| Khuutra said: I'm... six days in? Eight? I think it's eight. I'll relate my experiences later. Oh those damned, dirty sheep! They are so very strong. |
Told ya. But death has never been so adorable!
| MrBubbles said: fixed the runeys...a bit...planting stuff in the field was rather hard as everything had just had stumps rocks everywhere, as well as the fact that plants had started to wither(including stuff i had planted in a dungeon!!! wtf is that about). i put my wood chopper/stone crusher pets back to work and they had the field cleared in just a couple days <3. tilled almost the entire field and planted fodder. so hopefully they grow fast enough that i can get some runeys out of them and still have enough food for the winter for my animals. tossed about 5 runeys of each in the dead zones.(so now only 1 is empty) it would be nice if i could just plant crops in these areas so they could produce their own runeys because moving all these runeys about and making sure their levels are perfect is taking a surprising amount of time out of my day, that i would much rather prefer spending in a dungeon. dont know how i am going to take care of the runeys in winter. |
I've noticed that for the first seven days of each month the runeys DON'T kill each other: in fact, in each zone they multiply by one per day. And of course, they NEVER die out in your homestead, no matter what.
Keeping that in mind, you can survive the winter easiest like this: on Fall 30th, make sure there's at least one of each type of runey in each zone. By Winter 8th, there should be a minimum of eight runeys in each zone. At that point, you can either leave them be, and hope the ecosystem lasts the winter, or play it conservative, and harvest all but one runey (total) from all the zones (making sure to add one runey in any zone which lost its last survivor).
When Winter 30th comes, go back to adding one of each in each zone, and take it from there. It'll take about a minute or two for each day, but it will get you through the winter with enough runeys to seed a better Spring.







