Buildings: Difference between revisions
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! colspan="3" | Buildings | ! colspan="3" | Buildings | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Beavers}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Beavers|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Cellar|medium}} | | {{bl|Cellar|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Guild House|medium}} | | {{bl|Guild House|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Scribe|medium}} | | {{bl|Scribe|medium}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Foxes}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Foxes|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Beanery|medium}} | | {{bl|Beanery|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Tea Doctor|medium}} | | {{bl|Tea Doctor|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Teahouse|medium}} | | {{bl|Teahouse|medium}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Frogs}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Frogs|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Cannery|medium}} | | {{bl|Cannery|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Forum|medium}} | | {{bl|Forum|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Pantry|medium}} | | {{bl|Pantry|medium}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Harpies}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Harpies|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Apothecary|medium}} | | {{bl|Apothecary|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Artisan|medium}} | | {{bl|Artisan|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Bath House|medium}} | | {{bl|Bath House|medium}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Humans}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Humans|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Brewery|medium}} | | {{bl|Brewery|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Brick Oven|medium}} | | {{bl|Brick Oven|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Monastery|medium}} | | {{bl|Monastery|medium}} | ||
|- | |- | ||
| style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Lizards}} | | style="font-weight:bold;" | {{Species link|Lizards|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Butcher|medium}} | | {{bl|Butcher|medium}} | ||
| {{bl|Clan Hall|medium}} | | {{bl|Clan Hall|medium}} |
Revision as of 20:37, 28 October 2024
Overview
Buildings are your main way of meeting the needs of your Villagers by way of gathering, farming, production, housing, and consumption. They occupy map tiles, constrain the movement of Villagers, and offer a variety of capabilities to help your Settlement survive. Some Buildings have a limited distance within which they are effective, for example, for gathering Wood from trees.
Blueprints
Which Buildings you have available for construction is determined by which Blueprints you have in your settlement. During each mission, you can choose additional Blueprints by gaining Reputation, completing Orders, buying from Traders, and from Glade Event rewards. Once you gain a new Blueprint, you are allowed to build that Building as many times as you can afford—until you move on to the next settlement. You will then have different choices and rewards.
Essential Blueprints
Every Viceroy has a list of Essential Blueprints, and you will begin each settlement with all of those Blueprints, meaning those Buildings start unlocked.
You can choose more Blueprints to be Essential by completing Deeds and buying upgrades in the Smoldering City. Some upgrades in the Smoldering City also add Blueprints to your list of choices when Embarking.
You can learn about your starting list of Essential Buildings and how to use those Buildings by playing the Tutorial.
Species Specific Buildings
Some Buildings will only appear in the Reputation Rewards Blueprint pool if certain Species are in the Settlement. These are:
Construction
To construct a building, you must first have that building's Blueprint. Then, you can see that Blueprint in the toolbar of icons at the bottom of the screen. Click to place the Blueprint on the map. If the building will have a working range, a green circle will indicate that range. Red squares under the construction site indicate obstacles such as trees, roads, or other buildings.
Once the construction site for your building is placed, you can select a priority and view which resources have or have not yet been delivered to the site. Before construction is completed, you can move the construction site of most buildings for free.
Builders
Buildings are constructed by Villagers that aren't assigned to work anywhere else. If you need a building built quickly, you will need to dismiss several workers from their workplaces. If no Builders are available, a hammer icon will appear above all buildings that are awaiting construction, letting you know that you need to dismiss a worker somewhere or the building materials will never be delivered and construction will never finish.
Construction Toolbar
Buildings are constructed by selecting from the Blueprints in the construction toolbar. From left to right, the construction icons represent the following categories of Blueprints:
- Roads, which are not buildings per se, but built like them. They increase Villagers' speed walking across the map.
- Camps, which gather resources from resource nodes. You start most maps with the same 4 options: Woodcutters' Camp, Stonecutters' Camp, Harvesters' Camp, and the small gathering camps.
- Food Production, which farm resources from Fertile Soil and cook Complex Foods.
- Housing, which fulfills Villagers' Housing Needs.
- Industry Buildings, which produce Resources from other Resources with Recipes.
- City Buildings, which include Hearths, Warehouses, and the Trading Post. This category will also contain buildings that provide Services when you have earned their Blueprints.
- Decorations, which are used to upgrade Hearths.
Next to the construction toolbar are the buttons for marking trees (the axe icons). To the far right is the button for destroying buildings, roads, or deposits.
Range
Depending on the building you've chosen to build (or move), the game may reveal one or more special overlays, highlighting, or icons:
- the range of the Hearth may be shown when placing another Hearth, housing buildings, or Decorations
- the range of gathering when placing a camp or a farm
- highlighting of tiles that contain Fertile Soil when placing farms
- icons of nearby Resources on map tiles when placing gathering camps and mines
- highlighting of Trees that have been marked for cutting when placing a Woodcutters' Camp
Most industry buildings do not show ranges. (The Mine is the exception, showing Resource icons.) Instead of a range, when placing one of these buildings white lines will connect to nearby buildings where Resources could be retrieved for the Recipes in the building you are placing.
Moving a building
After construction finishes, if a building may be moved the button to do so appears large, in blue, at the top left the Building Panel. Holding your mouse over the button will tell you whether the building may be moved for free, like a Woodcutters' Camp. Some buildings can be moved for a cost, like a Shelter for 5 Wood. Most buildings that produce goods using Recipes cannot be moved at all, and the icon will not appear on their building panel.
You can see before constructing a building whether it will be moveable. This appears on the same tooltip where you can preview the cost of the building before placing it for construction. In the screenshot to the right, notice the blue Move button on the building's picture in its construction tooltip.
For buildings that can be moved (especially for free), you can place the blueprint close to a warehouse for fast delivery of construction materials, then move it into a more appropriate place.
Building Panel
The Building panel contains information on a Building you have selected or placed for construction on the map. The contents vary widely depending on what kind of Building it is, but there are some common elements.
The top-left corner contains any major interactions: moving the Building, if possible, and deactivating the Building to instantly remove any Workers.
Leftmost on the panel are the worker slots. The main content of the panel is a few tabs with different information and interactive controls for the Building's functions. When you first open it, the first tab will show the Building's description, which would include a summary of its Recipes and any Specialization.
Workers
Most Buildings have space for two or more Villagers to work. On the Building panel, by clicking on slots, you can assign Villagers to work that Building or dismiss them to be builders for your settlement until they are reassigned.
Next to an assigned Worker's icon another small icon will appear that indicates the status of the Worker. They may be the following:
- = walking to the Building
- = actively producing or gathering
- = moving goods from the Building to a Warehouse or vice versa
- = walking to the Hearth for a break
- = resting at the Hearth
- = idling, unable to work
If the worker is unable to work, then their icon will be an exclamation point. This occurs when there are no more Resources to work with (whether from the nearby map tiles or from the Warehouse), if production limits have been reached, or if you must select one of the options of a Glade Event and press the Investigate button. The Building will also receive an exclamation point icon above it on the map view (even with the Building panel closed) to get your attention since an idling Worker may be wasting valuable time, however you are free to ignore these icons.
Empty Worker Slots
If a Building has space for more Workers, you click the black-and-white icon with a nondescript person and green plus sign to choose which Species to add from the radial menu.
There are noteworthy reasons to leave Worker slots empty in Buildings. For example, emptying the Woodcutters' Camps of all of their Workers just before the Storm can lower Hostility enough so you don't lose any Villagers during the Storm due to low Resolve. Another example is if your settlement is producing a good more quickly than it is needed, removing a Worker will slow down the rate of production.
Specializations
Some Buildings have Specializations for some Workers that make those individual Villagers more comfortable, granting them a bonus to their Resolve, or a bonus to production quantity or speed due to their proficiency.
Specializations are indicated with small, color-coded icons on the Building panel. You can hold your mouse over these icons to see a tooltip that identifies the name of the Specialization. However, the name does not tell you which of the two types of Specializations it is. For that, you have to look at the Worker icon. A blue glowing aura indicates their comfort bonus; spinning wheel indicates their proficiency bonus. You can also tell from the tooltip on the species; the first Specialization is always their proficiency bonus, the second is always their comfort bonus.
Besides being helpful passive bonus for your settlement, using Specializations at key moments can save your settlement from losing Villagers due to low Resolve. For example, a Building like the Cookhouse with 4 Worker slots and its Warmth Specialization can be used to boost the Resolve of four Lizards!
Specialization | Type | Effect | Species |
---|---|---|---|
Alchemy | Proficiency | +10% chance of doubling their yield | Harpies |
Blightrot | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Foxes |
Brewing | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Humans |
Tailoring | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Harpies |
Engineering | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Beavers |
Farming | Proficiency | +10% chance of doubling their yield | Humans |
Forest | Proficiency | +5% reduced working time of Glade Event | Foxes |
Masonry | Proficiency | +10% chance of doubling their yield | Frogs |
Meat production | Proficiency | +10% chance of doubling their yield | Lizards |
Rainwater | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Frogs |
Warmth | Comfort | +5 to their Resolve | Lizards |
Woodworking | Proficiency | +10% chance of doubling their yield | Beavers |
First Tab: Recipes
See also: Recipes
On the Building Panel for Production Buildings, the first tab contains the Recipes that the Building can produce. For Buildings like Gathering Camps and Farms, there are no tabs on the panel. The Resources they can gather, the controls, and the Building's Internal Storage are shown together on the panel. Service Buildings also have Recipes on their first tab, and while they aren't the same kind of Recipes as Production Buildings that convert Resources into other Resources, they have similar controls.
In the list of Recipes, you can check or uncheck the Recipes you want the Workers to produce. By default when a Building is constructed, all Recipes are enabled. You may want to uncheck to disable Recipes that are lower efficiency than in other Buildings. For example, you may want to disable the Recipe for Planks in the Crude Workstation (☆) if you have also built a Lumber Mill (★★★), so you get the most efficient use of Wood. However, if your are in need of more Planks and you can afford to spend the extra Wood, it may be worth it to keep the Planks Recipe checked in the Crude Workstation.
In the list of Recipes, you can also click the up and down arrows to increase or decrease the priority of a Recipe. This will reorder the list, so the highest priority Recipes are on top. (This can be changed in the Game Options.) When a Recipe is prioritized in a Building, the Workers will spend all of their time making that Recipe. Once they are unable to produce more, they will move on to the next-lower priority Recipe. This may happen when the settlement runs out of the ingredient Resources or when a production or storage reserve limit is reached.
On the right side of the Recipes list, you can set the production limit of the Recipe. When the settlement has that number of that product Resource in the Warehouse, then the Workers will not start producing more. Often, the deliveries to the Warehouse have not been made yet, a Worker starts another batch, and the limit is exceeded, so keep this in mind.
Second Tab: Storage
Most buildings have internal storage, where (a) ingredient Resources are brought from the Warehouse for use in the Building's Recipes and (b) gathered or produced Goods are kept until a batch can be taken to the Warehouse. The latter has limits, and Buildings' internal capacities can be increased by Perks and Upgrades in the Smoldering City.
Produced Goods Storage
In the example screenshot, a Woodcutters' Camp has an internal Storage capacity of 15. It is holding 8 Wood and 6 Copper Ore that are awaiting delivery to the closest Warehouse. The blue button to Force delivery now can be used before the Storage is full to force a Worker to stop producing and take Goods to the Warehouse. This is useful if you have Buildings awaiting construction or Glade Events that urgently need Resources.
Ingredients Storage
In another example, a Crude Workstation in a settlement still stands, but all its Recipes can be made with other, more efficient (higher-star) Buildings. However, this Building still has valuable ingredients stored that other Buildings cannot access. Clicking the red-and-white X button on the Resource icon instantly transfers these Goods back to the Warehouse. If you accidentally remove the wrong ingredient, a Worker will need to go pick the ingredient back up from the Warehouse before they can work on the Recipe.
List of Essential Blueprints
Main page: List of Essential Blueprints
The Blueprints in this list can be earned through completing Deeds and buying Upgrades in the Smoldering City. Once earned, they become Essential, which means they are available from the start of every settlement.
Roads
Blueprint | Unlock or Upgrade |
---|---|
Path | (always available) |
Paved Road | Unlocked on Level 3 |
Reinforced Road | Unlocked on Level 7 |
Camps
Blueprint | Unlock or Upgrade |
---|---|
Woodcutters' Camp | (always available) |
Stonecutters' Camp | (always available) |
Harvesters' Camp | (always available) |
Small Fishing Hut | Unlocked on Level 2 |
Small Foragers' Camp | (always available) |
Small Herbalists' Camp | Unlocked on Level 2 |
Small Trappers' Camp | (always available) |
Food Production
Blueprint | Unlock or Upgrade |
---|---|
Farm Field | (always available) |
Field Kitchen | Unlocked with Obsidian Archive Level 11 Upgrade |
Housing
Blueprint | Unlock or Upgrade |
---|---|
Shelter | (always available) |
Big Shelter | Unlocked with Ancient Knowledge Deed |
Human House | Unlocked with Vanguard Spire Level 1 Upgrade |
Beaver House | Unlocked with Vanguard Spire Level 2 Upgrade |
Lizard House | Unlocked with Vanguard Spire Level 3 Upgrade |
Harpy House | Unlocked with Vanguard Spire Level 4 Upgrade |
Fox House | Unlocked with Vanguard Spire Level 6 Upgrade |
Frog House | Unlocked at Level 13 |
Industry
Blueprint | Unlock or Upgrade |
---|---|
Crude Workstation | (always available) |
Makeshift Post | (always available) |
City Buildings
List of Buildings
- Main page: List of Buildings
Starting Buildings
Every settlement starts with an Ancient Hearth and Main Warehouse.
Building | Purpose | Workplaces | Specialization |
---|---|---|---|
Ancient Hearth | Heats nearby Houses. Villagers gather here to rest and eat. | 1 | Warmth |
Main Warehouse | Centralizes resources for settlement supply chain. | 3 | none |
Camps
Camps are starting points for your settlement to go out into the wild to gather Resources from the map in a small area around them. Selecting a Camp from the construction menu will highlight their range and show icons for the resource deposits or trees from which the Camp can gather. All Camps can be moved for free.
Some of the Camps have smaller and larger versions. If the Camp you have when you start a map is named "Small," then you can upgrade it by unlocking the Blueprint for the larger version. Small camps can only gather from small resource nodes; the regular camps
Building | Place near this | Primary resource gathered | Workplaces | Specialization | Cost to build | ||||||||||||||||||||
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Small Fishing Hut |
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3 | none |
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Fishing Hut | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Small Foragers' Camp |
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2 | Farming |
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Foragers' Camp |
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Harvesters' Camp |
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2 | none |
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Small Herbalists' Camp |
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2 | Alchemy |
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Herbalists' Camp | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Stonecutters' Camp |
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2 | Masonry |
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Small Trappers' Camp |
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2 | Meat production |
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Trappers' Camp | |||||||||||||||||||||||||
Woodcutters' Camp |
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3 | Woodworking |
|
Food Production
Food production Buildings include Farms and Buildings whose primary purpose is Recipes for food. Many of these buildings also produce non-food items from farming or include non-food Recipes. This may give you more options or less in choosing your Blueprints, depending on how strict your needs are.
Housing
Housing Buildings must be constructed within range of a Hearth to work. These buildings satisfy villagers' need for shelter. Certain Housing Building also satisfy villagers' need for their species-specific housing. These have fewer places for residents and require that you unlock their Blueprints.
Building | Residents | Need Satisfied | Species Satisfied | Cost to Build |
---|---|---|---|---|
Shelter | 3 | Basic Housing | none | 10 Wood |
Big Shelter | 6 | Basic Housing | none | 4 Planks |
Human House | 2 | Basic Housing + Human Housing |
Humans | 4 Planks 2 Bricks |
Beaver House | 2 | Basic Housing + Beaver Housing |
Beavers | 8 Planks |
Lizard House | 2 | Basic Housing + Lizard Housing |
Lizards | 2 Fabric 2 Bricks |
Harpy House | 2 | Basic Housing + Harpy Housing |
Harpies | 4 Fabric |
Fox House | 2 | Basic Housing + Fox Housing |
Foxes | 4 Planks 2 Crystalized Dew |
Frog House | 2 | Frog Housing | Frogs | 4 Bricks |
Industry Buildings
Industry Buildings produce intermediate crafting and building materials, trade goods, and the finished goods used for Services and other effects. Most of these buildings require you to unlock their Blueprints before you can place them. The four that you start with are listed first in the table.
Building | Products | Workplaces | Specialization | Cost to build | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Crude Workstation | 2 | none |
| |||||||
Makeshift Post | 2 | none |
| |||||||
Geyser Pump |
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2 | Rainwater |
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Rain Collector |
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2 | Rainwater |
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Advanced Rain Collector |
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3 | Rainwater |
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Mine |
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4 | Engineering |
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Alchemist's Hut |
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2 | Alchemy Brewing |
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Artisan | 3 | Tailoring |
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Brewery |
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2 | Brewing |
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Flawless Brewery |
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2 | Brewing | Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Brick Oven | 3 | Warmth |
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Brickyard |
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2 | Masonry |
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Cannery | 2 | none |
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Carpenter |
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3 | Woodworking |
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Clothier |
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2 | Tailoring |
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Cobbler |
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2 | Tailoring |
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Cooperage |
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2 | Woodworking |
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Flawless Cooperage |
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2 | Woodworking Rainwater |
Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Distillery |
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2 | Brewing Rainwater |
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Druid's Hut | 3 | Alchemy |
| |||||||
Flawless Druid's Hut | 3 | Alchemy | Haunted Ruin reward | |||||||
Finesmith | 3 | Engineering | Rare Ruin | |||||||
Kiln | 3 | Warmth Masonry |
| |||||||
Leatherworker |
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2 | Tailoring Meat production |
| ||||||
Flawless Leatherworker |
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2 | Tailoring Meat production |
Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Lumber Mill |
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2 | Woodworking |
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Manufactory | 3 | Tailoring |
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Press | 3 | Engineering |
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Provisioner |
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2 | none |
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Rainpunk Foundry |
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3 | Engineering | Forbidden Glade Event reward | ||||||
Scribe |
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3 | Brewing |
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Smelter |
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3 | Warmth |
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Flawless Smelter |
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3 | Warmth | Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Smithy |
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2 | Engineering Warmth |
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Stamping Mill |
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2 | Engineering Masonry |
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Supplier |
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2 | Tailoring |
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Teahouse |
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2 | Alchemy Rainwater |
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Tinctury | 2 | Alchemy Brewing |
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Tinkerer |
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3 | Engineering |
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Toolshop | 2 | Engineering |
| |||||||
Weaver |
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2 | Tailoring |
| ||||||
Workshop | 2 | none |
|
City Buildings
City Buildings include buildings that provide Services and passive effects and the buildings that everyone starts out being able to access that provide essential settlement functions of Hearths, Warehouses, and Trade. Services Buildings can be quite expensive to build, costing upwards of several dozen building materials. The Blight Post and Forsaken Altar become available at different Difficulty levels: Veteran and Prestige 1, respectively.
Building | Number of Workers | Purpose, service, or effects | Cost to build |
---|---|---|---|
Small Hearth | 1 | Hearths expand settlements, and villagers go there to rest. Warmth Specialization bonus. |
5 Planks 5 Bricks 1 Wildfire Essence |
Warehouse | none or 2 (depends on upgrades) |
Workers deliver and take goods from the nearest Warehouse. | 2 Bricks 2 Fabric 1 Parts |
Trading Post | none | Purchase Resources and Perks from Traders. Enables Trade Routes. | 10 Wood |
Blight Post | 3 | Purging Fire Sends out workers to destroy Blightrot Cysts. Alchemy and Warmth Specialization bonuses. |
4 Planks 3 Bricks 2 Parts |
Hydrant | none | Lets workers from the Blight Post access Purging Fire without going all the way back to the Blight Post. | 1 Bricks 3 Planks |
Forsaken Altar | none | During Storm Season, spend Citadel Resources or villagers' lives for powerful Perks. | 40 Wood 8 Bricks |
Services Buildings
Building | Workplaces | Purpose, service, or effects | Cost to build | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Bath House | 3 |
|
| ||||||
Clan Hall | 3 |
|
| ||||||
Explorers' Lodge | 3 |
|
| ||||||
Forum | 3 |
|
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Guild House | 3 |
|
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Holy Guild House | 3 |
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Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Market | 2 |
|
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Holy Market | 2 |
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Haunted Ruin reward | ||||||
Monastery | 3 |
|
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Tavern | 3 |
|
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Tea Doctor | 3 |
|
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Temple | 3 |
|
| ||||||
Holy Temple | 3 |
|
Haunted Ruin reward |