One example being is if you take the personality type Sanguine you'll get options to try to persuade town leaders and others of import based off your "energetic and sociable" personality.Īll of this gets written up in a short biography that attempts to help guide and inform you of the life that your character lead up till this point. They add to this by letting you select personality, greatest virtue, your father's occupation what your vocation is, as well as what you learnt as a child, they even have you select your character's religion.Īll these options affect your over all game play in some way. Your ethnicity, age, gender, and height are all able to be selected and changed from various drop down menus. Mount and Blade is no different tho it's character creation brings to mind thoughts of old pen and paper dice games. Mount and Blade has been around for a good while, and seems to have become a rather popular yet oddly unheard of title.Ĭreating your character is the first step to conquering the world, as any game would be happy to teach you. Where the only law was what local lords could enforce through the might of the sword. This (not so) little game is inspired by the dark ages of history. Specifically, I'd like to take you to a very interesting game, named Mount and Blade: Warband Viking Conquest Reforged Edition. To nobles and kings, warriors and heroes. i was afraid i'd get banned or something from the lumber camps, and yes we both r talking about viking conquest :).I'd like to take you back to a time of war and blood. (Also, I'm assuming we are both talking about Viking Conquest? That's the only version that has lumber camps, to my recollection) indeed, thanks for taking the time to find out. My guess would be that the "red bar" indicates how close you are to filling your luber quota? When it's full, you get to walk away with the wood you cut. Once you've destroyed everything you can find and leave, you wind up with a few units of lumber in your inventory. Originally posted by White Knight:I don't remember the "red bar" but I do remember that what you described is how you can harvest wood for free.
(Also, I'm assuming we are both talking about Viking Conquest? That's the only version that has lumber camps, to my recollection) My guess would be that the "red bar" indicates how close you are to filling your lumber quota? When it's full, you get to walk away with the wood you cut. It's also a bit handy if you need some lumber for ships or your refuge and can not/will not take the time to go and find it in village markets. The foreman will charge going market rates for wood but if you're flat broke, you can earn a tiny bit of gold from farming wood in this way. You can chop them down in the same way as splitting firewood. If you go out back behind the little cabins, there are a couple of trees that are also labeled "destructible target". I don't remember the "red bar" but I do remember that what you described is how you can harvest wood for free. so if it doesn't really do anything that would be instant, try looking for tong term effects or something.
of course, i only posted this after trying to look it up what heppens, only to no avail. plus, if u didnt know about this, i bet its gonna be at least entertaining or a cool surprise for u to find out the answer. and thank u for messing up ur character whislt saving my own from what would happen. so someone screw up their character for me, and report back :). I haven't done it yet since all my games r the 'ironman mode' equivalent in regards to saveing games. So my question is this: WHAT HAPPENS IF YOU DESTROY ALL THE WOOD PIECES AND FILL UP THE RED BAR? however, right after i destroyed the piece of wood, a bar appeared at the top of the screen, with it filled just a tiny bit with red, still mostly empty/void of color. If that was all there was to it, i'd just think 'NEAT', and continue on destroying all the other pieces, and do so every time i go into a lumber camp. and so, i dropped down from my horse, took out my sword, and hit one with it.
It then made me wonder whether i could actually destroy them or not. but today, i noticed them, and if u read them too, u would see how they said 'destructible target'. At the lumber camp, i've never really noticed the small piles of wood.