Questions & Answers

It was a joke, obviously. But then again I'm blond myself. Or was, before I cut it all off...
 
It was a joke, obviously. But then again I'm blond myself. Or was, before I cut it all off...

Or did it fall off?

Since I understand you're quite a bit older than Lena. ;)


P.S. I was joking too. I don't care.
I'm a (reddish) blonde hairy Viking-like man and proud of it! (kinda like a younger beardless version of Ragnar) :p
 
Print Screen. (Its left of Scroll Lock on my keyboard, above the arrow keys.)

The actual image will end up in \My Documents\My Games\Beyond the Sword\ScreenShots\
 
Hi guys,
can a vassalized nation win its UHV?
I'm playing my first game of RFC (RAND), and in 1630 AD Mali, a weak nation, is 2/3 UHV and cruising to 3/3. I intended to attack it, and to my surprise he asked me to be my vassal.

BUMP on this one... anyone have a clue? I'd like to know too...

my GUESS is yes.
 
I would like to change the greek UP to only giving 100% GP bonus, but letting them start with the ability to run Representation aswell - sortof like the egyptian UP. Is it possible to give them two UP's in any way, and if so, can anyone explain to me how to do it? I was looking in the file UniquePowers in the Python directory, but it seems that's not the file the code is actually located in :(
 
The Greek UP is in the SDK... You need to edit the SDK to make it possible to start with a civic other than those which are actually available.
 
I don't understand why I didn't get the second English unique goal.
I founded three cities in each continent before 1730:
North America: New York, Fort Albany, Savannah
South America: Georgetown, Cambridge (on the west coast, north of the Inca), Stanley
Africa: Port Elizabeth, Saint Helena, Salisbury (near Zimbabwe), Warwick (near Somalia, just in case Saint Helena didn't count)
Asia: Malabar, Coventry, Hastings (these two are north of Japan)
Australia: Melbourne, Brisbane, Geraldton

Why didn't I get it?
 
Europe, don't you need 3 cities there..? Manchester/Liverpool, Dublin/Belfast, Plymouth/Exeter.

No.

I don't understand why I didn't get the second English unique goal.
I founded three cities in each continent before 1730:
North America: New York, Fort Albany, Savannah
South America: Georgetown, Cambridge (on the west coast, north of the Inca), Stanley
Africa: Port Elizabeth, Saint Helena, Salisbury (near Zimbabwe), Warwick (near Somalia, just in case Saint Helena didn't count)
Asia: Malabar, Coventry, Hastings (these two are north of Japan)
Australia: Melbourne, Brisbane, Geraldton

Why didn't I get it?

I think the problem could be Stanley (Falklands I presume?). This is from an old set of continents files that Thonnas once prepared for the RFC mod, but it shows a difference between the definition of SAmerica on the Atlas page because Falklands are excluded.

Spoiler :
attachment.php


To be sure, why not give yourself a few extra settlers via worldbuilder and put down extra cities yourself to test the UHV? Without any screenshots, it is difficult to comment any further though.
 
That would do it. Also, one of the cities I thought I founded in Asia is in the area marked as Europe there (far east Russia).

I think I preferred how the online atlas shows the continents. Simple rectangles.
 
That would do it. Also, one of the cities I thought I founded in Asia is in the area marked as Europe there (far east Russia).

I think I preferred how the online atlas shows the continents. Simple rectangles.

The simple rectangles might be what is called upon in the UHV code, all I'm saying is that I'm not sure which definition of continents is being used. For the very latest version of RFC (v1.187), Rhye tweaked again the boundary between European Siberia and Asian Siberia - so I'm uncertain of how this might also impact the issue for your game.

Best bet would be to use the worldbuilder/new settler approach at a pre-1730AD savegame and use trial and error to investigate the UHV.
 
Logically, the boundary between Europe and Asia should have no baring on my UHV, since my cities were on the east coast of Russia, near Japan. Although for some reason, the map you posted earlier has Europe covering most of northern Russia.
 
The continents image file that I posted is the definition of continents as they apply to things such as the Statue of Liberty Wonder and the like. For these sort of considerations, European Russia is as depicted as I understand things.
 
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