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Everything posted by LadyWYT
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I think you can put it on the database as a draft, and then post the link to the page. If it's posted as a draft, it won't appear in the list of mods for download, but anyone that has the direct link to the draft's page can download it for testing.
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Chocolate and coffee both would be good reasons to venture to the tropics, visit agriculture traders, or just play on a tropical/warm map to begin with. As far as hot drinks to warm you up...yes, absolutely. I think the code may already be there in the game too. I've been helping develop a mod with @traugdor, and if I'm recalling correctly, there's already a bit in Vintage Story's code where eating hot food will already warm up your character. I don't recall if it was active code, or commented out, but it was there.
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Sounds like the world I've been mod-testing on. Plenty of goodies, but no clay at all for seemingly miles around, despite spawn being a grassland with almost constant rain. Finally found a couple of deposits about a day's jog over the hill, dug some up and brought back home. What do I find the next day, right next to my base though? Clay! So I do agree, Clay's a shifty dude.
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That flamethrower candle still cracks me up every time I see it.
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https://mods.vintagestory.at/expandedstomach There you go, got it launched! Have fun! It doesn't cover exactly what you asked for, but it comes pretty close in that you can eat more and go longer before needing to eat again. You may need to adjust some of the settings in the config file to get the exact results you want, depending on how much challenge you'd like to play with.
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Sleeping through nights is probably your best bet, from the sounds of it. That way you can set the month/year lengths to be quite long and have meaningful seasons, but still have time pass relatively quickly since you aren't squeezing every last bit of usable time out of a day. Not really, aside from what @traugdor said. He handles the code, while I test and help refine details/make assets. As far as I'm aware, all the pieces are there regarding what the mod does, and I'm pretty sure that we've swatted all the bugs...at least all the ones we could find, so there shouldn't be any major issues on launch. I just need to finish the thumbnail art and it should be ready for a proper release...so, maybe sometime in the next couple of days, I'd guess? As for getting notified, I can just make a mental note to drop a link here when it's ready. That way you don't have to go hunt for it.
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Welcome to the forums! I think this should be the default setting--time shouldn't pass at all unless someone is online. If it's not the default, I know it's a setting somewhere in the server config, as the friend that hosts the one I play on has time set to not pass unless someone is online. You'll probably want to shorten month length then, or otherwise look into mods that shorten day length. The typical day in VS is 48 real life minutes long. Of course, you could just sleep through the nights as well--that passes a lot of time. This one conflicts with the above...to get seasons to last longer, you need to make the months longer as well. Which means that time will be passing slower and you likely won't see more than a year or two in 100 hours of play. Crop growth scales with day-month setting, to my knowledge, so setting your months to be longer will mean it takes longer for the harvest to come in. That means you'll need to rely on hunting and foraging for longer than normal, and you'll need more food to last through the winter too. However, it's also easy to counter both of those problems by just building bigger farms. Food isn't really a big issue, as a general rule. If you have your food supply locked down, the rest of the game is pretty straight-forward. That being said, you could try cranking up the hunger and spoilage rates; you'll need more food that way, and the food you have won't last nearly as long. I think there's at least one mod floating around out there that will let you adjust day length, though I don't recall the name and I'm not sure it's up to date. Keep in mind too that sleeping helps pass the time if you want the years to go by faster. Likewise, shorter days mean that time will pass more quickly, which results in faster years as well, but also shorter, less meaningful seasons. Depending on what you're doing, by default you don't really need to eat more than a couple times a day. Eating a full meal from a bowl in one sitting will give a saturation bonus, so you won't get hungry again for a while. If you're away from home doing a lot of work, pies are a better option since they're very filling and easily stackable. For a day's work away from home, a pie or two(depends on filling) should be plenty to keep you going on default settings. Now if you're packing supplies for spending several days away from your base, that's different. In that case, inventory management is part of the challenge of planning such a trip, and if you don't want to sacrifice extra slots for food, you'll need to plan on hunting, foraging, or some other method of resupplying. You'd need a mod for this. Technically one exists...but it's not yet released. No, but you can change the hunger rate and the food spoilage rates to be faster or slower. As I mentioned earlier, you could try increasing the hunger rate, so that players need to eat a bit more than they'd need to on default. Keep in mind that doing that also means players will be needing to eat more often as well. Nutrition will decay slowly over time. If you aren't eating a balanced diet, it's easier to notice, since you won't be replenishing certain areas of nutrition at all. Current nutrition is also cut in half when you die. Possibly...but as it currently stands, there is not, to my knowledge. At least not yet...I would keep an eye on the database. As I said before, you'd need a mod to accomplish what you're asking for the hunger, and there's not yet any available that really cover that territory. I will also note that if you are going to be modding a multiplayer server, the hosting needs to support mods, which means third-party hosting since the official servers don't support mods currently.
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By "private" I mean unofficial server, essentially; it can still be open to the public, but isn't sanctioned as an official server. In the case of Vintage Story, it'd be the kind you'd set up for playing with friends, or that a YouTuber might set up for their viewing community, instead of something like TOPS where it's run by the game studio/parent company.
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As I've always understood it...it's kind of both? The ESRB ratings exist for a reason, and there's a reason you have to enter your birth date or whatever to access the pages of games like Skyrim on Steam. As for online community content such as public servers and the like...those aren't rated, and if the server is run by a private individual/group(that is, not an official game server) then it's up to the server owner to manage their own community. And this is where everything I said above can be thrown out the window. When it comes to government involvement, it hinges less on what the law actually says and the intentions behind it, and more on who is enforcing/interpreting said law. If the people in charge are unscrupulous, they will have no qualms about twisting the law and abusing their authority to get what they want.
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Right, but I generally plant warm-weather crops like carrots, flax, or onions after the spring turnip harvest so I get a full summer harvest, and then plant turnips in the fall for that last vegetable crop...that I really don't need, but like to have anyway.
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Assuming medium or better soil, September is fine for planting cold crops since the growing season will last until the end of October. Turnips only take 9 days to mature by default, so you can get away with planting those late September and still expect a harvest. As for rye...you'll need to plant that at the very start of September or the very end of August if you're going to get a full harvest from it, since it takes considerably longer to grow than turnips. Keep in mind too that you can use greenhouses to extend the growing season by a few days, so if you aren't sure that you'll have enough time for the crops to mature, you might consider planting them in a greenhouse to buy yourself a bit of extra time. You do need to be careful though, as greenhouses can stunt plant growth with too much heat, and won't fully protect plants from harsh winter weather.
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There's not a clear answer as it really depends on your base's microclimate. For temperate zones though, I would say that you can safely plant cold-hardy crops at the tail end of March/first of April, and planting other crops mid-late April. My general strategy is keeping an eye on the nighttime temperature and planting the appropriate seeds once it reaches the minimum temperature needed for the seed to survive. I say nighttime temperature, because the daytime temperature can get decently warm in early March, but will cool off too much at night and damage whatever's been planted.
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Welcome to the forums! Songs will usually play all the way through once they start. However, if you stray too far from natural light, venture too close to a rift, or a temporal storm starts, whatever music is playing will quickly fade out and be replaced with the appropriate ambience. In any case, I think the current system is mostly fine, however, I do agree that there should be an exception for certain underground spaces like cellars. Essentially, if the space qualifies as a cellar or insulated room, you shouldn't hear the normal underground ambience and should either silence, the continuation of the current music, or different ambience that still indicates you're underground but not in danger. That would resolve the issue of going into your cellar to get ingredients for a delicious stew and being met with the creepy cave ambience.
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Welcome to the forums! I don't know if you can force client-side mods to download, but you could just package them all up into one folder, send that folder to the users, and have the users copy/paste everything in that folder into the proper location. They aren't having to go mod-hunting that way.
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The general rule of thumb I use for temperate climate is plant turnips and rye in early spring or late summer/early fall, and plant everything else late spring/mid-summer. Turnips and rye are cold-hardy, so while they won't grow if the temperature is freezing they can tolerate some cold before they get damaged or die. Everything else you pretty much need to plant after the danger of frost has passed.
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I mean, I remember barren oceans from the other block game. No fish, no coral, no seaweed, just water. Nothing but water. Traveling them was very easy given there was no terrain or monsters to serve as obstacles, but it wasn't fun(and not just because the early boats were terrible). The aquatic update changed all that by adding seaweed, coral, plenty of fish, dolphins, shipwrecks, and the guardians/ocean temples, along with improved boats. Not only did boats become much more usable, but there was also something to see out in all that water when traveling, and goodies to look for if one is inclined to explore. Similar case with oceans and large bodies of water in Vintage Story. Once there is some actual life to the water, and a proper fishing system or some sort of curiosity to find(sunken treasure, ruins, etc), or even a way to really explore underwater...I don't expect water travel to be very exciting at all. It's simply an easy way to get from point A to point B, but without anything interesting to look at.
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Welcome to the forums! To my knowledge, default world settings are getting adjusted in 1.21 to account for oceans, since there's now actually content to be had for such large bodies of water. Otherwise, I agree with what @Lugh Crow-Slave already noted--aquatic content is still lacking, and needs more refinement before too many adjustments happen. Otherwise, players will end up with a lot of water but nothing to really do with it, which isn't very fun.
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Pretty much this. The temporal storms and associated monsters can be a little tedious, sure, but they're meant to be supernatural environmental disasters/hazards that you have to occasionally deal with in order to accomplish your goals. There are reasons to brave the storms(temporal gears, Jonas parts), that will likely be more attractive reasons once more late game tech is added, but otherwise monsters are not something the player is supposed to be actively hunting for goodies. If you make monster drops particularly lucrative, then they stop being hazards that could wreck your day and start being...mobile loot boxes, essentially. As for avoiding the tedium of temporal storms, there's already the option to sleep through them, or disable them entirely. Both options are disabled by default, so you'd need to either enable them at world creation, or run the appropriate command and reload the world. And as a final note on monster loot...that is one advantage of having robust mod support. There are several out there that adjust the monster loot tables, and it's also relatively easy to make a new mod if there's nothing currently in existence to do the job.
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https://lophi.bandcamp.com/album/vintage-story-ost Here you go--it's a name-your-price kind of deal, but the listed suggested price is $10 USD.
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Oh, that's no bug. That's a will o' the wisp, from Primitive Survival. To my knowledge they don't do anything except look pretty/mysterious; you can't catch them for display and they will despawn after a while. They're just a neat bit of ambience.
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Actually...I would check this one. Either go into creative/spectator and look around for a dinosaur, or spawn one of those particular ones in a creative world and see what noises they make. Parasaurolophus and related dinosaurs are thought to make noises similar to trombones and other horns, so that may very well be what you're hearing, if not one of the other dinosaurs.
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I think the mod does a great job of providing immersive cues, instead of needing to rely purely on text warnings. That being said, I think for the vanilla game, text warnings should always be an option to go with the environmental cues, that players can toggle on/off. Environmental cues can be easily missed, depending on circumstances, and there are some players that probably need the more blatant text warning in order to avoid getting caught off-guard.
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@Narg This is likely cause by Salty & Proto's Temporal Symphony: https://mods.vintagestory.at/temporalsymphony It removes the text warning from temporal storms and replaces it with a camera shake, rust particles, and a rusty screen tint, among other things. I would check your modlist to see if it's installed, as it's the most likely cause. That being said...assuming I'm right, good luck with the storm!
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How to make Dave appear in the Rust World horizon?
LadyWYT replied to Sparkplug04's topic in Questions
I think your view distance needs to be 300 or better for Dave to appear. Also keep in mind that he does move around, so he won't always be in the same place, and if there's mountains, forest, or other terrain nearby it may be very difficult to spot him even with an appropriate view distance.