On another thread Xin Yu describes some trading techniques which allow cities to refresh their supply commodities. I thought it best to start a new thread for this important topic.
Below is a copy of Xin Yu's posting:
Here's my theory. I have only played a couple of games so I'm not sure if it works.
Part I, using one food caravan and one commodity caravan
Suppose you have established 3 trade routes, and your city screen looks like:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
If you send a food caravan to London, you get to supply Salt again:
-----------------------------
Supplies: Salt(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London food: -1f
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Then you send a salt caravan to London you get back to
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Here's how it works: A new trade route always replaces the first existing trade route if there are 3 routes already existed. For the source city, IF THE OLD FIRST TRADE ROUTE HAD THE SAME COMMODITY AS ONE OF THE SUPPLIES IN PARENTHESIS (example, salt in the above case), then the supply will come back. In the above case, you can keep on sending a food caravan to London then get to build a salt caravan, until the trade route no longer shows Salt as commodity:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Beeds: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
You will not likely to get salt back now so you should try your luck in another city. Remember you will much less likely to get Dye or Silver (the 2nd and 3rd trade routes) back by using the above technique.
Part II, using two commodity caravans
Suppose, before establishing your 2nd trade route, you first send a food caravan to your trade partner city, you will make the food trade route be the 2nd trade route so it will never be replaced (unless you go to another city). After establishing your 2nd commodity route your city screen looks like:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt) Dye (Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
If you send a dye caravan to London, you get to supply Salt again:
-----------------------------
Supplies: Salt(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Dye: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Then you send a salt caravan to London you get back to
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt) Dye (Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Compared to the technique in part I, You lose the benefit of one trade route each turn, but you get to produce more commodity caravans. Should be a good deal.
Note: In both games I played Salt and Dye were not demanded by the trade partner city. The technique might fail to work if the commodities were demanded.
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Copied by SG(2) Written by Xin Yu
Below is a copy of Xin Yu's posting:
Here's my theory. I have only played a couple of games so I'm not sure if it works.
Part I, using one food caravan and one commodity caravan
Suppose you have established 3 trade routes, and your city screen looks like:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
If you send a food caravan to London, you get to supply Salt again:
-----------------------------
Supplies: Salt(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London food: -1f
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Then you send a salt caravan to London you get back to
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Here's how it works: A new trade route always replaces the first existing trade route if there are 3 routes already existed. For the source city, IF THE OLD FIRST TRADE ROUTE HAD THE SAME COMMODITY AS ONE OF THE SUPPLIES IN PARENTHESIS (example, salt in the above case), then the supply will come back. In the above case, you can keep on sending a food caravan to London then get to build a salt caravan, until the trade route no longer shows Salt as commodity:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt)(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Beeds: +7$
London Dye: +7$
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
You will not likely to get salt back now so you should try your luck in another city. Remember you will much less likely to get Dye or Silver (the 2nd and 3rd trade routes) back by using the above technique.
Part II, using two commodity caravans
Suppose, before establishing your 2nd trade route, you first send a food caravan to your trade partner city, you will make the food trade route be the 2nd trade route so it will never be replaced (unless you go to another city). After establishing your 2nd commodity route your city screen looks like:
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt) Dye (Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
If you send a dye caravan to London, you get to supply Salt again:
-----------------------------
Supplies: Salt(Dye)(Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Dye: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Then you send a salt caravan to London you get back to
-----------------------------
Supplies: (Salt) Dye (Silver)
Demands: Spice (Coal) Hides
London Salt: +7$
London food: -1f
London Silver: +7$
-----------------------------
Compared to the technique in part I, You lose the benefit of one trade route each turn, but you get to produce more commodity caravans. Should be a good deal.
Note: In both games I played Salt and Dye were not demanded by the trade partner city. The technique might fail to work if the commodities were demanded.
-------
Copied by SG(2) Written by Xin Yu
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