

Pentium II - 233MHz, 32MB RAM, 4-speed CD-ROM, 4MB graphics card compatible with DirectX 8.1, OS Windows98/98se/ME/2000/XP. All additions and rule changes are incorporated.
Patrician iii patches manual#
This manual represents the current state of play. The Patrician III team wishes to thank all who have participated in the Patrician III forum on the ASCARON web site, shared their ideas with us and discussed them with us and others. Please take a look through this manual to learn what you need to do to become a successful and respected member of the Hanseatic League. Fight real-time sea battles or lay siege to a town - not a particularly genteel way of maintaining your interests, but highly effective and quite common for the times. Apart from offering the various elements of construction, you also get to take part in some real action and battles. This is why Patrician III has really developed beyond being just a trading simulation. You also desire wealth for your home town and toil for recognition and prestige, dabble in local and national politics, ensure your competition is left standing and confront evil pirates and unreasonable princes. However, it is not just base self-interest driving you in this. To this end you gather information, set up trading offices in other Hanseatic towns, take on various assignments for which you are not always best qualified, and indulge in as much bribery as your purse will withstand. You are a small, but ambitious trader, bent on succeeding and shaping your own empire. Protected by the Hanseatic League, traders travel between Luebeck and London, Cologne and Bergen, Riga and Novgorod. Patrician III let’s you join this exciting world of discovery and new beginnings. This class of wealthy and proud merchants ruled most towns in the Holy Roman Empire and even pushed the jealous nobility into the background. This was usually restricted to the patricians. Of course, not everyone could join the Hanseatic League. In other words, it was one of the first global players in the history of economics - even if only Europe and parts of Africa and Asia were known at that time, and America and Australia had not been discovered yet. It held strong political sway and was something of a predecessor of the European Union. In its heyday, the Hanseatic League was much more than a community of merchants or towns. North Sea and Baltic traders had to be a part of the Hanseatic League if they wanted to have any chance of succeeding. Over time, however, it developed into a very powerful trading concern. Initially it was a loose organisation of a few daring traders. The Hanseatic League was founded in the middle of the 13th century to protect its members trading interests. 11.4.1 Businesses Producing Raw Materialsġ2.1.3 Checking and Raising your Reputationġ3.2.3 Controlling your Ship Manually During Battleġ3.2.4 Damages sustained during Sea Battlesġ3.2.6 Taking a Ship over after a Sea battleġ3.4.2 The Town Gate Functions during a Siege
