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Forge empires fair trade ratios1/21/2024 In the Iron Age, there’s more diversity: weaving mill 4X3, ebony woodworks 4X4, jewelry manufacturer 3X4, iron foundry 3X3, and limestone mason 4X4. In the Bronze Age, all of the goods buildings are 3 squares by 3 squares, with the exception of the stone mason, which is 4X4. However, the first and most glaring flaw in the logic comes when one realizes that some goods buildings are larger than others. On the surface, that seems logical and … um … “fair”. You’re not allowed to charge higher rates for one-age-up offers, like 3:2, 4:5, or 1:1, and the game makes prices cheaper than 2:1 impossible.Īpparently, the gentle souls who came up with these rules figure they’re “fair” because the cost of producing all goods from the same age is exactly the same (100 coins and 100 supplies for a 4-hour production of marble, lumber, dye, stone, or wine in the Bronze Age, for instance), and the cost of producing goods from each successive age is exactly twice that of the previous one (200 coins and 200 supplies for a 4-hour production of cloth, ebony, jewelry, iron, or limestone in the Iron Age, as an example). The game itself makes anything more expensive than a 1:2 offer impossible.Ĥ) One-age-up offers must be made at a ratio of 2:1. So a seller can make same-age offers of, for example, 1:1, 5:4, 3:2, or 2:1, but not 4:5, 2:3, or 1:2.ģ) One-age-down offers must be made at a ratio of 1:2 or cheaper. Offers to exchange goods separated on the tech tree by two or more ages are forbidden.Ģ) Same-age offers must be made at a ratio of 1:1 or cheaper, the first number being the number of goods being offered and the second being the number of goods requested. Many guilds require their members to make offers on the market, especially Guild Only offers, that conform to these rules:ġ) Offers can only be made to exchange goods from any given age for other goods of that same age (same-age offers), for goods from the previous age (one-age-down offers), or for goods from the next age (one-age-up offers). So before debunking the myth, let’s first define the term. In my experience, the words “fair trade” are bandied about and a lot of folks don’t even know what they mean.
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