Manor Lords: Our Perfect Slavic Village Is Under Attack!

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One Proud Bavarian

One Proud Bavarian

2 ай бұрын

Today, we're continuing a multi-video journey on which we will be building historically accurate and authentic city designs in Manor lords, a highly anticipated city-building game! I will explain how the game works as I play and explain some historical details as we go!
Manor Lords on Steam: store.steampowered.com/app/13...
Manor Lords is a strategy game that allows you to experience the life of a medieval lord. Grow your starting village into a bustling city, manage resources and production chains, and expand your lands through conquest.
Inspired by the art and architecture of late 14th century Franconia, Manor Lords prioritizes historical accuracy wherever possible, using it to inform gameplay mechanics and visuals alike. Common medieval tropes are avoided in favor of historical accuracy, in order to make the world feel more authentic, colorful, and believable.
#manorlords

Пікірлер: 267
@OneProudBavarian
@OneProudBavarian 2 ай бұрын
I really like how this one came out - while this particular village is done now, I will probably return every now and again to adjust certain things. I might, for example, redraw the fields a bit or add new ones somewhere! What are your thoughts on a tavern in the Rundling as mentioned in the video?
@maltegoogle437
@maltegoogle437 2 ай бұрын
I think a tavern would be a good addition for a common area. :)
@Hobbyrepubliken
@Hobbyrepubliken 2 ай бұрын
Yes to a tavern on the village green and for more aesthetic fields.
@user-zk1td3gw8y
@user-zk1td3gw8y 2 ай бұрын
A tavern might be fine but not on the trees!
@shurikentv7733
@shurikentv7733 2 ай бұрын
Yes a tavern will be good keep some trees if you can but either or it will be great, also great series the best I’ve found in this game
@Smilemonster1912
@Smilemonster1912 2 ай бұрын
I think you should build as many fields and pastures as your people are able to work. Stay true to the farming village idea and keep rundlingen as lvl 1 with it being very rural.
@jakob814
@jakob814 2 ай бұрын
definitely my favourite manor lords playthrough; doing your game historically accurate is the best way to do it
@henkhenk1601
@henkhenk1601 2 ай бұрын
Same, best playthrough without a doubt.
@alainburki
@alainburki Ай бұрын
Exactly!
@okeanos6391
@okeanos6391 Ай бұрын
Me too!
@2KXMKR
@2KXMKR 2 ай бұрын
They also figured out that crop rotation would prevent loss or failure through disease as when a crop becomes diseased, the diseases often reside at root level, more importantly in the soil itself, and each disease could only infect one particular type of crop, so by planting a different crop in that field the following year, the disease had nothing to infect and would die off, making the same field completely safe for that same crop type when the rotation was complete and it was time to plant that crop type again as three years would have passed by that time and the disease would be long dead. Very smart! And keep in mind that this was all figured out by people that had very poor or even no education whatsoever. They could feed entire towns, but probably couldn't even spell their own name.
@chrishutchins9384
@chrishutchins9384 2 ай бұрын
Another thing to consider is that these people largely produced a lot of their day to day items on their own. The had to memorize every task they did, be they smith or whatnot typically. Paper or vellum wasn't cheap! And while later in the period a lot more people could read and write than we think, this came closer to the renaissance. Which means smelters and such had to memorize their recipes and methods. That's pretty amazing to me.
@dakaodo
@dakaodo Ай бұрын
"poor education" is a very limited perspective. Humans tend to suffer from familiarity bias and the Dunning-Kruger effect in this as in everything else in life. Even in modern contexts, a formally educated person will often underestimate or outright ignore a lifetime of working experience (e.g. a college-educated engineer who doesn't understand why the veteran machinist is allowing for a certain tolerance in making tool components). Vice versa, a person who has learned their trade through work experience for a lifetime may dismiss or outright reject the usefulness of a formal education (e.g. a veteran machinist used to producing parts of a certain tolerance not understanding why a new computer-designed iteration needs higher precision parts for better performance). Each has its own strengths as well as weaknesses, like being able to organize principles and concepts versus understanding hands-on practical details of how things work or don't work. Modern people in industrialized countries tend to start from a much more formal educational background (even at a grade school level), and they look at people in developing countries or from pre-industrial historical time periods as ignorant -- in terms of formal education. But as OP alluded to, these people with no (formal) education had generations of informally accumulated habits, wisdom, superstitions, etc. This body of knowledge acts as a set of heuristic rules -- not necessarily logically or scientifically rigorous or sometimes even particularly correct, but they are mostly "good enough" for keeping people more fed than hungry, more healthy than hurt, etc. In a world with little to no scientific method, they were still able to figure out which plants and animals were worth cultivating for food, clothing, dyes, medicines, etc. for tens of thousands of years before modern medicine, agriculture, and other sciences were developed (and stopped killing people too frequently through Dunning-Kruger). Just seemingly simple things like how to plant a food crop and bring it successfully to harvest, or ensuring a newborn animal survives, involves a huge amount of knowledge.
@JaneXemylixa
@JaneXemylixa Ай бұрын
Entire kings could feed entire empires without writing a word besides their name in Latin. Charlemagne had no problem with it. He could read in several languages, but writing? That's something he'd pay other people to do
@LucasSchimmel
@LucasSchimmel 2 ай бұрын
A well protected peasant is a profitable tithe payer.
@Ezullof
@Ezullof 2 ай бұрын
In my years of emergency archaeologist, here's the buildings I've seen the most often in the middle of circular medieval villages: - churches - city hall - castle - old roman amphitheater
@jeanlouisgaming1221
@jeanlouisgaming1221 2 ай бұрын
hey man if you have done some researchs or something i would be very happy to read them, im doing a geographical first degree right now and im interrested in urbanism
@cristianbalan518
@cristianbalan518 2 ай бұрын
That sounds really cool! In what countries have you worked?
@NathanS__
@NathanS__ 2 ай бұрын
You get horses and permanently assign them to the trading post and it speeds up your trade when you have dedicated trade routes. Otherwise the trader walks everywhere.
@JuergenGDB
@JuergenGDB 2 ай бұрын
Good to know, hopefully they add that to the description of Horse, or Trader.
@NipapornP
@NipapornP 2 ай бұрын
@@JuergenGDB Trading cart can transport 10 items, horse cart can transport 20 items in one go.
@hitomisalazar4073
@hitomisalazar4073 2 ай бұрын
As an American we didn't really cover crop rotation in the more medieval sense of leaving fields fallow. But growing up in a rural area I did end up learning about the more George Washington Carver method of Crop Rotation. Where one of his big contributions to agriculture was basically coming up with a way to keep fields productive every year by changing what is actually planted in it. As various crops needed different nutrients and produced different waste into the soil. So you'd basically have Crop A depleted Nutrient A and creates Nutrient B, Crop B uses the new Nutrient B in the soil and produces Nutrient C, Crop C uses the new Nutrient C and produces Nutrient D, Crop D uses Nutrient D and produces Nutrient E. Crop E uses the new Nutrient E and produces Nutrient A, and have a 5 year closed loop where every year is productive. Really fascinating sort of stuff. But sadly most people know George Washington Carver for one thing he almost certainly was not in any way involved in "Inventing peanut butter". Which actually is a matter of historical contention about who did because there were three claims and patents filed within months of each other all claiming to have created processes for it. From Hiram Maxim (Yes the Maxim Machinegun Maxim, another fascinating figure who basically was a mad genius scientist like you'd see in a comic book with his over the top applications and the sheer variety of things you need to do) to a former lab assistant of Maxim's, and one other who's status I forget at the moment. But all seemed to have come at it independently at roughly the same time.
@philippg1390
@philippg1390 2 ай бұрын
I love that they measure the field size in Morgen, that is the traditional unit used by farmers plus field at that time would not have been much bigger than one or two Morgen, depending on the fertility of the region and the inheritance laws
@dogukan127
@dogukan127 2 ай бұрын
Land management, land distribution, history of agriculture, landownership forms and how much they differed from region to region, shaping up whole civilizations...these are the most underrated topics that made history. Glad you you are adding this historical flavour in this playthrough.
@mountainview35
@mountainview35 2 ай бұрын
This is by far my favorite playthrough of this game. While others are pumping out content as fast as possible to gain views, you are taking it slow and playing it like intended, as well as providing historical knowledge. You have definitely earned my sub :)
@leonla598
@leonla598 2 ай бұрын
Hes always that way, he is a history nerd, which makes strategic games of history always a pleasure to watch. He brings the aspect of Role-play and historic accuracy nicely together.
@JohnyG29
@JohnyG29 2 ай бұрын
Exactly, and then those other youtubers moan about things like trading, when they just have a tiny village or unlocked anything.
@konkwistador3121
@konkwistador3121 2 ай бұрын
Didnt he call south german village a slavic village? He is form bavaria so he should know the difference
@leonla598
@leonla598 2 ай бұрын
@@konkwistador3121 It doesn't mean that he is a historical expert. He probably looks into the Internet or reads a few books before every let's play series, so that he knows a few fun facts and historical relevant time periods. For Manor Lords he looked up village and city architecture, how they planned out villages etc. So mistakes can happen a lot.
@rhzyo
@rhzyo 2 ай бұрын
​@@konkwistador3121 when did he say that?
@MisamHunnan
@MisamHunnan 2 ай бұрын
I think talking about the way the things worked back in the day isn't dry at all. It's very interesting. People from this time an social status often get depicted very "simple" maybe even stupid in media, when in fact a lot of them very as smart - probably even smarter - then people today.
@chrishutchins9384
@chrishutchins9384 2 ай бұрын
Indeed. They were also much more connected to the land than we are and thus developed local innovations with local resources that are quite clever. We finally figured out Roman concrete, but only because we looked at local resources (volcano ash). I mean just because someone can't read or write doesn't mean they don't have a brain. I mean I always think about how I can improve certain things instead of struggling all the time (it's simple but a good analogy: I leave my shoes and keys and wallet in the same spot so I don't have to look for it). In a medieval context you could say carrying things by hand sucks so I make a sled. Well a sled can get snagged on things so I make a cart. Well the cart tips over too easy when loaded down so I make it wider. I don't need to read or write for common sense!
@sib113
@sib113 2 ай бұрын
This feels like if Kingdom Come Deliverance made From From Ashes DLC a full game/expansion xd I love it!
@Psycho250785
@Psycho250785 2 ай бұрын
Yeah, KCD was the thingnI was thnkingnabout when he travelled around the village.
@ardenwarwick1087
@ardenwarwick1087 2 ай бұрын
The historicity of this playthrough propels it to heights unseen by any of the other playthroughs I've seen (not that I didn't like them also). It's a beautiful little village, and I can't wait to see what comes next.
@Warhawk_
@Warhawk_ 2 ай бұрын
This is the most authentic town i've seen as a european myself Most people build it in blocks like New York.
@wintermutevsneuromancer8299
@wintermutevsneuromancer8299 2 ай бұрын
oh yes - how i hate it when the use the grid... i was really searching for a city builder diffrent from anno grid style and this will be my game. Foundation is also good but i played it already too often and lost interest.
@Valleyraven007
@Valleyraven007 2 ай бұрын
American here, I can't wait to try this game so I can AVOID grids and make organic plots. The way plots can adapt to irregular shapes is incredible, I want every city builder to have this tech now haha
@pasikiiski
@pasikiiski 2 ай бұрын
As a gamers and modern humans, we are so used to think straight lines and grids, you can see it in almost every KZbin playthroughts. In reality old villages and towns have grow different way, depending from various reasons. You can see it even nowadays where there are old towns left. It is wonderful that at last we can now build really organic and natural way in Manor Lords.
@NipapornP
@NipapornP 2 ай бұрын
Seems, you guys never played Ostriv!
@HistorianOfVaelris
@HistorianOfVaelris Ай бұрын
Yea, grid style is best for modern city builders and city builder games set in Imperial China or other civilizations that were known for using grid style cities, not medieval European city builders.
@EinfachLosspielen
@EinfachLosspielen 2 ай бұрын
Came for Manor Lords content, stayed for the history lesson 😀👍
@krizzygirl206
@krizzygirl206 2 ай бұрын
A tavern in the middle of the village green would be absolutely PERFECT!
@stephena1196
@stephena1196 2 ай бұрын
Yes, next to the market stalls.
@cyberrb25
@cyberrb25 2 ай бұрын
In Northern Spain, there was a thing that happened that, with partitioning, parcels were split between successors. And, so each partition, they all needed to be connected to the road. And even today, up my street, you can see blocks of buildings near the town centre that are defined by long houses with at most 2-3 metres of its front wall.
@theorixlux2605
@theorixlux2605 2 ай бұрын
More fields! That soil fertility is rare. And that logging camp will probably despawn the berry bush
@christophernoneya4635
@christophernoneya4635 2 ай бұрын
One thing that drives me crazy about most playthroughs is how they design their villages as city blocks, not villages. It leads to them running into some silly problems, although the game does kind of encourage that without an interface to manage who goes where (so you can have a little mining settlement outside your village)
@maltancrusader
@maltancrusader 2 ай бұрын
dude, i love this village. it looks so natural and cool, unlike a lot of other people, who just make grids.
@a5cent
@a5cent 2 ай бұрын
Yeah. Grids were rarely a thing in Europe. Grids are how American cities were laid out 700 years later.
@ketaminepoptarts
@ketaminepoptarts 12 күн бұрын
you can like his village without putting down other ones
@deleeson
@deleeson 2 ай бұрын
I'm not even watching anyone else's series other than yours despite how hyped I am for this game. You're series is the best out there due to the dedication to historical background. Tavern would be nice.
@starguy321
@starguy321 2 ай бұрын
Maybe a couple of centuries early but that middle area is a perfect spot for a cricket pitch
@sixtycents
@sixtycents 2 ай бұрын
The historical trivia is actually very interesting and not dry at all as you claimed, keep it up!
@Figura95
@Figura95 2 ай бұрын
Man I’ve been obsessed with this game since first time I knew about its existance. I’ve seen roughly +20 gameplays and yours is so far the best one. Keep it going on, please, cannot wait to see you building the manor and updgrading it into a proper castle.
@theblackknight5389
@theblackknight5389 2 ай бұрын
@OneProudBavarian Over here in England we had fields similar to what you had in Germany but additional the monasteries also had fields and tenant farmers to work the land. If I remember correctly the system lasted from Bede’s time (6-8th century A.D.) to the time of H.R.H Henry VIII and the dissolution of the monastic system. Either way loving the attention to accuracy and a insight to how some of medieval Germany functioned pre Martin Luther
@Wolf6119
@Wolf6119 3 күн бұрын
Just to add, Henry VIII would have been His Majesty, not His Royal Highness. Fun fact actually: he was the FIRST monarch of England to adopt the style of “Your Majesty” which is now the standard for (not only) British kings and Queens. He did so in 1519 (a full decade before the dissolution of the monasteries) after Charles V adopted the style of Majesty upon his election as Holy Roman Emperor, who felt that a plain old “Highness” was simply too pedestrian for an Emperor. That prompted Henry and Francis I of France to immediately do the same, because God forbid they ever let anyone one-up them.
@mygetawayart
@mygetawayart 2 ай бұрын
Of all those i've seen, yours is the best Manor Lords playthorugh. You keep it interesting, historically accurate and engaging and your videos are much shorter than the rest.
@alexb-b7971
@alexb-b7971 2 ай бұрын
The best manor lords village playthrough i've seen so far. A tavern would be a great addition to the common in the village, feels right!
@DivinityOfBLaze
@DivinityOfBLaze 2 ай бұрын
Tavern is for a town. You should really leave level 2 for towns! The noble-esque place!
@InsomniacTC
@InsomniacTC 2 ай бұрын
I would love for this series to turn from a small settlement into a metropolis
@paullogemann7512
@paullogemann7512 2 ай бұрын
i want to play that game so bad.... Ich liebe auch einfach deinen Kontent
@FonFreeze
@FonFreeze 2 ай бұрын
same, cant wait
@SoufianeDepp
@SoufianeDepp 2 ай бұрын
24:52 LMAO that was a wildly unexpected reference.
@Cbart23
@Cbart23 2 ай бұрын
I like this village build a lot more than these city grid ones I’ve seen. 👀
@Serisar
@Serisar 2 ай бұрын
Put an orchard/fruit trees in the village center, so it looks like an Allmende.
@antorseax9492
@antorseax9492 2 ай бұрын
The orchard is a garden extension and costs a development point (a valuable resource) so, sadly, probably isn't worth it.
@Not_Dane_Heart
@Not_Dane_Heart 2 ай бұрын
@@antorseax9492 if the region is fertile then it is worth putting dev points for the region in agriculture
@pierrehenry8208
@pierrehenry8208 2 ай бұрын
Hi, I love the your historic comments, and that you buil historic forms of villages. And ilt's obviously the best village that I have seen among all playthrough I've watchof this game yet. But I found your explanation of farming a bit oversimplified : the revolution in farming of the middle ages, which takes place between the XI and the XIII centuries is not based on the three years crop rotation. There were even some places that keep the two years rotation of the roman... The revolution revolve arround the plough, but especially arround wagons in all their forms. It's the possibility of moving a lot of things that allowed to produce more food. Indeed, thanks to that people can move hay. So they can stock the surplus of grass of spring and summer, and feed the livestock with it in winter (generally in buildings). So they can have much more livestock because the lack of food for it in winter is no longer the limit. And as they now can move the manure to the fields thanks to carts, and as they have more animals, they have better yields, and more people can live on the same surface. (more manure means more minerals and nitrogen for plants ) Feeding livestock in building also allow that all the dung is collected and put in the fields rather than scattered in meadows and along the roads like it was before (the animals were put on meadows to eat during the day, then move to fields (in fallow) the night so a little bit of nutrients is move from meadow to fiels, bettering the yield) Meanwhile, the plough allowed one familly to farm a greater surface, and as the yields were better, not only farmers were better feed, but they can sell more of it, allowing artisans to flourish. Indeed, before this revolution,each familly needed to farm all year just to feed herself, and nobles, artisans and all type of people that don't produce they own food needed slaves and plundering of neighbouring cities or region to live. Another benefit of the plough, is to allow farming to extend on lands that were unusable before (soil too heavy, too damp, too poor for the old roman system of farming), creating a movement of extension of somes villages, and especially a movement of colonisation of large swathes of land that were unusable without this revolution. Then only, this system improve with the three years rotation, were the soil were not too poor. That allow to use fields to produce grain two third of the time rather than half of it. PS : before they were not wagon and cart able to move such mass, because they were attach to animals in a way that strangle them. That's why the romans needed four horses on they chariots, while after only two horses are enough for a whole wagon. My source is a book (in French) titled "Histoire des agricultures du monde" (history of world's farming systems) by Marcel Mazoyer and Laurence Roudart
@OneProudBavarian
@OneProudBavarian 2 ай бұрын
Yes, thank you for this comment! When recording, I very much have to be somewhat reductive to not get lost in the sauce and it's always good to see a more extended angle in written discussion afterwards!
@thitalo1239
@thitalo1239 2 ай бұрын
True, but I’m pretty sure there were three very notable inventions that made it possible for societies to grow and develop into one with a monetary system once more. This process eventually caused societies to become an agrarian urbanism society. Sure, there was a groundbreaking new plough, but only in combination with what OPB described as the crop rotation (instead of the two-yearly crop rotation) and the often forgotten possibilities for deforestation and draining of swamp and other bogland would allow for there to be more space for properly designated land for agriculture. One last thing I’ve also not seen either of you mention is that instead of using oxes they started using horses for ploughing. Horses can dig way deeper into the ground to assure for seeds to be planted without failure. As a result of all of these inventions societies would be able to develop into those with more specialized varieties in work, like I’ve described at the start of this message. I hope that this is helpful and clears everything up a little bit more.
@pierrehenry8208
@pierrehenry8208 2 ай бұрын
@@thitalo1239 Indeed, this revolution comes from a lot of innovation (or generalized use of very rarely used old inventions), but I have summarized 70 pages of one book in some lines, so it's very short... And all of this inventions work together, so I have only talk about the majors ones, and those that seems important to me in the context of the ostseelung. (I don't now how to write it exactly, I don't speak German) Firstly, they were a lot of land with already established farms, and those were often the latest to adopt the new system. Indeed this new system was very costly and so the first places to implement it were villages along swamps or forests that could have a huge benefit from it by extending their farmlands, and thus justify the investissement. Then there were colonies established by lords, wealthy people and monks on their lands unused untill then (great swamps, forest... the Flanders are a great example, even if it is quite peculiar as this was a gain on sea). After that some people did the same on other lands, it's probably the case of the ostseelung (but I don't really know). I know it's the case for Prussia under the Teutonic Order for example. And finally regioins were all the lands were already used switched to the new system. This took way more time because those investement were not justify by a possible expansion of farms, and especially there were many traditions and laws that had to be changed, or even all the fields had to be redesign, because before the plough, it was better to have rather small square field, and with the plough long and narrow fields are better. So I agree with you, to extend to this new places, a lot of deforestation had to take place, but also the draining of swamps. For the latter, it was almost unprofitbale to do it without plough, so I only say that the plough allowed to extend on otherwise too damp soils. And it's a grreat example of inventions that work together. For the horses that replace the oxes, it vary a lot from farm to farm. Horses are better because they are way more powerful, but when tractors arrived they were still oxes or even simple cows used to plough, and not only horses. So it's absolutely not something central. For the three years rotation, the book that I mention explain that at start people continue with the two years rotation for a while, before switching to three years rotation. It is wrote that three years rotation start during the XIII century while the farming revolution started during the XI century. During the XIV it was still the most common rotation, and it still exist during the XVII. So the two years rotation remained during several centuries even if the three year rotation was better on all points (exept on very poor soil) : less weeds, more grain on the same surface, it spreads the work on the fields, and it profit more of the manure. The book says that the traditions and laws can slow the adoption of the three year rotation, that it need to redesign the fields and redistribute them to the different families, and as long as the population hasn't grow enough to need to produce more on the same surface, it's useless. Another reason is that for the three years rotation to be better, it need to have enough livestock, and it's a very long process to increase the density of it, especially when all of excess animals are sold to new colonies so they can form they livestock. Finally, the plough by itself isn't enough, to work properly it need harrows and roller. To have enough, hay you need the great scythe, but also the wagon to transport it. Then you need stables to feed your animals with the hay and collect manure. You also need a cart to move the manure to the fields. For all of those carts, wagons, plough, harrows, and rollers, you need to have the new way to attach those to your animals without strangling them. And all of those inventions are the srict minimum to have the new system, and without one of them, either it didn't work, or it's very impractical. Funnily, the most symbolic of them, the plough, was invented before Christ, as the great scythe...
@fvchs
@fvchs 2 ай бұрын
This playthrough is great! As an architect I'm a sucker for the historical details! :)
@slec22
@slec22 2 ай бұрын
16:50 we were also tought in Poland about this in history class, it's called "trójpolówka" in polish.
@UZI-Max
@UZI-Max 2 ай бұрын
Your knowledge about history is definitely adding depth to your playthrough .. love it ! Thankyou so much , greetings from the Netherlands 🇳🇱🤝🏻🇩🇪
@TelperionMt
@TelperionMt 2 ай бұрын
When you created the pasture it suddenly struck me how similar this is to what we have in my home town. The pasture isn’t in use anymore, but there is a waist high stone wall that goes around the top of a hill surrounded by homes. Off to the side of the hill are the remnants of open fields, which, again, are left to minimum care taking, but it’s all there to see.
@TheRozeeey
@TheRozeeey 2 ай бұрын
Sat here refreshing my feed for episode 4! Enjoying your play through immensely
@Daniel-en1on
@Daniel-en1on 2 ай бұрын
16:50 yes I remember this about crop rotation
@salionshatterstar
@salionshatterstar 2 ай бұрын
I didn't learn much about crop rotation in school in the U.S., though my cousins' school in an agricultural area covered farming in great depth. I do remember learning about the three sisters - corn, beans, and squash. I may be wrong, as my memory is fuzzy, but I think those three crops were planted together in the same field in lieu of crop rotation. Each plant would replace the nutrients consumed by the others.
@francescoboselli6033
@francescoboselli6033 2 ай бұрын
17:20 as an Italian I can confirm that crop rotation together with " valvassori valvassini e valvassori" were at the basic of history lessons regarding midle ages fedual system 😂😂
@pedranwessels6428
@pedranwessels6428 2 ай бұрын
I can’t wait for the Germanic part. It makes sense that the slavic part is more agricultural, also in their backyards. Then the German town will have the artisans like the blacksmith etc
@davidchiandotto7245
@davidchiandotto7245 2 ай бұрын
beautiful little village, the tavern would be a great addition
@garry358
@garry358 2 ай бұрын
I love your commentaries and what you're doing with the game; your thoughts aren't dry at all - it's fascinating to see/hear the similarities and differences between your country and mine. Long may you continue!
@vivamongolia
@vivamongolia 2 ай бұрын
I love all these historical observations! Thank you so much for recording this!
@aidankenny521
@aidankenny521 2 ай бұрын
Absolutely been loving the series!
@popdartan7986
@popdartan7986 2 ай бұрын
Love how informative this series is
@matt_the_coder
@matt_the_coder 2 ай бұрын
Really enjoyed this playthrough! I also found the additional commentary on medieval farming practices to be interesting and informative :) Thanks for the videos!
@joshgambrell4095
@joshgambrell4095 2 ай бұрын
Love the series! Keep it up!
@johnfetty9356
@johnfetty9356 2 ай бұрын
love your informative commentary, sir!!
@stevekirkby6570
@stevekirkby6570 2 ай бұрын
Brilliant - I love that you think through the history. It gives such value to the game. I can't wait for this one!
@GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube
@GiveMeBackMyUsernameYouTube 2 ай бұрын
I like the way you apologise for talking at length about very niche, specific topics in great detail as if that isn't precisely why we're here.
@narzuneth
@narzuneth 2 ай бұрын
I love listening to you teach while you work and think. Very chill and interesting
@gregtimm1
@gregtimm1 2 ай бұрын
I love this series so well done! love the mix of history
@cody59786
@cody59786 2 ай бұрын
I love watching the play-through and learning at the same time. Wonderful videos please keep them going.
@nietoattacks4150
@nietoattacks4150 2 ай бұрын
Fantastic video! The historical background and research is great! I love series like this!
@Grimmy_Grimes
@Grimmy_Grimes 2 ай бұрын
I absolutely cannot get enough of this game, can't wait for it to come out.
@martinpetersen2888
@martinpetersen2888 2 ай бұрын
I love the way you do it ! More fields, and the tabern in the rundling
@JulianTheApostateEatingDoritos
@JulianTheApostateEatingDoritos 2 ай бұрын
I love this series! The game looks absolutely amazinf
@rhokor4985
@rhokor4985 2 ай бұрын
Love that you're doing things historically - looks great so far! I can't wait to play this myself, build some historical towns!
@Obsidianoak
@Obsidianoak 2 ай бұрын
I'm enjoying your creation and looking forward to more fun facts as you build 😉
@thelobsylife5174
@thelobsylife5174 2 ай бұрын
I like the historical background of it and also all the info you give
@Nickunparalleled
@Nickunparalleled 2 ай бұрын
37:00 I am Happy AF 😃
@Eagle-kp7fx
@Eagle-kp7fx 2 ай бұрын
I really love the history lesson, keep it up!
@ajk710
@ajk710 2 ай бұрын
Its entertaining to watch these videos, but I am also learning a lot about a culture and lifestyle that I wasn't really aware of so thank you for these!
@iamreaperd
@iamreaperd 2 ай бұрын
I just found your channel and I really appreciate your educational parts of the video. It really adds to the quality of what you have here. Cheers, mate! Keep nerding out.
@samEg1999
@samEg1999 2 ай бұрын
I love this so much, please, more
@realEpicGold
@realEpicGold 2 ай бұрын
I needed to comment because I LOVED this video and the lessons you taught. I really, REALLY appreaciate the history behind the town and game, and it makes me enjoy this game so much. Thanks for the videos!
@qouavang3646
@qouavang3646 2 ай бұрын
Be cool if they had a night mode at night where you have to assign sentries to guard the town from wolves and sneaky bandit or even thieves from the inside if your population isn't happy.
@Asgar1205
@Asgar1205 2 ай бұрын
This is so statisfying to watch. I can't wait to play the game myself, but this playthrough is definitely the next best thing!
@greenhighlander7
@greenhighlander7 2 ай бұрын
Yes! history lecture included, I always like to hear about history.
@paragoninnovation3383
@paragoninnovation3383 2 ай бұрын
Loving these history lessons! Most is familiar from history class but it’s so entertaining to have it here in this medium
@elijy6160
@elijy6160 2 ай бұрын
This is exactly what I want to do in my playthroughs. Play super-historical after reading papers! Amazing video, you've got yourself a subscriber! This is my favorite ML playthrough by far.
@paulnolin862
@paulnolin862 2 ай бұрын
Historically happy! A tavern in the center sounds perfect.
@user-cf6iw9xo9x
@user-cf6iw9xo9x 2 ай бұрын
one of my favourite….more episodes quickly please
@samkinloch1365
@samkinloch1365 2 ай бұрын
This has to be the most insightful playthrough of a game ever. The fact that I’m more interested in learning the history of town building than the game itself speaks volumes of your passion and knowledge of history. Well done and thank you🙏🏼
@kevindevoe7338
@kevindevoe7338 2 ай бұрын
Loving the history bits
@wfwf9917
@wfwf9917 2 ай бұрын
best Manor lords gameplay I've seen
@alsdlsaeofs
@alsdlsaeofs 2 ай бұрын
Amazing series
@aiko0928
@aiko0928 2 ай бұрын
I love this, I will play the next episode
@olestomok9086
@olestomok9086 Ай бұрын
In my school in Ukraine there were a couple of biology lessons that explained about crop rotation plus some history as well coverd this topic. And as my university major were biology/chemistry it was also covered there. And i quiet often were in my grandparents village and see how this works from first hands.
@beargillesgaming
@beargillesgaming 2 ай бұрын
Trying my best not to get too hyped but this is amazing. Can't wait for the release!
@saxrendell
@saxrendell Ай бұрын
talking about the parcels of farmland sounds a lot like how allotments work today in the uk, except you dont HAVE to work it lmao its just something you have for funsies, like an extra back garden, but the long strips of field sounds very similar to allotments
@Space_Ghost91
@Space_Ghost91 2 ай бұрын
I'm really enjoying this play-through, especially the attention to historical accuracy. I've seen so many people just setting up their towns in a grid system like an American post-industrial city.
@antoniplebanski1119
@antoniplebanski1119 2 ай бұрын
Awesome job my friend. Finally someone is trying to discuss real history of urbanisation with a help of this gorgeous city builder game. Greetings from your eastern neighbour. P.s. We do have lots of such round villages in Poland that are from XI-XIV c. Those were very diverse processes of founding settlements in here and at schools we learned of seven main types (shapes) of villages on todays Polish soil. Round village was one of them.
@dongquixote7Q6
@dongquixote7Q6 2 ай бұрын
playing while educating is so underrated ❤
@RomanGods1
@RomanGods1 2 ай бұрын
This is so wonderful to watch. Makes me miss the history lessons that went along with the CK3 roleplay series.
@ShadowDragon1848
@ShadowDragon1848 2 ай бұрын
Even though the game seems relativly simple, it´s amazing. Even just he looks are amazing!
@JohnSmith-ng8nm
@JohnSmith-ng8nm 2 ай бұрын
"Herr OPB, a second brigand band just entered your fief."
@user-cd4bx6uq1y
@user-cd4bx6uq1y Ай бұрын
Very cool
@LibertyOfDoom
@LibertyOfDoom Ай бұрын
Something to consider is the social standing of your occupations. The Millers were usually placed further from town and seen as dishonest and deceitful people, supposedly engaging in theivery.
@ATrainGames
@ATrainGames 2 ай бұрын
"Don't Mess with Texas. We will destroy you!" - Glad word's gotten around. :D Enjoying the informative gameplay. I am looking to incorporate some aspects of the village design from this game into my Medieval Dynasty play (particularly vegetable gardens in back yards and villages having larger fields for grain crops, as well as small animal pens behind homes). Thanks for sharing! A-Train from Dallas, Texas, USA! :D
@Acidfalck
@Acidfalck 2 ай бұрын
I Enjoying hearing about the History from the mideval time, while watching your playthrough. I look forward to hear about the German history, while you build the second village.
@jono_cc2258
@jono_cc2258 2 ай бұрын
I would definitely go with a tavern to be the social centre of the town where the farm workers can have a well earned rest after a hard days work in the fields.
@jozefmitro1017
@jozefmitro1017 2 ай бұрын
I'd not upgrade the center houses further at least until you build couple more villages. Revisit this village at a later date, it's beautiful as it is right now.
@drizmas
@drizmas 2 ай бұрын
The USA learned a hard lesson about crop rotation, The Dust Bowl, so we are also taught about it (at leas the state I grew up in, some states may differ!)
@bloodraven4812
@bloodraven4812 2 ай бұрын
Perhaps the best village a have seen so far! For the inside of the Rundling, I would argue, that a Communal Bakery should be placed there.
@indeedentertainment
@indeedentertainment 2 ай бұрын
Have searched around for a good playthrough to watch while I wait for the release, yours is the best, I love your roleplay and realism aspect and it is exactly how I planned to play the game. It isn't cities skylines or anno! Functionality and efficiency isn't everything!
@SD-O
@SD-O Ай бұрын
The farm system was simmular in denmark and sweden, but in Norway we didn't have the same systems as our population was more decentrialised
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