Legacy:Paved Ground: Difference between revisions

From Ring of Brodgar
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
 
m (file rename: to-legacy - general)
 
(20 intermediate revisions by 11 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[File:Stonefloor.png|thumb|300px|right]]Paved ground is the result of laying stone, which requires [[Stone Working]]. Paving terrain requires plowing first (grassland mudflats and mountains do not need to be plowed to pave). Then you chip stone from a boulder. Then you use the pave key in Adventure>landscaping and click on each tile you want to pave.
[[File:Legacy-Stonefloor.png|thumb|300px|right]]




Paved ground is the result of laying stone, which requires [[Legacy:Stone Working|Stone Working]]. Paving terrain requires plowing first ([[Legacy:grassland|grassland]]s, [[Legacy:mudflat|mudflat]]s, [[Legacy:heath|heath]], [[Legacy:Moor|Moor]], and [[Legacy:mountain|mountain]]s do not need to be plowed to pave). The benefit of paving land is that stamina drain is reduced when running and sprinting and that most structures don't decay on claimed paved land and decay slowly on unclaimed paved land.


If you make a mistake get some seeds into your inventory and use the Adventure>landscaping plant grass to turn it into grass tiles. You can then plow it again.
== Notes ==
*If you make a mistake get some seeds into your inventory and use the Adventure>landscaping plant grass to turn it into grass tiles. You can then plow it again.


*If you pave where crops are growing they will keep growing. They can still be harvested when they mature.


*Paved land will decay back to the tile under it after a long time. It takes much longer than plowed land. Many people pave so that they can run fast and so they do not see weeds.


If you pave where crops are growing they will keep growing. They can still be harvested when they are tall. But then you cannot plant there unless you put grass and plow.
*There is a 2 tile clearance which is unpavable along coastal areas and [[Legacy:Thicket|thickets]]. However thicket tiles can be plowed to allow the clearance necessary to pave within a thicket.
 
 
 
Paved land will decay back to the tile under it after a long time.It takes much longer than plowed land. Many people pave so that they can run fast and so they do not see weeds.
 
(Unconfirmed) A couple people have reported that even if you plow Thickets, they cannot be paved.

Latest revision as of 20:09, 11 May 2018

Legacy-Stonefloor.png


Paved ground is the result of laying stone, which requires Stone Working. Paving terrain requires plowing first (grasslands, mudflats, heath, Moor, and mountains do not need to be plowed to pave). The benefit of paving land is that stamina drain is reduced when running and sprinting and that most structures don't decay on claimed paved land and decay slowly on unclaimed paved land.

Notes

  • If you make a mistake get some seeds into your inventory and use the Adventure>landscaping plant grass to turn it into grass tiles. You can then plow it again.
  • If you pave where crops are growing they will keep growing. They can still be harvested when they mature.
  • Paved land will decay back to the tile under it after a long time. It takes much longer than plowed land. Many people pave so that they can run fast and so they do not see weeds.
  • There is a 2 tile clearance which is unpavable along coastal areas and thickets. However thicket tiles can be plowed to allow the clearance necessary to pave within a thicket.