REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

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REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

Medieval Trader Simulator was developed and published by DNA ARMY GAMING. Our suggestion would be to play this game on a 64-bit processor and operating system with Windows 10 on Intel Core i5 6600K with 8 GB RAM. The suggested Graphic card would be NVIDIA GeForce GTX 970. Build your store in a medieval mountain village, buy and sell over 50 medieval products, manage your economy, and organize your furniture and merchandise 100% freely.

REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

Open your store in a medieval village, start with an empty store and grow to build your own success story. There are more than 50 types of products that can be sold at the Player’s Shop

 In the medieval market area where many stores are selling so many kinds of products

 You can customize your home and business with furniture, and there is a day/night cycle. There are AI citizens, including dynamic pricing system, product prices change daily, and there is an economic factor. You can buy notebooks and workbooks and use them to record transactions. When you are missing something, you can replenish your store. There are aspects of survival such as hunger, filth and so on. In the medieval market, players can also visit vendors to shop with them, and you can hire workers. There is an interactive shopping cart for using and shipping goods. This reputation system allows players to unlock new products sold in their stores.

REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

You need to keep your business running and stock your store while managing other aspects of your life. Take care! Bankruptcy can occur if you dont take care of all the things.

The game is difficult to understand and has a long way to go, so a sideways recommendation. A better map (showing your current location) is very helpful. For everyone reading this, I understand the game … pretty … after you leave home, your store is in front of you, in the suburbs. You can already sell a few boxes of merchandise with a clerk in the store.

REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

 The rep will automatically sell the item you put up for sale and later click on the bag on the table to collect money that you can add to your inventory. Also, there are books in stock that can be placed at the checkout counter, allowing you to save the game. Finally, there is a cart outside the store that you can push to the market. It’s another town with a series of stalls. Important: If you look at the map, you will see the streets leading to the market. Head northeast (e.g. at 1 o’clock) when you are at the doorstep of your business. Further northeast (I just crossed the field), I eventually came across a market town. Go to the centre of all the stalls again to release the shopping cart.

Hover your mouse over the different items sold at each booth to see if it’s a good buy. When you buy something, it becomes a box or crate in your hand. You can stack these in your shopping cart and use the shopping cart to push some boxes back into the shop. When you return to the store, unload the boxes, pick up the items, and place them on the table for sale. Oh, and also important: there are areas of the market town where you can buy more shelves, tables, tubs, beds, toilets, etc … If you buy them, put them in your inventory (Not shopping) carts) can be placed later. It would help if you had a toilet to pee in and a bed to sleep in (both are in stock at the beginning of the game). But to keep it clean, you need to buy and store basins in the market town, such as toilets and beds. For the time being, the store development system stopped playing.

To be able to sell/buy weapons, you need to get a positive rating from the shop. That means you have to have a lot of items in your store, which means you will run into the market repeatedly (in your shopping cart). The store rating system imposes severe penalties on you when customers want what you don’t have and only slightly rewards you when you have what they want. Bored. You also need to manually unload the boxes and place individual items on tables and shelves. That’s not interesting either. Your employees stand there and collect money. The more automation we can do, the more fun it will be. For now, short-term games seem to buy many items to sell in your store. And that’s boosting the store’s reputation. The problem is that there are so many different articles. Long-term games seem to be able to sell guns, at least as far as I know.

I first thought this game was a bit frustrating because it didn’t start with direct instructions or a tutorial. It took a few minutes for it to start. But once you get into the game and get the job done, it’s a lot of fun. As you play the game, you need to think a lot about how to maximize your profits from what you buy and sell in the store. All I want to change in the game is that when I move around the map and look at the map, the cursor etc., doesn’t move in the game. It will be a little challenging until you get used to the path of walking in the village where you work. But overall, I would recommend this game to anyone looking for a cool simulation game that only takes hours. I’m sure there will be more playtime!

Medieval trading sim is like trying to navigate steam. It should be fun and mysterious, but it’s lacking. In the first playthrough, I didn’t know how to go to the bathroom or sleep, so I was walking around all the time. I bought a flowerpot, but there was no box. A lot of confusion. Please note that the

 The game has very little content. Instead, there are many items and shelves for selling these items. That’s great, but that’s it. That is the whole game. Go to the market from your store, buy some items, take them home, refill your shelves and start over.

REVIEW : Medieval Trader Simulator (PC)

 Love is rudimentary. NPCs are just walking around unknowingly. They do nothing. They are supposed to buy from you, but I saw the goods bought when there was no one except the clerk in my store and me.  Rebooted and clarified everything. The user interface can be a bit tedious, but it feels like an EA game that needs to be priced that way.

REVIEW : SCARF (PC)

REVIEW OVERVIEW
Conclusion
5
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review-medieval-trader-simulator-pcI played for over an hour and giggled a bit, so it was enough time to buy a gift. However, for the asking price, probably go with others.

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