Sabtu, 23 Juli 2016

Welcome township

WELCOME TO GUIDE TOWNSHIP

How do I get more Township Cash? And what do I need it for?

How do I get more Township Cash? And what do I need it for?

Township Cash is a kind of in-game currency. You can use it to accelerate most game processes such as processing goods at factories, growing crops in fields, etc. You can also use Township Cash to buy any items or materials you might need.

Here are some ways to get Township Cash:
* Visit your town regularly and collect your daily reward. If you sign in to the game more than 4 days in a row, then each subsequent day you'll have a chance to get 1 unit of Township Cash.

* Construct buildings. Every time a new type of building appears in your town, your residents will thank you and give you Township Cash as a reward.

* Exchange gifts with your friends. Some gifts contain 1 Township Cash.

* Earn achievements at the Mayor's Office. The harder the achievement, the more Township Cash you'll receive as a reward.

* Assemble collections of artifacts at the Central Museum. You can receive three rewards for each collection.

* Explore the mine, fill in the Airport orders and visit your friends' towns to get treasure chests. You may find Township Cash and other valuables in them.

* You can win Township Cash in the House of Luck.

* If you are in need of more cash you can always purchase some through the in-game shop which runs via iTunes, Google Play and Amazon Appstore.

GUIDE TOWNSHIP

GUIDE TOWNSHIP

Township by Playrix is a rather unusual city building game. That’s because it adds farming to the equation, meaning harvesting crops, selling goods, and running facilities as you develop your town. You can also mine for resources, travel to islands to get “exotic” products, and open all sorts of buildings to keep your community happy and engaged. Aside from that, you can also collect ancient artifacts at the mine, raise animals on your farm, and meet “charismatic and fun characters with quirky personalities” to brighten up your town. It’s available for iOS and Android devices, and if you’ve decided to start playing this game, we have some Township cheats, tips and hints for making your town prosper. 

1. It’s A Free Town 
What do we mean by this? Well, that’s another reason why Township is a very unique city building title. It’s an open-world game in the truest sense, as you don’t have to go on any missions or quests. Creativity is your only limitation when building your city and choosing buildings and establishments. But if you’re like most gamers, you’ll want to have a busy, thriving city, and that’s where the rest of the tips will come in handy. 

2. Complete Orders To Earn Coins 
You won’t earn coins easily in this game, and the most reliable way of doing this is to tap on the helicopter button to complete orders. People will submit orders to you and you’ll have to get them what they want, but would they really be worth it? It’s important to examine each offer and see whether you’re getting a good deal or not. If you don’t think there’s much in it for you, then you can tap on the trash bin next to the order to get rid of it. 

3. Focus On The Farming Aspect 
Your city thrives mainly on organic crops, and you’ll want to plant a lot of them if you want a bustling and active city. Wheat is the most important of these crops, so you should make it a point to check if you’ve got an adequate supply of it. Over time, you’ll also unlock other crops, and that could throw a wrench into things; you may find yourself grasping at straws to find available plots. If that’s the case, keep in mind your orders in queue and your items in stock, and use this information to plant smartly. 

4. You Can’t Control The Materials You Receive
And yet, we’ve got another Township quirk to share with you. The materials for construction arrive via train, and they come in at random. Your only choice, really, is to keep on sending trains for materials until you’ve gotten what you really need. 

5. Make Your Town Bigger 
As early as possible, you should be thinking of expanding your town, as the first options to expand wouldn’t really cost you that much. Most gamers don’t expand until later on in the game, but you’ll find out soon enough that it’s easy to run out of space, especially if you put a premium on decorations.

REVIEW township

REVIEW

Township is a city-builder that really conveys the feeling of building your own community

Once a game genre blows up on Facebook, it gets increasingly more difficult for new developers to find a way to make their entry in the genre feel distinct. Playrix’s Township, rather remarkably, manages not to look or feel excessively like any of the other city building games currently available on Facebook. What sets Township apart is a mechanic that ties the size and prosperity of a user’s town to economic factors like farming, industry, and trade. While the result may levy a “no friends” tax on solo gamers, it has lots of promise for players who have friends in the game with them. 

You start a game of Township with a relatively well-settled starter town and plowed plots of land where you can grow crops. You begin with wheat but can eventually grow other staples like cotton and sugar cane. You get 10 plots at the game’s beginning and have to unlock more by growing your town’s population. This involves managing the happiness level of your citizens, which determines how many people can live in your town. You make citizens happy by building decorations and certain types of buildings. Once they’re happy enough, you can increase your population by building houses.


You can simply sell the crops you grow in Township, as in many other games, or you can invest resources in processing them. For instance, if you grow wheat you can opt to use your mill to grind it into flour and then ship the flour off to your bakery to become bread. You get much higher profits for selling 10 loaves of bread than you would for simply selling 10 units of wheat. This in turn helps you afford more decorations and lets you level your town up faster. You can build additional types of factories over time, which usually requires expanding your town due to their sheer size.
Building things is where Township levies its “no friends” tax. Every player in Township has a factory that produces a resource vital for building new structures, such as glass. To get other resources your game can’t produce, such as girders and concrete slabs, you need to trade with friends who happen to have that type of factory or buy the resources with real money. While the prices involved are reasonable, you’ll have to start making purchases extremely early in your game. Getting far in Township without friends in the game with you would be an expensive proposition.

Township is still a solid game offering a strong sense of advancement, well-designed quests, and extremely satisfying visuals. While the game isn’t 3D or anything fancy like that, it has a look that’s bright and friendly without feeling like a retread of any other game. It also ran very well during the test period, even on low-powered machines. The only reason not to play Township, in fact, is if you don’t have any friends to play the game with you and share resources. If you see a friend on Facebook playing it, though, you’ll probably have a good time if you decide to hop in, too.
 

Places

In Township you have your own city, which you can leave and go to friends city's, at level 30 you can go to isles, once you unlock the port, at level 40 you can build a zoo, and several different levels you can get airplanes and trains. You can also go into a app.
 

Gameplay

Township is a city-building game which contains farming elements. Players are guided through a brief tutorial at the very beginning of the game. The player begins with a starter town and in order to develop it they should harvest crops, run processing facilities and sell goods. The primary currency in the game is T-cash. Besides, the player also earns XP (experience points) and coins for performing different kinds of actions in the game. Coins are used to buy factories, community buildings, decorations and XP points are used to level up. As the player accumulates XP points and goes through levels, more kinds of crops, factories, community buildings and decorations become available.

Crops

Most of the production comes from crops. The player starts with wheat but can eventually grow many other kinds of crops. To unlock them the player should grow the town’s population and level up. Crops can be used in the following ways - it’s possible to sell crops or invest resources in processing them.

Facilities

Factories let players process various crops into other products. As the player levels up more factories become available to be built. Houses and Community Buildings help the player increase the population and the population cap in the town, respectively. These facilities can be purchased for coins.

Social interaction

Township encourages interactions between players through the social network Facebook. Keeping in touch with other players allows the player to develop the town faster by using friends’ help. In July 2015, a new update was released, introducing a zoo and the ability to donate to friends' planes and trains.
New crops, products, buildings and activities are added with each update from Playrix.

Best vehicle for each stage in Hill Climb Racing

Best vehicle for each stage in Hill Climb Racing

Some hints for each stage, and my 3 best vehicles below.
As far as money, either take the fully upgraded Truck to highway and take your time with it (can get millions per run this way if you are careful/patient, but the runs are slow), or take something like Motocross Bike to the moon and just rack up the air/flips.

Countryside

Most vehicles can do ok here. Once you hit 2000m, there are a couple of hills that are very tricky, and one in particular that is very hard to not break your neck when you land.
  1. Dune Buggy 2223m
  2. Monster Truck 2156m
  3. Jeep 2154m

Xmas

The trees don't really get in the way here. I don't have much fun with this stage, so I haven't put much time into it. Gas becomes the limiting factor.
  1. Tank 3073m
  2. Dune Buggy 2590m
  3. Truck 1921m

Desert

Traction is key for this one.
  1. Monster Truck 3638m
  2. Tank 3051m
  3. Truck 2872m

Arctic

Again traction is the main concern. The hill at ~2340m stops most vehicles that get that far.
  1. Dune Buggy 3219m
  2. Snow Mobile 2563m
  3. Quad Bike 2431m

Highway

This one's all about gas. The distance between gas cans goes up about 50m each time you get to one, so watch your distance and try to figure out when the next one is coming up so that you don't jump over it. Any vehicle without a gas upgrade will need to hit every gas after about 1400m.
  1. Kiddie Express 18028m
  2. Truck 14678m
  3. Super Diesel 4x4 9047m

Cave

Slower/shorter vehicles do well here because they are easier to keep from flying over jumps. Eventually traction and speed to get up some hills become an issue, at which point you have to get real good at letting off the gas early and cresting the hills.
  1. Dune Buggy 2876m
  2. Rally Car 2431m
  3. Jeep 2369m

Moon

This one is just really hard to get distance on - the second one wheel gets off the ground you are starting to flip. Tank does consistently well because of its tracks.
  1. Tank 1253m
  2. Monster Truck 1111m
  3. Rally Car 1090m

Mars

A combination of cave and moon. Timing when you let off the gas becomes even more critical than in cave. Take your time.
  1. Jeep 1586m
  2. Tank 1562m
  3. Quad Bike 1446m

Alien Planet

The slick surface means that very early in the level you need a running start for most hills. If you jump off a hill and land on the up slope of another, you have to back down and start over. Better to gently crest the hill, ride down the other side and pick up speed for the next. There's a hill at ~1150m that stops most vehicles.
  1. Snowmobile 2351m
  2. Jeep 1313m
  3. Race Car 1257m

Arctic Cave

Like a slicker version of cave.
  1. Dune Buggy 1910m
  2. Hovercraft 1235m
  3. Snow Mobile 1159m

Forest

It takes power and traction to push through the trees. I don't enjoy this one very much so I haven't put in much time. The Hippie Van is not affected by the trees, but it still does not seem as effective as the 3 below.
  1. Tank 1727m
  2. Dune Buggy 1602m
  3. Monster Truck 1563m

Mountain

The Mountain stage works best with vehicles that are good at making short, steep climbs, and are resilient to flipping. The treads on the tank also handle the large number of sharp points very well, when other vehicles get stuck with a tire on either side of the point.
  1. Tank 2114m
  2. Dune Buggy 1884m
  3. Hovercraft 1434m

Mudpool

Performance seems to diminish as you get muddy in this one, so try to jump as much mud as you can. Traction up hills becomes the biggest issue. The hovercraft will skim the surface of the liquid, which is handy.
  1. Dune Buggy 2266m
  2. Big Finger 2142m
  3. Tank 2023m

Volcano

Jumping the fire becomes pretty important when gas gets scarce. Again, the hovercraft will skim the surface of the liquid, which means you will never have extended fires.
  1. Tank 2958m
  2. Rally Car 2177m
  3. Monster Truck 2071m

Beach

This one's actually really straightforward. The dunes provide nice traction heading up the hills.
  1. Truck 12338m
  2. Tank 5694m
  3. Dune Buggy 4357m

Roller Coaster

The key is a vehicle that can get up the very steep inclines - vehicles with down force like the Dragster, Race Car, or Rally Car are all effective.
  1. Dragster 3991m
  2. Race Car 2652m
  3. Rally Car 1562m

I have not put as much time into the following tracks.

Night

The rolling hills and scarcity of gas make this track similar to Highway. However, traction is not as good.
  1. Tank 4424m
  2. Tractor 2877m
  3. Monster Truck 2355m

Rooftops

The key to this stage is not to hit all the ramps with speed. The very flat ones, like the first few wooden ramps, are safe, as are the dark ones at the edges of the rooftops. Any other higher ramps are liable to land you in between rooftops if you hit them with speed. Unfortunately you do not get lots of air for falling down the holes!
  1. Monster Truck 2763m
  2. Jeep 2666m
  3. Motocross Bike 2651m

Junkyard

There doesn't seem to be much of a trick to this one. Another "traction and gas" track.
  1. Tank 2746m
  2. Super Diesel 4x4 2455m
  3. ?

Construction

The swinging beams make this one tricky. The best stratergy is probably to travel slowly to see how the beam is suported and work from there.
  1. Big Finger 1964m
  2. Tank 1584m
  3. Quad Bike 1564m

Rainbow

This is a tough course. You just have to spend a good bit of time figuring out which jumps to take at which speeds.
  1. Rally Car 2776m
  2. Truck 1775m
  3. Quad Bike 1507m

Haunted

This was a pretty boring course, I only went through it a couple of times.
  1. Tank 4684m
  2. Big Finger 2316m
  3. ?

Northpole

Also pretty boring. The presents can get annoying. I imagine tank and truck would fare well, possibly also snow mobile. Update: BF is good here. Earned 10m+ coins going from level 45 to 62 in one go.
  1. Big Finger 16040m (level 64)
  2. Dune Buggy 6291m
  3. Sleigh 2108m