They only require the appropriate level of Dynasty Reputation. - Removed "Loyalty to the crown" challenge. - The name of the field and orchard visible in the interaction. - Improved readability of building selection in the technology list. - The number of objects shown on the lists in...
Both of these values are required for expanding your settlement. Dynasty Reputation provides a hard cap on how many villagers can be recruited at one time. Without the necessary Dynasty Reputation, potential recruits will turn you down when approached. As for Build Technology, this is needed to ...
Considering the game runs so well, how did you optimize Medieval Dynasty? Nowak: Our lead programmer and his team did most of the work optimizing the game on the engine side. They spent many hours in the Profiler. I can't speak to all of the know-how here, but, in ge...
You can essentially become the mayor of your own town and decide where they will live and what they will do. Make them work the woodshed or make them tend to your cattle. Every choice is yours to make, but with that also comes the responsibility of ensuring your villagers are happy and ...
- Two or more field workers work on the same chunk. - Waterskin cannot get broken while drinking from it. - Field workers standing preoccupied in the fields. - Equipped horse items do not show as equipped if the saddlebags are opened with "E". - The item description is visible ...
the middle of a dense forest with two dependents: your wife and son. You have nothing, really, other than the clothes on your back and a water bottle to your name, which you’ll need to fill from a nearby river as soon as you can. Starting a dynasty from scratch is thirsty work. ...
I loved the first 80 or so hours of Medieval Dynasty. Starting a village is a struggle, which I liked. You really have to hustle and grind to improve your skills and get new things. I love a somewhat peaceful but challenging game that lets me create my own world and this game definite...
3.3. Fèi Chángfáng’s 費長房 Lìdài sānbǎo jì 歷代三寶記 (“A Record of the Three Treasures through the Ages”; Suí Dynasty; 597 CE) Fèi Chángfáng also assumes that the Qīfó ānzhái shénzhòu and the Ānzhái zhòu belong to the category of lost translations. He includes ...