events that were not solved in time and cause a permanent penalty
- Decreases massively when the Hearth runs out of fuel, since it compounds with losing the increases gained from your satisfying their needs for Shelter or their Species-specific Housing when their houses go cold
Difficulty
- Main Article: Difficulty
Difficulty | Blightrot? | Forest Mysteries | Hostility Scaling | Other Scaling | XP per Win | Reward | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Max | Multiplier | ||||||
Settler | No |
|
6 | 1x |
|
30 xp | 21 Food Stockpiles |
Pioneer | No |
|
9 | 1.5x |
|
70 xp | 42 Food Stockpiles |
Veteran | Yes |
|
16 | 2x |
|
140 xp | 70 Food Stockpiles |
Viceroy | Yes |
|
31 | 3x |
|
175 xp | 91 Food Stockpiles |
Standard Opening (a.k.a. "the Meta")
Consider the following for your first year of your first mission. After that, you will need to adapt to the Forest Modifiers, Cornerstones, Blueprints, and resources available on your map.
- Disable coal consumption since it is far more valuable than Wood because it can solve Glade Events (with a full stack of 30).
- Choose your best available Firekeeper worker at your Hearth.
- Assign a Lizard to gain +1 to everyone's Resolve if this gets you over a species' threshold. If you have only one Lizard, then they get an additional +5 for working in the Hearth with the Warmth Specialization—if you have more than one, this large bonus will get averaged away.
- Assign a Harpy to gain their powerful Firekeeper bonus of +5 to every villagers' carrying capacity.
- Assign a Beaver early on to save fuel burned at Hearth.
- Assign a Human to slow down the rate at which the Queen's Impatience increases.
- Build two Woodcutters' Camp and start clearing trees in the direction of a Dangerous Glade, but do not allow them to open it yet.
- Build a few plain roads, at least to connect your Main Warehouse to the Hearth.
- Build three Shelters and four tiles of decorations to upgrade the Hearth for the bonus to Resolve.
- Build a Crude Workstation to start getting building materials.
- Build gathering camps that can gather from the resource deposits you started with.
- Choose your first Orders based on what you can see on the map.
- Choose your first Blueprints based on the products they make: focus on food first. Match the icons next to the species' portraits to the food goods the buildings make. Humans like Biscuits, for example.
- Build a Trading Post during the first Storm. You will try to use what the first Trader sells to help you solve your first Dangerous Glade Event.
- Build one of your Blueprints.
- At the beginning of Year 2, after the first Storm, open the first Dangerous Glade and do everything you can to solve it.
Final Summary
- Reputation wins you the mission. The Queen's Impatience running out makes you lose the mission.
- Gaining Reputation reduces the Queen's Impatience.
- Hostility lowers Resolve during the Storm.
- High Impatience reduces Hostility.
- Time in game (years) increases Hostility.
- Opening Glades increases Hostility, but enables more production by revealing new resources and rewards.
- Being able to produce Complex Foods and goods for Services boosts Resolve, allowing you to withstand higher Hostility.
- Every mission is about balancing these pressures and priorities.