THE SETTLERS I have stopped trying to take over enemy castles; it isn't required to finish the game and it doesn't seem to make all that much difference as to when the other players give in. I'm only on mission 11 though, so I can't really say for certain how much of a difference it makes. Also, I am so relieved to finish a mission that I haven't gone back and checked whether there is a difference. Still, I just ignore the castles and the computer player give in when they still have lots of land/huts/buildings. After the first few levels, inventory becomes a problem. The first shortage you run into is usually swords and shields (I am ignoring lumbar since it is really easy to set up and get going). Basically, once I have an good area of land staked out, I try to get iron mines and gold mines going quickly. The production of gold and weapons are pretty much decide how quickly I can finish a mission and everything else is a means to that end. Kind of a vague strategy, but it is what I keep in mind. A problem that I used to run into was trying to build too much at the same time and ending up with unfinished buildings all over the place taking forever to build (usually because lumber supplies keep getting depleted). And then when they do get built, it is always the building you don't need now that get built first; like a bakery before the farm. Anyway, just don't try to build all your food buildings, mines and smiths at the same time. Keep in mind that you frequently start the game with 20+ coal, a pile of iron ore, 10+ wheat, a few grain...I generally set things up so iron/gold foundries and sometimes blacksmiths are completed before there are any mines to supply them for this reason. Usually I lay out all the mines and foundries, etc. first, then connect the foundries with roads so they start construction; I connect the mines as soon as the foundries' supplies have all arrived or thereabouts. This prevents the jams that can slow down construction so much. Food supplies I handle differently, only because the time between a farm being completed and it actually producing grain is so long; generally I start them all at once and connect them immediately, and the windmill/bakery have just enough time to process the wheat/grain in the castle before the farm starts producing. Usually, the first thing I do when I start the game is figure out where my best farmland/land for big buildings is and deforest it. When I start a game, at least recently, I drop a sawmill, four lumberjack huts, and a granite-dude or two before I've built two huts. Often I find the most thickly forested or rockiest land is exactly where I want to spread out; deforestation gives me the room I need and the supplies I need. In fact, in only one mission have I built a forest ranger hut, and even then I didn't really need it. Around mission 8 or 9, I had an extremely aggressive enemy sitting on the second-best land on the map (right next to mine, the best land; fancy that) and he was jumping the huts that guarded my best gold veins constantly. When he finally succeeded in taking it, I took it back, burned it down, and built a tower. Since then, when time isn't an issue, I tend to build towers when I can, as they are almost unbeatable by identical troops when fully guarded. (note: overrunning them is easy when the morale gets high. So far I've not fought an enemy with enough morale to sneeze at.) Using towers instead of huts takes longer, soaks up land that sometimes you can't afford to lose (especially near mountains or on long slopes), but gives you FAR greater defensive ability...and having four available knights rather than two to attack speeds up the endgame tremendously. I haven't tried this as I usually don't have a problem with losing huts, but: I imagine if you _really_ wanted to reinforce a hut, you could destroy the road leading to it and build a new one; this would cost you all the materials currently in transit on the road, but it would also get all the damned transporters out of the way. Reinforcements for the knights that die in combat still wouldn't be able to get to the hut, but they'd almost definitely run into some of the waiting attackers, improving your odds substantially. Other comments: there are times when the best way to guard land is NOT to build a hut. I've not had the problem myself, but I notice when overrunning enemies, sometimes I won't be quite ready to tackle their castle, so they get to keep the blacksmith sitting RIGHT next to it...until the poor AI starts feeling vulnerable and builds a hut right next to the castle (note: this happens only when I've cut the castle off from the rest of their city). Boom, easy conquest and there goes their blacksmith. Keep in mind that you (and your enemies) gain more territory by conquering a hut than by building one of your own. One thing that might be of interest to someone: I was out of miners and picks, and I had two iron mines and a coal mine without miners. I also had two iron and plenty of wood, so I built a tool shop and set the pickaxe priority to maximum. Tada, the tool shop built a pickaxe, and I ended up with a miner in the coal mine. Tada, the tool shop built a hammer (which by default is near maximum on the priority list) and I was out of iron. Ended up having to burn down the coal mine (which by the time I realized this was full of food *sigh*), set the priorities right on the tool shop, and start the coal mine over. Don't let this happen to you. :) The surest winning strategy I have found is this: 1. Clear out some good land. 2. Expand to mountains and find _gold_. 3. Figure out where your mines are going to be; at a minimum, a coal mine and two gold mines (I usually go two coal and three gold, coal seems to produce faster). 4. Find a place to put the bakery, with the windmill nearby, such that they can feed bread directly into the mines _without_ going past/into the castle. 5. Find another place to put two gold smelters, preferably without using the same road as your food supply. 6. Lay another road to feed gold straight into the nearest storage facility (I rarely build warehouses, but if you do, it's just as good as the castle). 7. Drop two farms if possible, and feed the roads as straight as possible to the windmill. Keep in mind that the less zigzagging you do, the more land is available to the farmer; you can afford steep hills here to avoid switchbacks. 8. Make sure there's a road from your mines to your castle and from your bakery to your castle; this way the excess has somewhere to go. 9. Ensure that everything critical (mines, food supplies, and foundries) is WELL defended. Again, towers if possible. 10. Leave. Go to work or to bed, whichever. 11. Come back eight hours later. You'll have a horde of messages; some will say you've been attacked, some that mines no longer produce (these are repeated periodically, so expect duplicates), several that because of such and such building you've lost some land. Scan through these, burning down mines that don't produce (and kiss that food goodbye; I wish there was a way to tell mines to drop their food at the road before going up in flames, but I haven't found one). 12. Check out the knights menu. Your morale will be incredibly high (expect 200%+; I usually get somewhere in the 300%'s, and last game I came back to a whopping 617%). 13. Attack. Attack everything you can reach, one knight to a target. If it's a castle, attack with more than three but less than ten. You will win almost all of the fights; expect a 5:1 to 10:1 kill ratio in your favor. Most of your troops will be captains, as you haven't got supplies to make new wimpy knights. If your enemies didn't attack much while you were away, or if they've got only one or two knights in their huts, you can safely turn the bottom setting of _every_ building-range-staffing-thingy to "minimum". I do this without bothering to look around and haven't regretted it yet. It makes a massive difference in how fast you can attack. Notice that nowhere in there did I mention tool shops, iron mines, iron foundries, blacksmiths, etc, etc, etc. At least in the first ten or twelve missions, there are enough supplies to get by; the supply of swords and shields you start the game with is usually enough to handle 40-80 knights. When you can take a castle with losses of one or two rather than 20 or 30, you don't NEED any more weapons than that. Note with regards to available knights: the more efficiently you guard your land (using small numbers of towers, ideally) the less knights are tied up in defense. This may seem obvious, but for several of my first games I built more huts than I really needed to hold my borders. Sometimes while advancing on an enemy I will burn down huts just after I take them (checking for gold first, of course) just to free that knight up. Sure, he's gotta walk all the way home first, but better that than hold a hut that guards empty land I'll never utilize. If you prefer to avoid the eight-hour-idle strategy, and thus don't have overwhelming motivation when you attack, I've found this to be extremely effective: your first targets should be, in no particular order: 1. Huts between you and the enemy castle. 2. huts that, when captured, will burn down enemy warehouses. 3. huts all around the enemy castle. When you isolate or destroy all the enemy storage facilities, they will find themselves unable to create more, expand, etc, etc, etc. They also can't train soldiers worth a damn. Even if you're not ready for a real strong offensive, isolating their castle alone can damage them more than any other single action. Oh, almost forgot: go for their sawmill too. I've noticed wood has to go all the way back to the castle before it comes out to be used, but I don't know that this is still true if the castle is unreachable. These are just my thoughts after having played the game for many hours, and looking forward to many more. This is one of the most addicting games I have ever played, despite its flaws. I heartily recommend it to anybody who hasn't got it yet. Ultrasound support is great, it's beautiful in SVGA despite my poor 15" monitor; on my setup, though I need a boot disk, it runs flawlessly without crashing or garbling sound, etc, etc. I've found two bugs to date: 1. I noticed the same problem somebody else has mentioned: occasionally the game will "forget" that a building doesn't quite have all the supplies it needs, and not deliver lumber. The same solution mentioned by the other poster worked for me: change the demand on that road by adding a construction project or simply wiping the road and building a new one. 2. One time while suffering the major shortcoming of the strategy outlined above (running out of knights), I was madly demolishing huts I didn't need and suddenly couldn't demolish anything anymore, including civilian stuff. I'd special-click the destruction icon, it'd ask for verification; I'd click ok or the checkmark or whatever, and it would make its little mouse- click noise, exit the menu, and not burn it down. Annoying. I had two knights left anyway, though, and that turned out to be enough to pass the victory threshold. Questions: Does anybody actually use the attack-with-weak-knights default? Has anybody found the 'sending messages to yourself' thingy mentioned in the manual? Has anybody got a crack for this thing? I've seen the settlers crack; it doesn't understand my version (SSI). Has anybody ever played a game with a more poorly written manual? Can anyone verify or deny this: whenever the feather-helmet dudes (corporals?) are fighting each other for a building (not in the open somewhere, I mean), whoever gets the first hit always loses. I've noticed this but I can't be certain it's true, since sometimes the blood splotch appears directly between the combatants *sigh*. I had another question but it escapes me now. Ah, the horrors age visits upon memory... I hope some of the content of this overly long post are of use to somebody, and I look forward to getting some other peoples' comments or tips on this game. Sooner or later I need to abandon the eight-hour-idle strategy, but when I go to bed or to work I always say to myself "what the hell, let's leave it running and see what happens" >:) Good luck to everyone just starting with this game, and have fun. Oh, and be careful not to have too much fun watching your little slaves work to remember something important...