06-19-2015, 02:20 AM
Funny you should ask that, I was just thinking about these this morning.
I never use them but I think that's mostly because I never really worked them out. When I first started playing I tried them out and I got messages telling me I couldn't do things I thought I should be able to (can only have one thing at a certain priory or some such) so I kinda gave up and have only now started thinking about trying to work out how they actually work and what they do.
I think it would be nice to be able to prioritise things but I couldn't really say if the current system is the right one as I haven't mastered it.
Perhaps you could have simple priority pre-sets of some kind instead of ranking everything.
Something like:
- Normal (what ever normal is currently?)
- Highest demand first (just fill up New York and if there's any excess let the other cities have it).
- Lowest demand first (means more cities will get supply but the big ones might not get everything they need).
- Closes first (save transport costs)
- Furthest first (we want to look after our overseas market!)
I never use them but I think that's mostly because I never really worked them out. When I first started playing I tried them out and I got messages telling me I couldn't do things I thought I should be able to (can only have one thing at a certain priory or some such) so I kinda gave up and have only now started thinking about trying to work out how they actually work and what they do.
I think it would be nice to be able to prioritise things but I couldn't really say if the current system is the right one as I haven't mastered it.
Perhaps you could have simple priority pre-sets of some kind instead of ranking everything.
Something like:
- Normal (what ever normal is currently?)
- Highest demand first (just fill up New York and if there's any excess let the other cities have it).
- Lowest demand first (means more cities will get supply but the big ones might not get everything they need).
- Closes first (save transport costs)
- Furthest first (we want to look after our overseas market!)