Which given it's in early access, is going to be for quite some time. And as this is currently a work in progress it'll be updated roughly every week content wise until it goes over most, if not all of the game's features. As long as you have a road out there you can build a couple of pumps then 1 small tank at the maximum allowed distance and then 1 trading post can probably reach your main water storage area.Hello and welcome to the first ever guide I've published, if not the biggest written work I've done for years. Canyon you have to flood the offshoot across the river. Also you can use the river bed for farming too in the 2nd dry season.įor drinking water both maps have spots that retain water even at the end of dry season. Save all the irrigated land for farming food and new trees. You start with 15 explosives and can make 8 2 tile deep holes that give plenty of irrigation for farming. each hole irrigates a circle with a 10 tile radius. When dry season comes the river bed dries up but the holes retain the water. I think I made them 2 levels deep but I think it might work with 1.
![timberborn water timberborn water](https://iggamespc.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/10/Timberborn-Download-Free-MAC-Game.jpg)
Builders can build explosives in the river from the shore. I think I did one play through with no dam and about 5 small tanks.įor irrigation use explosives to make holes in the riverbed. *This is normal the easiest way of beating the demo and the way I would suggest people try first. Also levees are a must have for making taller dams. You still want to about 3 dams in the middle to stop flooding. When building you dam you might want to research levees first they are 40% cheaper. Make sure you have food to last you as your crops might dry up. This, with or with out the small season 1 dam could see you through. Build a lot of tanks and fill them during the wet season. A crazy amount of water tanks: Not something I would suggest doing but listed here for completeness.This should be around day 8 of the dry season but will depend on the sizes of the 2 sections of water you dammed off. Ideally you want to break the upper section at the point where it just fill the lower section with out over flowing. You don't want to wait till both sections have evaporated out. The trick is know when to break the upper dam. When the lower section is running out you delete a section from the upper dam and let it fill up the lower section. You want them to be large but they don’t need to be as large as the first 2 ideas to work. Second dam upstream*: The idea is to have 2 sections of water, a lower one that you use and a second higher one to refill it.Mid size area with deep bits: works much the same as above but once you run out of the first layer you make steps down and build pumps to get water at the bottom layer.Large flat lake: dam a large area to 1 high, this will mean as you have a large area so, height should not be changed too much by pumping some out to drink so you should get close to 14 days of water after that you can live off the water you have stored in tanks.So how can you last the whole of the second dry season? Well a number of ways: This means that a one high dam will only last 13 to 14 days at best and maybe a lot less if you are only holding a small section of water and pumping lot out if you have a load of thirsty beavers. A dam only holds back about 90% of the water height.
Timberborn water full#
the problem is 2 fold, 1 your also pumping water out to drink and 2 you don’t have a full tile of water. So how fast does it evaporates? I found that one tile high of water lasts about 15 days. It’s worth noting that water height is not effected by how many trees, crops or grass tiles it is watering, unless your using Irrigation towers in which case that counts as pumping it out.
![timberborn water timberborn water](https://i.redd.it/m6k75i3ay6s71.jpg)
![timberborn water timberborn water](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/0f1fe1_73c28e27917a4568894b72c4ad8d660e~mv2.jpg)
![timberborn water timberborn water](https://myfullgames.com/wp-content/uploads/2021/10/image-718-747x420.jpeg)