ติดตั้ง Steam
เข้าสู่ระบบ
|
ภาษา
简体中文 (จีนตัวย่อ)
繁體中文 (จีนตัวเต็ม)
日本語 (ญี่ปุ่น)
한국어 (เกาหลี)
български (บัลแกเรีย)
Čeština (เช็ก)
Dansk (เดนมาร์ก)
Deutsch (เยอรมัน)
English (อังกฤษ)
Español - España (สเปน)
Español - Latinoamérica (สเปน - ลาตินอเมริกา)
Ελληνικά (กรีก)
Français (ฝรั่งเศส)
Italiano (อิตาลี)
Bahasa Indonesia (อินโดนีเซีย)
Magyar (ฮังการี)
Nederlands (ดัตช์)
Norsk (นอร์เวย์)
Polski (โปแลนด์)
Português (โปรตุเกส - โปรตุเกส)
Português - Brasil (โปรตุเกส - บราซิล)
Română (โรมาเนีย)
Русский (รัสเซีย)
Suomi (ฟินแลนด์)
Svenska (สวีเดน)
Türkçe (ตุรกี)
Tiếng Việt (เวียดนาม)
Українська (ยูเครน)
รายงานปัญหาเกี่ยวกับการแปลภาษา









Well this got very mathematical! I have a much simpler philosophy: Hit it with a pickaxe if it's ore or stone, hit it with a shovel (which is technically a spade) if it's sand or dirt.
This is also my approach to mining , if it is soft material , use shovel , to me it's a no brainer .
Things have changed / are changing. Currently in MP/Adv we have "distributed ores", they are no longer large blobs / viens of ore. They are spead out.
..as a result; the Pickaxe is Dead. []/b] Usefull only in getting quality hits from the stones as it use to from the ores. :(
With "Distributed ores" you will rarely get "Quality / Yield" hits. Like one 28 return hit, one 14 or 21 return hit and a bunch of 7 return hits, like 5-7. ..and have to waddle around to get that.!
..and STILL have to take out the dirt! The Pick is Dead
If one can dig a clean diagonal/sliding tunnel with a shovel ..then it will forever more smoke the pickaxe thro ore.
You will get less per' ore, sure ..but sliding shaft / continuous dig practicaly automates it. Dramatic time reduction.
<sigh>
@Ninja Blade: Pretty much, that's the way it is balanced right now so that the Pickaxe is the tool to go to if you want to craft lots of stuff and need a lot of materials. Example: You want to make 500 Fuel from Petroleum. You can either make a relatively small hole with the Pickaxe or end up with a big crater with the Shovel. Both will do the job, but one wastes less material than the other. ;)