Zainstaluj Steam
zaloguj się
|
język
简体中文 (chiński uproszczony)
繁體中文 (chiński tradycyjny)
日本語 (japoński)
한국어 (koreański)
ไทย (tajski)
български (bułgarski)
Čeština (czeski)
Dansk (duński)
Deutsch (niemiecki)
English (angielski)
Español – España (hiszpański)
Español – Latinoamérica (hiszpański latynoamerykański)
Ελληνικά (grecki)
Français (francuski)
Italiano (włoski)
Bahasa Indonesia (indonezyjski)
Magyar (węgierski)
Nederlands (niderlandzki)
Norsk (norweski)
Português (portugalski – Portugalia)
Português – Brasil (portugalski brazylijski)
Română (rumuński)
Русский (rosyjski)
Suomi (fiński)
Svenska (szwedzki)
Türkçe (turecki)
Tiếng Việt (wietnamski)
Українська (ukraiński)
Zgłoś problem z tłumaczeniem
Thanks
- the towns with no ind/com only grew to match their new basic size and not target pop
- in one of them I was able to create a com zone, by setting it at 500 and waiting 8 years (!); the town had 2 (!) shops and its pop still did not grew past the basic size
- the towns with ind/com grew as they should as soon as the new caps were set at anything above 50, but then they did so at a much slower rate than the organically planted city
- I could completely remove ind zone in one of them, but not recreate it
- the sliders for zone sizes worked for the organic town just fine
The towns I tested were indeed very small, 30-40 residential with 0-20 industrial and commercial capacity. The other, the one plopped by the vanilla tool, had caps of 135.
I placed them in the map editor, not after the game started; I know it makes a difference for some assets.
I did not test your tool on bigger towns yet, but I'm about to.
I ran a test game with 4 very small towns, I supplied them with everything they needed over 5 years and even though they showed that their target population should increase by 140%, they stayed the same size.
I had two somewhat realted mods that could potentially interfere, namely Town Tuning and Urbanization, but after uninstalling them the issue persists.