




Hello and welcome back to another Victoria 3 dev diary! Today we will be talking about three of the four of the main currencies of the game - namely Capacities (the last being Money, which well of course come back to later).
We mentioned in the very first dev diary that there is no mana in Victoria 3, and since this dev diary is about the games currencies, I want to be clear on what I mean by that. When we say there is no mana we mean that the resources in Victoria 3 arise and are spent in clearly defined ways that are parts of the simulation, not from an overly abstract concept or vague idea. There is, of course, some degree of abstraction involved (all games are abstractions after all), but we want all the games currencies to be strongly rooted in the mechanics and not feel arbitrary.
But enough about that and onto Capacities. What exactly are they?
Well, for starters, calling them currencies is actually not accurate. Capacities are not a pooled resource and are not accumulated or spent, but instead, have a constant generation and a constant usage (similar to for example Administrative Capacity in Stellaris), and you generally want to keep your usage from exceeding your generation. Each capacity represents one specific area of your nations ability to govern and is used solely for matters relating to that area.
As mentioned, Capacities are not accumulated, so excess generation is not pooled, but instead there is an effect for each Capacity which is positive if generation exceeds usage and quite negative if usage exceeds generation - a country that incorporates territories left and right without expanding its bureaucratic corps may quickly find itself mired in debt as tax collection collapses under the strain!
Bureaucracy represents a nations ability to govern, invest in and collect taxes from its incorporated territory. It is produced by the Government Administration building, where many of a nations Bureaucrats will be employed. All of a nations Incorporated States use a base amount of Bureaucracy which increases with the size of their population, and further increased by each Institution (such as Education or Police - more on those later!) that a country has invested in. Overall, the purpose of Bureaucracy is to ensure that there is a cost to ruling over, taxing and providing for your population - administrating China should not be cheap!
The Swedish Bureaucracy is currently a bit overworked and the country could certainly benefit from another Government Administration building or two.
Authority represents the Head of States personal power and ability to enact change in the country through decree. It is generated from your Laws - generally, the more repressive and authoritarian the country, the more Authority it will generate - and is used by a variety of actions such as enacting decrees in specific states, interacting with Interest Groups and promoting or banning certain types of Goods. Overall, the purpose of Authority is to create an interesting trade-off between more and less authoritarian societies - by shifting the distribution of power away from the Pops into the hands of the ruler, your ability to rule by decree is increased, and vice versa.
The Swedish King has more Authority at his disposal than he is currently using, slightly speeding up the rate at which laws can be passed.
Influence represents a countrys ability to conduct diplomacy and its reach on the global stage. It is generated primarily from your Rank (Great Powers have more Influence than Major Powers and so on) and is used to support ongoing diplomatic actions and pacts, such as Improving Relations, Alliances, Trade Deals, Subjects and so on. Overall, the purpose of Influence is to force players to make interesting choices about which foreign countries they want to build strong diplomatic relationships with.
Sweden has plenty of unused Influence and could certainly afford to support another diplomatic pact or two!
Thats all for today! Join us again next week as I cover something yet another topic thats fundamental to Victoria 3: Buildings. See you then!
[ 2021-06-03 16:01:08 CET ] [ Original post ]
- Project Caligula Linux [192.72 M]
- Project Caligula Linux Launcher [109.1 M]
SHAPE A GRAND TOMORROW
Paradox Development Studio invites you to build your ideal society in the tumult of the exciting and transformative 19th century. Balance the competing interests in your society and earn your place in the sun in Victoria 3, one of the most anticipated games in Paradox’s history.THE ULTIMATE SOCIETY SIMULATOR
- Lead dozens of world nations from 1836-1936. Agrarian or Industrial, Traditional or Radical, Peaceful or Expansionist... the choice is yours.
- Detailed population groups with their own economic needs and political desires.
- Reform your government and constitution to take advantage of new social innovations, or preserve the stability of your nation by holding fast to tradition in the face of revolutionaries.
- Research transformative new technology or ideas to improve your national situation.
DEEP ECONOMIC SYSTEM
- Expand your industry to take advantage of lucrative goods, taxing the profits to improve national prosperity.
- Import cheap raw materials to cover your basic needs while finding new markets for your finished goods.
- Secure vital goods to fuel your advanced economy and control the fate of empires.
- Balance employing available labor force with the needs for new types of workers.
PLAY ON A GRAND STAGE
- Use your diplomatic wiles to weave a tangled global web of pacts, relations, alliances, and rivalries to secure your diplomatic position on the world stage.
- Employ threats, military prowess and bluffs to persuade enemies to back down in conflicts.
- Increase your economic and military strength at the expense of rivals.
- Accumulate prestige and the respect of your rivals as you build an industrial giant at home or an empire abroad.
- OS: TBC
- Processor: TBC
- Graphics: TBCSound Card: TBC
- OS: TBC
- Processor: TBC
- Graphics: TBCSound Card: TBC
[ 5974 ]
[ 1565 ]
[ 1799 ]