![]() And the home decor and fashion are too tied to stats boosts for a decorative approach to really work.īy being so slow, My Time At Portia both repels and appeals. The farming is… fine? Seasonal celebrations are fun but involve minigames of variable quality. The villagers aren’t very engaging, so I have no desire to cultivate friendships or romances. The fighting is dull - slash, slash, slash, dodge roll is pretty much all you need. Outside the crafting missions and commissions, the systems are a mixed bag. Oh, and you have to fuel the furnace and the grinder so you’ll need a whole lot of wood (as distinct from hardwood) and power stones (from the ruins). Don’t forget you’ll need extra copper ore to refine into the copper bars which can then be ground to form the copper pipes. So it’s back to the ruins for old parts, copper ore and stone, then to the furnace and worktable to refine some of the materials into a usable format. You go back to the furnace to make the bricks, but the copper blades come from a grinder, and a grinder requires 2 old parts, 3 copper bars and 2 grinding stones. Cutters need 2 copper blades and 5 stone bricks. You now have the ability to get hardwood!īut you need hardwood planks not hardwood, so you’ll need a cutter. Hardwood comes from the big trees nearby, but the axe you crafted for the tutorial isn’t strong enough so you must smelt copper and tin (obtained via mining trips to the abandoned ruins or hacking away at stones) to make bronze bars and buy an expensive (for this stage in the game) upgrade kit from a local store. But the Bridge Heads need 3 copper pipes and 5 hardwood planks each.
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