Bridge & ships

正在查看此主题的用户

bisthebis25

Knight
Hi !

Is started a new savegame, and i play a "Sea raider vassal" : I am vassal of south saxons, they are at war with fortriu, and i raze coastal villages with my ship, and I go on East Costal Cities for sale my goods (and goods from cattle :grin:)
Also, I up some rivers (like the Ouse, the Yorkish river) for access cities like Eoferwic, far from the sea, but nearby river.
Bu i am blocked by bridges. (without bridges, it would be possible to go on Caer Wendolleu by the Ouse !)

It is possible to do a teleportation script ? (in camp menu, if near a bridge and in a ship : "Take 2 hours to go behind the bridge with your ships")
It is interesting ?
(In reality or RP, bridges of campaign maps are really bridges, of just fords ?)
 
You can use CRTL+T cheat actually. However, historically, bridges were used for sea raiders cannt pass. You remember Paris  :grin:
 
Many vikings dragged their longships over dry passages, there was also a sort of meat that is called after that aktivity  :mrgreen:
but i think it won´t be an essentiel feature for Brytenwalda ^^
 
Actually, it is possible (but difficult and risky) to get around bridges.  I discovered this the hard way when I sailed up a river near Caiseal (the Sionainne/Shannon?) and landed near a Scoti Lair.  Now, when you try to set sail again, your ship is teleported a short distance away.  In rivers, this sometimes means getting teleported on the other side of a bridge.  It takes a lot of tries to get around it, but it's possible.  I think you can use this to sail up rivers as well!  I have an obsession with river raids, lakes, looting, pre-gunpowder warfare, and so on, so you can tell what I think of this game.
 
To refine what was just said, the teleportation goes in the same direction you were. So if you want your ship teleported past the bridge, go up to the ship from the opposite side as the bridge, headed toward the bridge. That'll mean go toward the boat with it between you and the bridge. You'll be pushed past it more often than not.
 
后退
顶部 底部