What do you put in the trading post for trade goods? Do you use the various trading options, or just use one standard trader for everything?Ĩ. Do you employ the distribution barns, where and why?ħ. Are there any tips tricks or hints, on micromanaging you would be willing to share?Ħ. it has approx 960 food space, and the updated barn was around four to six thousand, but it isn't exclusive to foods.ĥ. Which is why I build the specific leanto's, and discovered, that per space the leanto is better than the updated barn for carrying food. Even though I built plenty of specific storage for that to not happen. I happened to notice my updated Barn didn't carry as much food as I needed, and instead was getting overrun with the non food items. Still learning the food storage options right now. I use all of the vendor carts/stalls, along with Edible markets, and use all the various storages. I use alot of vendors, it is the highest profession of any in my games. With the various storage options, along with vendor options. I am a micromanager, which is why I love Journey so much. Do you build a market first and let the expansion revolve around it? Do you set an advance team forward, example being sending a log vendor with a stone vendor, and a construction vendor?ģ. Do you plan an expansion carefully? Or let it happen naturally?Ģ. And the expansion is to begin tinning food, or building different professions that you can't build without adding clay, glass, and other professions.ġ. After the initial building of your town, these questions assume you have a good handle of food/tools/resources. It is a hectic time for Bannies, with never enough people to work the jobs we set up for them.Įdited for clarifications. These questions are about building the expansions, after the initial flurry of first builds. is the designer.So playing modded with CC Journey. An initial impact assessment from last year estimated it would be a 50-year project. The prince has a completion deadline of 2030, which seems optimistic. Issues with master plans and unhappy foreign employees are plaguing this development. During the last oil boom, plans emerged for the world’s tallest skyscraper, only for it to get scuttled. Other Saudi Arabia megaprojects have gone off the rails. The development has struggled to gain foreign interest and funding due to Saudi Arabia’s human rights history, including 2018’s killing of journalist Jamal Khasoggi. The development is part of a bigger project known as Neom, which is roughly the size of Massachusetts. To account for the fact that the Earth curves, designers have proposed leaving a gap at the top of 2,600-foot modules so that the structures could “bend” around the planet. Even entertainment will be taken care of, as plans call for a sports stadium up to 1,000 feet above ground.īoat owners won’t be banished either, as there will be a marina for yachts. It would include a high-speed train under the buildings and a vertical farming scheme to help feed the population. It’s so big that everything a person needs would essentially have to be available. It would house up to five million people.įor Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, the project is meant to leave a legacy the size of the Egyptian pyramids. They would be connected by walkways as they traverse coastal, mountain and desert terrain. It would consist of two parallel buildings, each 1,600 feet tall. If it ever gets built, the $1 trillion project would be the world’s largest structure. That’s what’s being touted In Saudi Arabia, where a 75-mile-long skyscraper dubbed the Mirror Line is being planned, the Wall Street Journal reported. Imagine living in a development that stretches roughly the distance from Manhattan to New Haven, Connecticut. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman along with a rendering of the Mirror Line in Saudi Arabia (Getty Images, NEOM)