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Post by tacofarmer on Nov 4, 2019 8:59:02 GMT -6
When we are selling things. Say soybeans. How do we determine a fair price? Not everyone plays on the same difficulty level. Im usually on Normal. So for someone on Easy it would be a steal. And for someone on Hard it would be a bad deal. What do you personally use to determine a fair price?
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:03:14 GMT -6
I would say try to list somewhere in the normal range.. I mean.. lets be honest.. the prices in the game r a bit of a joke unless u play on hard and even then it could be argued that in most cases the prices r really high, especially considering how easy it is to gather crops in the base game without seasons.. so no matter what its a deal if u r playing realistic as well as roleplaying.. I mean.. this is my opinion and I don't expect anyone to share it.. but it seems to me that if people r playing on easy and can get those sweet prices, they probably wont be selling many crops in here anyway..
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:04:30 GMT -6
and of course it also relies on the flexibility of the seller.. like.. try to think realistic about it.. if u have a HUGE harvest with good yield, u can afford to let your crops go for a bit less in an attempt to move the product in bulk
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 4, 2019 9:06:39 GMT -6
from what i have noticed is rather its on hard or easy the prices are the same the only way to get realistic prices it to edit the sell points in the map tbh
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:09:57 GMT -6
it all works out better on hard with seasons honestly.. but that's because u aren't harvesting every game day.. it really does change it a lot.. plus add in that numbers mod (I don't remember what exactly its called) and things really start to feel "real" in most areas
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 4, 2019 9:13:30 GMT -6
yes with seasons but if the map is not seasons ready then its not affected i found this out the other day i started on a new map that WAS seasons ready but sadly it wasn't
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:15:20 GMT -6
I don't play on non "seasoned" maps.. kinda kills it too cause there r some fine maps that haven't been prepped properly.. but it is what it is.. as time goes on u know?!
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 4, 2019 9:17:24 GMT -6
yea i know all my saves are season ready maps
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:20:49 GMT -6
we should stop with the seasons talk for now.. folks like taco don't have access to it yet and im really not trying to rub it in.. im so excited for the console release of seasons19
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 4, 2019 9:33:36 GMT -6
true but like i said the sell points are the parts to be edited to simulate real prices in liters bush in fs17 i was able to edit the prices to match real life prices per the bushel
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Post by PrincessJessi on Nov 4, 2019 9:36:12 GMT -6
"bushels" mean nothing to me in terms of measurement.. which is weird as im a truck driver from the U.S... grandpa was always just like "take this to the lift, they r expecting u" and would toss me the keys to the ford day cab lolol.. the only reason I ever had a clue as to what I was even hauling was because grandpa only grew beans and corn lol
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 4, 2019 9:42:52 GMT -6
1 bushel is equal to 32 quarts. 1 bushel is equal 35.2 liters. 1 bushel is equal to 64 pints. 1 bushel is equal to 4 pecks basically a bushel is 8.125 gallons and it can be used for all cereal crops and row crops
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Post by BoxTunnel on Nov 11, 2019 15:36:43 GMT -6
It amazes me why the US still uses imperial measurements, you are the most powerful nation on the planet, Silicon Valley is the centre of the tech revolution, you put a man on the moon for crying out loud but you still deal in feet, inches and bushels. Along with Liberia and Myanamar.
I'm not criticising, it just baffles me:)
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Post by OutlawFarms on Nov 13, 2019 11:22:37 GMT -6
BoxTunnelBecause of the British, of course. When the British Empire colonized North America hundreds of years ago, it brought with it the British Imperial System, which was itself a tangled mess of sub-standardized medieval weights and measurements.
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