This thread has been created from Quietus' A Quick Economics Guide & Primer to RTW, which now resides in the RTW Guide forum. Below are posts in that thread that related to trade research.
Original post:
Originally Posted by therother
This thread has been created from Quietus' A Quick Economics Guide & Primer to RTW, which now resides in the RTW Guide forum. Below are posts in that thread that related to trade research.
Original post:
Originally Posted by therother
Last edited by therother; 12-11-2004 at 16:33.
Nullius addictus iurare in verba magistri -- Quintus Horatius Flaccus
History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren't there -- George Santayana
A few slightly more detailed comments:
You might want to mention expenditures like Family member wages (200 each I think, 300 for the Faction Leader), devastation, diplomatic tributes in your opening list. You might also want to mention one time incomes/expenditures, like Senate fines or selling map information.
You have two settlements with the same population, no Governors, same tax rate, same difficulty level, but have different tax incomes? I've never seen this in my games. Would you mind making the game available to me? I thought I had tax income pretty much solved. Ho hum.Originally Posted by Quietus
Trade
In my games the increase due to paved roads is 100%. It's 50% for Highways. For increases in neighbouring settlements, it usually depends on the relative quality of their roads, from my limited experience.
Sea Exports/Imports - It's been my general observation, as yet unconfirmed, that your trading routes depend on a number of factors. Geography is one: you only seem to sea trade within a certain locality. Selection of routes is based on profitability of the route. The game automatically chooses the best route for trading. It takes into account trade agreements, and is strongly dependent on both the goods that you can trade to a settlement (i.e. if a target settlement has that resource as well, it will not be traded), and the populations of the two settlements.
Basically, the more populated the market is, the more money everyone gets (imports and exports). A very large city, which is centrally located around a number of large cities with lots of trade goods, will not only make a great deal from exporting, but also a fair amount from importing. This is why, along with tax income, you want your cities as large as you can make them.
In the first instance, the fool counted squares from known landmarks (Wonders, for the most part). He then learned of the show_cursorstat RomeShell command. Unlike other RomeShell commands, you can use this as many times as you like. It's then just a question simple of trigonometry.Originally Posted by Quietus
Trade Fluctuations - I suspect this is to do with population changes.
Nullius addictus iurare in verba magistri -- Quintus Horatius Flaccus
History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren't there -- George Santayana
Oops, typo. I quickly checked my conclusion papers, I did put down "road -->paved = 2x" too.Originally Posted by theorother
I'll double-check the mess of data papers to be absolutely sure.
The increments do not happen concurrently though. Example, land trade w/ settlement A,B,D, increases but not C,E etc. Or you're saying population changes in the others settlements not the original?Originally Posted by therother
I have to dispute this. I checked for population effect on trade but there's no relationship I've seen. For example: Tingi gets 1700+ denari income from exporting the same stuff to Corduba, but only about 200+ denari with Carthago Nova. Maybe it is distance related?Originally Posted by therother
No governors, Normal tax, no Rebels, same difficulty level, in-game (Arretium and Arimium). SAME taxes collected, same population.Originally Posted by therother
Arretium = 5232 pop, 745 denari tax.
Arimium = 5230 pop, 745 denari tax.
Uhm, sorry, I'll check your old posts.
Originally Posted by Quietus
Andrew, is that what you're replying to? Oh nice, will have check this out.Originally Posted by Andrewt
I'll attend to all your comments, infos, and corrections. Thx for the replies, and again please, if you find any mistakes, speak up.![]()
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I'm not sure, I'd have to see your data to see exactly what you mean.Originally Posted by Quietus
I think perhaps distance is a factor, but trade income is most definitely affected by population. Absolutely no question - I've seen what happens when you change populations. You lose money from exports, the imports you already get, and you might lose entire import routes. [see example]Originally Posted by Quietus
Tax: Sorry I misread the original post. Damn my speed reading skills. OTOH, I'm not meant to be 'wasting' time here at all...
Of course, I forgot another geographical restriction on sea trade: you can't sea trade with a settlement you have a land route with! But maybe that was obvious.
Oh, and trade income doesn't seem to be affected by campaign difficulty.
Hacking Athens down by 75%
One thing to note: the trade income, as given in the trade summary scroll, is different than the figure given in the Settlement Details scroll. Is this just in my games, or is everyone seeing this? FYI, the corresponding drop in actual income is 7067 to 6165 Denarii.Code:Pop 30074 7500 Pop Goods Land Lari 547 518 28414 Ag,Fe, OO Therm 549 520 29777 Ag,Fe, OO Cor 595 555 17949 Ag,Fe, OO,Tim,Marb Imports Spart 307 283 20830 Not Reported Rhod 160 n/a 22515 Tim Thess 145 134 23466 AU, Tim Kyd 191 176 20564 Dye Sard 166 151 16379 Tim, Marb,Text Byz 120 n/a 23121 AU, Tim Perg 161 147 18393 Tim,Wine,Text Exports Kyd 1364 1260 20564 Ag,OO Perg 960 862 18393 Fe,OO Sard 906 797 16379 Fe,OO Totals 6171 5403
Nullius addictus iurare in verba magistri -- Quintus Horatius Flaccus
History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren't there -- George Santayana
Yeah, that was what I was replying to.Originally Posted by Quietus
For trade, distance seems to be the biggest factor. Halicarnassus and Rhodes are exporting 2000+ each to each other in my game. The largest sea exports tend to be cities right next to each other.
If distance is a primarily determinate of the value of a route, then that would certainly explain the lack of really long trade routes in the game. I have some fiendishly simple ideas to test if this is indeed the case, but they will have to wait.
Just noticed an odd thing: the trade income from Byzantium (to Athens) dipped (~7%) when I constructed the Imperial Palace. It only went back up to its previous level when I built a Curia. Very curious indeed.
No time to investigate further on either point though. Perhaps tomorrow.
Nullius addictus iurare in verba magistri -- Quintus Horatius Flaccus
History is a pack of lies about events that never happened told by people who weren't there -- George Santayana
I've had the same thing happen when finishing trade-building upgrades. I finally did find my data file from that test I ran two weeks ago. Will have to dig it out and get some income-dip percentages for each of the buildings, but it was quite consistent IIRC.Originally Posted by therother
"Die Wahrheit ruht in Gott / Uns bleibt das Forschen." Johann von Müller
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