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   ____                                                               _____
  /~~~~/   _______   _______   _______   _       _______   ______    /~~~~~/ 
 /~/      /~~~~~~~| |~~~~~~~| |~~~~~~~| |~|     /~~~~~~~| |~~~~~~\  /~/
 \~\____  |~|____      |~|       |~|    |~|     |~|____   |~|  \~|  \~\_____
  \~~~~~\ |~~~~~~|     |~|       |~|    |~|     |~~~~~~|  |~|__|~/   \~~~~~~\
      |~| |~|          |~|       |~|    |~|     |~|       |~~~~~/         |~|
      /~/ |~|_____     |~|       |~|    |~|___  |~|_____  |~| \~~\        /~/
 ____/~/  \~~~~~~~|    |~|       |~|    |~~~~~| \~~~~~~~| |~|  \~~\  ____/~/
/~~~~~/                                                             /~~~~~/
                             +=++=++=++=++=++=++=+
                               HERITAGE OF KINGS
                             +=++=++=++=++=++=++=+

+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=

Guide author: Useless
E-mail: utuselessut@hotmail.com
Guide version: 1.3
Game version: 1.0
System: PC

Copyright: Useless 2006

This entire document is (c) 2006 Useless. All trademarks are property of
their respective owners. No section of this guide can be used without my
permission. This includes, but is not limited to posting on your website,
making links to my guide, including parts of my guide in your own, or making
reference to any material contained within.

Please do not email me to ask for permission to host this guide, as I will be 
unable to give it to you. I don't have enough time to manage and upload FAQ 
versions at any sites other than the two listed below. These sites are 
therefore the only ones permitted to host this guide:

GameFAQS.com
NeoSeeker.com

+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=

 1. INTRO
=~=~=~=~=~

	1.1 INTRODUCTION
	1.2 USING THIS GUIDE
	1.3 CONTACT ME

 2. GAME INFO
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~

	2.1 RESOURCES
	2.2 BUILDINGS
	2.3 UNITS
		2.3.1 CIVILIANS
		2.3.2 MILITARY
		2.3.3 HEROES

 3. WALKTHROUGH
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~

	3.1 THALGRUND
	3.2 RIDGEWOOD
	3.3 CRAWFORD
	3.4 CLEYCOURT
	3.5 THE FLOOD
	3.6 BARMECIA
	3.7 FOLKLUNG
	3.8 NORFOLK
	3.9 KALOIX
	3.10 THE GREAT PLAGUE
	3.11 OLD KING'S CASTLE
	3.12 CLOUDY MOUNTAINS
	3.13 EVELANCE
	3.14 WASTELANDS
	3.15 BATTLE OF EVELANCE

 4. CONTRIBUTIONS
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~

 5. VERSION HISTORY
=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~=~

==============================================================================

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                                   1. INTRO
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+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                               1.1 INTRODUCTION
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Welcome to my guide to Settlers: Heritage Of Kings, the fifth instalment of 
the amazingly popular Settlers series. I started writing walkthroughs in June 
2006 and this guide takes me up to ten altogether.

This walkthrough is mostly about taking players through the levels, pointing 
out things they might want to know or take into consideration, and suggesting 
the best ways to complete each objective and level. I've also bunged in some 
stuff about various game concepts, since the manual is often less than 
helpful. The walkthrough is for the fifteen campaign levels only, not the 
custom-made skirmishes.

---

I've played (if not completed) Settlers 2, 3 and 4, and having now completed 
this fifth episode I'm having great trouble seeing this as a Settlers game. 
It's absolutely nothing like its predecessors, so if you think it's going to 
be more of the same you'll be either disappointed or surprised. I enjoyed this 
game a lot, even though it took me a long time to get into it at first, and 
whether or not you liked the previous four games, this fifth one is very much 
worth playing and completing.

The most obvious similarity is the fact that you are still constricted in 
where you want to place your buildings. You also still have little or no 
option about where to build village centres, and the settlers (civilian 
workers) remain completely controlled by the computer.

On the other hand you now have heroes, unique combat units with special 
powers, who can change the course of a battle on their own. Resourcing has 
become more of a UT domination round, since all resource shafts are in fixed 
positions around the maps. No more sending in geologists - now you just find a 
shaft and stake your claim as soon as possible.

One big drawback of this game is the enormous amount of upgrading you have to 
do to let your settlement flourish. You often find yourself doing cycles of 
buildings, clicking an upgrade which will open up another upgrade, which will 
open up another upgrade... and so on. It gets immensely tedious in level after 
level, and the worst part is that new buildings begin from scratch, which 
means you often have to do it all over again.

Combat is still as suckage as in the other games - battles are just a case of 
bandboxing all your units and clicking them vaguely on the opposition. And 
then just crossing your fingers. Heroes' abilities help a lot in this, but 
without them around battles are won by numbers and whoever has more upgrades. 
There's little or no strategy, especially given how linear many of the maps 
are. It's also a pity that you seem to be unable to build walls and gates, 
while the computer is very capable indeed.

There is now no naval warfare, though water does come into it. You may not be 
able to build ships, but you do have the new weather tower which allows you to 
alter the seasons from summer to rain to winter and back again. This plays an 
important strategical part (unlike much else), and is an interesting enough 
concept to keep people's attention.

One thing that definitely does remind you of Settlers 1-4 is the quite 
fantastically bad voice-acting, scripting, narration and direction. There are 
very few cutscenes or voice-overs in the game which don't leave you cringing, 
scratching your head or running from the room in distress. I find it hard to 
take any game seriously when one of the protagonists has a response which 
goes, "How am I supposed to concentrate when you are tickling me?!" The 
scripts really are baffling at times, and the least they could have done is 
translated them over with some amount of believability. Surely the worst 
example in the game of any of the above is Kerberos: if you didn't get him in 
only one level you would probably just pack it in, purely to avoid hearing him 
scream "YEEEESSSS!" every time you try to move him about.

On the bright side, you do still have the pleasure of building up pretty 
bases, designing and maintaining functioning infrastructures, exploring the 
beautiful big maps, and amassing avaricious wealths of resources. There are 
also things like tax rate and motivation to take into account, as well as 
playing "Shove, Piggy, Shove" with the computer, who is just as intent on 
grabbing as much of the map as you are.

Overall this game is a decent one: hardly recognisable as a Settlers game; 
flawed in a lot of places; full enough of entertainment to make you want to 
see it through to the end. I recommend you do, or else I wouldn't have written 
this guide.

I hope you enjoy the game and the guide, and thanks for reading :)

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                             1.2 USING THIS GUIDE
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Please view this guide in a text viewer / editor with a set fixed-width 
font, or else it might look a mess. I use Courier New, Size 10.

Use the Find command (CTRL + F) with the numbered contents menu at the start 
of the guide, in order to quickly jump to the section you want.

I have put the main walkthrough section of the guide towards the end, after 
all the other game information. This is not a design flaw - it's deliberate.

Having written eight previous guides, I've gotten very bored with my crap 
headings. I'm still not moving on the 'ASCII art' thing - it sucks - but I can 
at least try and painstakingly put together a half-decent logo by typing it in 
myself. It may be a bit rubbish but it's still less boring than my old 
approach. It took me ages though, so enjoy it while you can, because I doubt 
I'll have the patience to do another one for my next guide :P

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                                1.3 CONTACT ME
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

I always appreciate feedback for any of my guides, so if you want to send 
strategies, thanks, blame, criticism or applause feel free to mail me your 
comments. I consider all suggestions (and playtest them if possible) and I 
often revise and rewrite based purely on reader contributions. All feedback is 
welcome, unless it's to tell me I suck.

Please consider the following before mailing me:

- Check whether your suggestions or questions are already covered in the 
guide.

- Check whether there is a more recent version of the guide available - I 
revise and update a lot after a first release.

- To email me, please send your message to 'utuselessut@hotmail.com' and put 
'Settlers:HOK guide' and the guide version number in the subject line.

- I don't edit contributor emails (unless they're obscene), so please make 
sure you won't mind seeing what you've written appearing in a future version 
of the guide, spelling mistakes and all.

- Let me know in your mail whether or not you want your name and email address 
to be included with your contribution - if you don't specify then I'll assume 
you want it included.

Thanks for taking the time to read this.

==============================================================================

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                                 2. GAME INFO
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This section describes many of the game's concepts, and goes over some things 
mentioned in the manual, as well as quite a few other things not mentioned.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                2.1 RESOURCES
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

There are six resources in Settlers: HOK, and you can never have too many of 
either. The idea is to amass is many resources as possible, while stopping 
your enemies from doing the same.

Marketplaces are excellent places in which to manage your resources, 
especially since you almost always have tons of at least one type, which can 
then be exchanged for what you really need. Occasionally you have the option 
of trading through the tribute menu, though these are often one-off deals.

THALERS
+=~=+=~

This basically means gold, and is acquired quickest by having loads of 
civilians and few or no military units. Heroes and serfs don't affect your 
thalers; but the more workers occupying buildings in your cities, the faster 
the thalers will come in. Soldiers are paid wages from the thalers, so try not 
to have more soldiers than you need. 

Thalers can be given an enormous boost by building some treasuries. When 
trading in the marketplace, you should always spend thalers if at all 
possible.

CLAY
+=~=

Clay can be found in orange shafts or little clumps. It's important for 
building, especially when you're just beginning to develop your base. It 
becomes less important later, and so you will tend to amass huge amounts of it 
without needing it very often. Clay should always be a big priority in 
fledgling bases.

WOOD
+=~=

Wood is probably the most troublesome of the resources when you're starting a 
base, since it's the only one (apart from thalers, which work differently) for 
which you can't immediately build a building which generates it. You need to 
research Construction from the college first, and until then you're stuck with 
serfs. I suggest that gathering wood should be the main job of most of your 
serfs at the beginning of any level, since clay takes care of itself a lot 
quicker.

Wood remains important throughout each level, and you will always be using 
lots of it. Try to have at least two sawmills in operation in each mission, 
and upgrading them is definitely worth it. Wood is also something you will 
find yourself buying in bulk from the marketplace, though luckily the natural 
resource takes absolutely ages to even look like it's running out.

STONE
+=~=+

Stone can be found in quarries or clumps, and is used in a lot of buildings. 
You'll need lots of it for decent fortifications, especially late on in the 
game, and it's always worth having a couple of quarries operating, with at 
least one stonemason.

IRON
+=~=

Iron is mostly used for upgrades and military units. It drops particularly 
quickly if you're building combat units in groups (which I suggest you do), so 
three iron pits and three smithies would not be overkill. This is the most 
important resource (along with thalers) in any combat-intensive mission, 
though there are thankfully not many of those.

SULPHUR
+=~=+=~

Sulphur is the least important of your resources, and you shouldn't worry if 
you can't find any decent supplies in the area. It's used in some upgrades, 
but mainly in things to do with the weather and / or building artillery. If 
you're not interested in either of these things you can pretty much ignore 
sulphur; and even if you do need it but can't find it, it's not hard to come 
by through the marketplace.

It's a good idea to knock out an enemy's sulphur mines if he's persistently 
sending artillery at you.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
                                 2.2 BUILDINGS
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

This is just a few notes about some of the buildings in the game which you 
might want to take particular... note of. I've named each building by its 
first version: ie. headquarters = keep = stronghold = fortress.

ALCHEMIST'S HUT
+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~

The alchemist might not seem very worthwhile if you're not using much sulphur; 
but you can't change the weather without building one and then upgrading it to 
a laboratory (except in special circumstances). It also holds a couple of nice 
cannon upgrades, so bear both these things in mind.

BANK
+=~=

Once you build a couple of banks and upgrade them to treasuries, you will 
likely never want for thalers again. Extremely useful for allowing you to 
forget about at least one of the six resources.

BARRACKS
+=~=+=~=

The barracks lets you train foot-soldiers, but in later missions it gets to be 
a bit useless. It needs too many upgrades and you keep wanting to build 
another barracks once you've conquered more land. It's probably best not to 
bother with the irritating upgrades until you've built a barracks whose 
position you're totally happy with; and forget all about it in the last few 
missions.

CHAPEL
+=~=+=

I've completed the game and I honestly only built one chapel, and that was 
only because it was an objective. If you never mess about with overtime or tax 
rate, and if you build enough houses and farms to keep your civilians happy, 
you will never need a chapel, church or cathedral. On the other hand, building 
one or two chapels can allow you to bump up the taxes or hit the overtime 
without having to worry about your civilians' happiness dropping below 100%.

One great thing about a cathedral is how enormously tough it is - tougher than 
a fortress, at least in terms of hitpoints. The one use I can think of for the 
cathedral is if you build one at whichever point you know the enemy is going 
to attack you from, then stick some cannon towers just behind it. Your enemies 
will have great difficulty destroying the cathedral, and your towers and 
troops can cut them down while they try. Then you just repair the cathedral.

COLLEGE
+=~=+=~

The college should be a priority building at the beginning of each level, and 
is the first thing you should build if you haven't been given one for free. 
Like the cathedral, a university is a very tough structure, and can be used as 
a decoy for enemy troops.

ENCLOSURE
+=~=+=~=+

The annoying thing about the enclosure is that it's the largest building in 
the game, and there are frustratingly few places where you can fit one in in 
some of the levels. You only really need enclosures late on in the game - say, 
around the thirteenth level onwards - but you will notice a big difference in 
your army's effectiveness. It's just that they take so long to research and 
build and upgrade...

FARM
+=~=

The annoying thing about farms is that the farmers themselves need a spot on a 
farm, and so you keep having to build extra. Bear this in mind if they're 
pissing you off.

Another thing about farms is that building a new one from scratch is often a 
cheaper and better solution than upgrading a mill to an estate. Have a look at 
your resources before you decide which to choose.

FOUNDRY
+=~=+=~

Unlike the barracks, shooting range, or enclosure, a foundry actually has 
someone working in it, which means it needs a farm and house nearby to keep 
the forger happy. This does of course suck, but just remember it when you're 
situating a new foundry away out in the wilderness to better replenish your 
artillery.

HEADQUARTERS
+=~=+=~=+=~=

This is always either a keep, stronghold or fortress, and it's extremely rare 
that you get more than one. There are two very important things about it. 
Firstly, if you lose it you lose the level. Secondly, it's the only building 
that can produce serfs. This means that you should keep any intrepid serfs 
safe if they're very far away from your HQ (particularly true of the final 
mission), since it's a hell of a long way for new serfs to come in order to 
pick up where the dead ones left off.

SAWMILL
+=~=+=~

An important building if you want your base to progress quickly. Even with 
three fully upgraded lumber mills you might often find that the wood is coming 
in too slow, so the more the merrier.

SMITHY
+=~=+=

This generates extra iron, but more importantly it allows you to buy upgrades 
for your military units. You probably only need one, but make sure you upgrade 
it and buy everything it offers for whichever units you're building.

STOREHOUSE
+=~=+=~=+=

Only really useful when you upgrade it to a marketplace, at which point you 
can play around with your resources to bring in whichever ones you really need 
and get rid of the surplus. The bigger the trade, the longer the transaction 
takes, and you'll often find that you actually have the resources you wanted 
by the time the marketplace decides to finalise the trade.

VILLAGE CENTRE
+=~=+=~=+=~=+=

One of the most important buildings in the game. You can't do anything without 
these, and each one is like a glittering prize. Either build on unoccupied 
sites or knock down enemy village centres to claim them for yourself, a bit 
like UT domination control points. You want more, and you want the enemy to 
have fewer.

They are always placed in supposedly strategic points, and you have to bear 
your building placement in mind when you get them. For instance, if you build 
a smithy nearer one village centre than another, you'd better make sure that 
the blacksmith doesn't have to pass through enemy territory to reach the 
smithy, otherwise he may never get through and you'll have to tear the 
building down and rebuild somewhere else.

Upgrading village centres gives you a little more space in your population 
limit, but you should always be looking to find more. Get rid of some serfs or 
even soldiers if you have buildings still waiting to be occupied. Bear in mind 
that you sometimes don't need an army beyond your six heroes if you have 
enough towers for the defense of your base.

Village centres are definitely priority kills in enemy bases - destroying a 
city centre (in theory) reduces the size of your enemy's army by 150 units.

WATCHTOWER
+=~=+=~=+=

Pretty crappy without upgrades, and even ballista towers aren't quite as 
worthwhile as they should be at that price. Cannon towers are another matter - 
no army is getting past ten evenly spaced cannon towers, especially if you've 
researched Masonry from the stonemason. The downside is that building this 
many really hits your wood and stone reserves hard, but it's worth it to know 
your base is totally safe. Keep them repaired though, and don't put them too 
close together.

WEATHER TOWER
+=~=+=~=+=~=+

The weather tower is a good way to delete lots of enemies at once - run a hero 
or two into an enemy base and then out again, drawing a few units out of their 
base and across some ice. When you're all out in the middle, switch to summer 
or rain and let the ice melt. The enemy units will die, whereas your heroes 
will merely be returned to your headquarters, unconscious but alive.

The weather tower will also give you advance warnings of when the weather is 
about to change, which lets you know when to take your units off the ice, or 
when to double the guard on the beaches.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                  2.3 UNITS
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

This section is about most of the units you'll meet and control in the game.

+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=
                               2.3.1 CIVILIANS
+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=

There are two types of civilians: workers and serfs.

WORKERS
+=~=+=~

Most of what you need to know about your workers is in the manual, but I just 
wanted to add a couple of things.

Always make sure your workers can get from the nearest village centre to 
whichever building you want them to occupy. If they have to travel through an 
enemy base to reach their building they will probably not make it and you'll 
have to move the building to somewhere else.

Always prioritise workers over serfs and military units in your population 
limit. If you have a huge army but only a handful of workers, you're not going 
to be able to replenish that army when it eventually gets reduced in numbers. 
But with lots of workers and only a few military units, your heroes and some 
cannon towers can do the defensive work while the workers bring in the all-
important resources.

SERFS
+=~=+

Serfs are only useful if they're working. They're useless at fighting, even 
with the Call To Arms thing, and they become quite superfluous once your 
workers are pulling in plenty of resources. It is worth keeping a few around 
for future building and repairing, but don't be afraid of disbanding quite a 
lot of them late on in the levels.

One serf builds a building too slowly. Build plenty of serfs at the beginning 
of each level, and get two or three working on each construction site. The 
quicker they get building your base the faster the thalers will come back 
anyway once the workers emerge to fill the buildings. 

Don't bother exploring with your serfs: they can't pick up chests and they 
can't get out of trouble easily if they run into it. Explore with heroes and 
then send serfs in to build in useful areas.

Get most serfs chopping wood when you're starting a base - wood is the slowest 
resource for a long time. And always build the mines and college first, before 
anything else - you can build the farms and houses later, but right now you 
need workers for those thalers.

Try to spread your serfs out all over the map (at least in the territory you 
control). The missions are big, and you don't want to have to waste time 
sending one single serf back and forward. You don't have to chop wood near 
your own base - chop it near the enemy's in case you might want to build any 
buildings nearby. And so on.

Bear in mind that your serfs can only be sent from your headquarters if you 
need to replace them. The farther away from your headquarters a serf is, the 
more important it is that you keep him healthy.

+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=
                                2.3.2 MILITARY
+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=

Most fights in the game are just big brawls, but it's at least worth knowing 
about the units you're filling your army with, and what they're good and bad 
at.

You can choose whether to build units in groups or individually, but I 
recommend groups, even though you do have to keep a close watch on your iron.

Remember that you can give a surviving captain more units for his squad, just 
by moving him close to his building of origin and clicking the recruit soldier 
button in his action menu.

It's worth looking at your units' rank, as higher ranks bestow greater rewards 
on the captains and their squads. Try to pull higher ranking captains out of 
battle if they get into trouble and lose all their squad members, because you 
can always give him more later, and they will start at his rank rather than at 
the lowest.

Remember that, as with serfs, you can double-click on a certain unit type to 
select all similar units in the area at once. This makes it very easy to 
assign group numbers.

SWORDSMAN
+=~=+=~=+

This is a basic melee grunt, good at attacking buildings and archers, and of 
course other swordsmen. They're slow and kind of weak, but they are 
understandably cheap. You can rely on nothing but swordsmen for most of the 
game, though I suggest you ditch them by the time you hit the thirteenth level 
- the computer certainly does.

SPEARMAN
=+=~=+=~

They're good against horsed units, but by the time you're meeting a lot of 
horses you're probably building plenty cavalry of your own. Spearmen are just 
too slow for me, and I don't like they way they have to be upgraded half 
through the smithy and half through the lumber mill.

ARCHER
=+=~=+

Surprisingly useful, as all ranged units tend to be. As weak and slow as any 
other foot soldier, but can do great damage to enemy troops and artillery if 
you get big groups of them. You're actually better building more archers than 
swordsmen in levels where you have five or six heroes around to do the main 
melee damage.

LIGHT CAVALRY
=+=~=+=~=+=~=

This is the sort of unit that many people will automatically skip in order to 
get to the heavy cavalry, but I strongly suggest you give these guys a look. I 
rely on them a huge amount in the last few levels, especially for base 
defense. A bunch of these guys behind a few cannon towers is just an 
unbreakable barrier for the computer.

They're also fantastic in attack, able to quickly take down anything - unit or 
building - if deployed in numbers. Don't use nothing but light cavalry, of 
course, but it's well worth filling out at least half your army with them.

HEAVY CAVALRY
=+=~=+=~=+=~=

Like light cavalry, these guys take a lot of time and money to reach. Once you 
get them, however, you will know where that money went. All else aside, you 
can't not use heavy cavalry when you see what units the computer is sending at 
you, and the bases and fortifications lying in wait. It's just a pity you 
don't get many in a squad; and they're also much faster than your heroes, 
which means you always have to wait for the heroes to catch up so you can send 
them in first.

LIGHT CANNON
=+=~=+=~=+=~

I hardly ever use these, because by the time you're building artillery a lot 
you have tons of resources, which means you can afford the heavier versions. 
They're OK as far as they go, but they're so slow and weak that they just 
don't survive if an enemy gets anywhere close. They're also difficult to 
protect when your army is advancing, since the computer is often fond of 
sneaking units around the back and chopping them down.

HEAVY CANNON
=+=~=+=~=+=~

If you're going to build artillery, make it the heavy versions. I suggest you 
just build siege cannons - they're good enough versus units to let you ignore 
the iron cannons, and in fact almost all other ranged units; and against 
buildings they're unrivalled. I know they cost a lot, but five or six leaves 
an enemy base with little or no chance. Just keep them protected.

+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=
                                 2.3.3 HEROES
+== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +== +=

Heroes are unique units, each with their own special abilities. You can only 
ever have six at once, but the more you have the better, as they have a huge 
effect on whether or not you win your battles against the computer.

Heroes can't be killed, but they can be knocked unconscious, and the only way 
to get them back is to kill off any enemy forces near their bodies then keep 
friendly units nearby until their green gauge fills up.

Try to keep your heroes at the forefront of any battle, and keep an eye on 
their abilities so you can use them as much as possible.

---

DARIO
+=~=+

Mission gained: 1 - Thalgrund
Rating: 2/3

Dario is with you from the first minute of the game, all the way through to 
the end. Haircut aside, he's about the most average of the heroes, but he's 
always useful in battles. He gets a boost to his armour in the Old King's 
Castle mission. His three abilities make him best suited for exploration of 
the maps and inaccessible areas.

Eye of The Falcon (1/3): The only thing this is useful for is when you want to 
look behind buildings for treasure chests. Since you can spot every chest in 
the game without this, you'll use it once and then forget about it.

Protect Units (3/3): This is very handy for battles, especially when Dario is 
surrounded by enemy units. It makes any enemy close enough run away a short 
distance and then stand still for a few seconds, without fighting back. The 
more enemies affected by it the better, at which point your own troops can cut 
them down with no trouble. It also lets Dario repel anyone chasing him if 
you're sending him scouting alone.

Sentinel (1/3): You can send Dario's falcon over fog of war which your units 
can't get to via the land. Like Eye, this is useful only very occasionally, 
though it does let you recon enemy fortifications from safety.

EREC
+=~=

Mission: 2 - Ridgewood
Rating: 3/3

Erec is a bit tougher than Dario and immediately becomes the more useful of 
the two heroes. Erec's strength is purely in battle, and he will remain the 
best fighting hero throughout almost the whole game.

Maelstrom (2/3): Trigger this when Erec is surrounded by enemies - much like 
with Dario's Protect Units - and the enemy units caught in the swing will 
almost always die, even including siege cannons. Try sending Erec alone into a 
melee and letting him get surrounded, and this ability can drop multiple units 
before the battle even really begins. It's useless if Erec is too far away 
from an enemy, however.

Aura Of Strength (3/3): The best combat ability in the game. This alone can 
change a probable defeat into a certain victory. Even if Aura affects only 
Erec's fellow heroes it's a big blow to the enemy; but if you can get half 
your troops into the area of effect then Erec can transform your army into 
juggernauts of destruction, against units and buildings alike. It also lasts a 
hell of a long time. This is the first hero ability you should use when going 
to pick a fight.

HELIAS
+=~=+=

Mission: 3 - Crawford
Rating: 2/3

As useful as Helias's abilities are, I can't bring myself to give him a full 
rating. Each ability cancels out the other, so it's difficult to know exactly 
what to do with him in battles.

Persuasion (2/3): This lets you convert enemy soldiers (not artillery) to your 
own army. It's immensely useful in Cleycourt and certain other missions, but 
it does take a long time to recharge, and is totally spoiled if Helias takes 
damage while trying to cast it. Best used while other heroes or units are 
running around and baiting enemies into chasing after them instead of 
attacking Helias.

Blessing (2/3): Similar to Erec's Aura Of Strength, except this increases your 
units' armour instead of attack damage. Useless if there are no friendlies 
near Helias while it's in effect; but for it to take effect he has to be among 
the fray, which makes it very difficult to cast Persuasion. And if he's 
casting Persuasion he'll tend to be doing so from safety, which seesaws into 
making Blessing a bit worthless. Oh well...

ARI
+=~

Mission: 5 - The Flood
Rating: 1/3

When you first meet Ari you have to use her Camouflage ability, which makes it 
seem really useful. You then get her in most of the remaining levels, but 
mostly you'll forget she exists. Not a great hero at all, though at least her 
position as the only hero who uses ranged weapons keeps her out of danger in 
battle, if also out of the area of effect of the abilities of her companions.

Camouflage (1/3): This is meant to let Ari sneak past enemy units and 
buildings, exploring bases, scouting out fogged areas, etc. But it seems to 
fail on me at critical times, at which point Ari gets attacked and often 
knocked out, which sucks. I don't like the way this just gets turned off for 
no reason, and Dario's falcon is probably better for reconnaissance.

Call Bandits (2/3): This is a bit more like it. Any extra combat units are 
always a good thing, especially ones which don't cost anything. They do tend 
to die and / or fade away sooner than you'd like, but every little helps. They 
can also help distract enemy units chasing Ari, allowing her to escape while 
her bandits take the flak.

PILGRIM
+=~=+=~

Mission: 6 - Barmecia
Rating: 3/3

Second only to Erec when it comes to fights: you might think Pilgrim's 
superior stats make him better, but I can't agree - Erec's abilities own 
everyone else's.

Plant Bomb (3/3): This is useful for the demolition of rocks and the opening 
of closed resource shafts. Since the enemy can never open closed shafts, you 
know you'll be the first to get control of them. The bomb can also take out 
groups of tightly clustered enemies in the midst of combat, and its fast 
recharge allows you to use it quite a few times in prolonged battles. Plant 
Bomb is essential to complete many of the game's missions.

Spring Cannon (2/3): This is like getting a free bombard cannon (or whatever 
artillery it most closely resembles). It takes potshots at enemies when they 
approach, but it disappears after only a few shots, and it can also be 
destroyed as easily as any other artillery. It takes a while to recharge, but 
the bright side is that you can lay down as many as you want - they only 
vanish once they're destroyed or have shot their loads, so to speak. In theory 
you could lay down a huge bunch of them as a nice surprise for the first enemy 
attack.

SALIM
+=~=+

Mission: 7 - Folklung
Rating: 2/3

Lay Trap (2/3): Like Pilgrim's Spring Cannon, you can keep using this over and 
over. The traps only trigger when an enemy gets near enough, so you can use 
them like mines. They do good damage, but again take too long to recharge to 
be truly useful. Good for close battles, even if the game won't allow Salim to 
lay one too close to an enemy.

Heal (2/3): This is the only healing spell in the game, and thus comes in 
handy when Salim is in the middle of a group of your troops, all of whom need 
more health. Takes a while to recharge, but it can give you another lifeline 
and change the occasional battle.

KERBEROS
+=~=+=~=

Mission: 12 - Cloudy Mountains
Rating: 2/3

You only get him in one level, and if you approach the level in the way I 
suggest you will never see Kerberos in battle. He is good in combat - sort of 
a cross between Dario and Erec, only tougher - but if you do the mission the 
easy way then he is totally superfluous.

Hellshout (2/3): Pretty much the same as Dario's Protect Units.

Aura Of Fear (2/3): And this is similar to Erec's Aura Of Strength, except 
that the enemies' stats go down instead of friendlies' stats going up.

==============================================================================

+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=
++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==++====++== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++
++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++              ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++
                                3. WALKTHROUGH
++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++              ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++
++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==++====++== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++++ ==== ++
+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=~=+=

This is the main part of the guide, taking you through from the start of the 
first level to the end of the final one. There is little or no mention of the 
storyline in here, so try your best to follow what the hell's going on during 
the cutscenes, which is more than I could...

My mission tactics are just my favourite ways of doing things: if you have 
better strategies then you should obviously use them, and you might even 
consider contributing them to the guide. I've denoted each mission objective 
as it occurred for me - please read their details in the objectives menu if my 
descriptions are unclear.

I've also noted the locations of all the treasure chests in each level after 
each mission's guide. Because the chests' contents are mostly randomised, I 
can't tell you what's going to be in them, so it's up to you whether you want 
to go for them. 

I had trouble deciding how to give decent directions, so I finally decided on 
a combination of clock numbers and rings. Plot numbers from 1 to 12 around the 
minimap, as if it was a clock face, then divide it into three rings; 1 (small 
circle in middle of minimap), 2 (middle ring, in between the inner and outer), 
3 (outer ring, the widest circle). So to find a chest located at -

7 / R2

- you would go to around the seven o'clock position and send a hero into the 
second, middle ring, somewhere between the centre of the map and the outer 
edge. I hope this is clear, as it's the best I could come up with.

Good luck.

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
                                 3.1 THALGRUND
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"The peaceful idyll of Thalgrund is suddenly interrupted, when Black Knights 
approach the little village and attack it on their search for a mysterious 
amulet..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This mission is simple, with very few enemies or problems. Do everything else 
before building a barracks and your attack on your few enemies will be swift 
and easy.

==============================================================================

RESCUE THE VILLAGE!
---

Get Dario and the serfs to kill off the barbarians, and once they're dead you 
get a new objective.

---
TALK TO BROTHER JOHN
---

Start repairing the buildings with the serfs, and send Dario north to meet 
Brother John. He gives you more objectives and three extra serfs.

---
REBUILD THE VILLAGE
---

Before Dario leaves the abbey, look at the ground of the little graveyard to 
the north of it. You should see something glittering on the ground - it's a 
ring belonging to a miner. Talk to Leonardo just east of the abbey - he will 
allow you to build watchtowers.

Build your first village centre. Send serfs north east over the river to find 
a clay pit; there is a stone pit west of your village and another to the south 
of the keep; and you can get a free iron pit by sending Dario to the miner 
north of the governor in the west. He asks you to find his ring, so go to the 
graveyard and bring the ring back to the miner, who will then give you his 
iron pit.

Once your three pits are in place get your serfs to start cutting wood in 
order to build residences and farms for your new miners. The two governors can 
be spoken to with Dario: the one in the west gives you some free archers, and 
you can tribute both governors with resources to gain more free soldiers 
later. I suggest that you don't get the soldiers yet, as they will reduce your 
thalers through wages.

You should soon have enough resources to build a college and food and housing 
for all your workers. When the college is up research Conscription so that you 
can build your barracks. Build it near your first clay pit, since your enemies 
are all in the north and will be passing the clay pit when they're attacking.

You might need more room in your village for extra soldiers, so you'll have to 
build another village centre. There's a site south east of your keep, and 
another one north of the clay pit, on the way to the barbarian camp. Some 
watchtowers couldn't hurt - send Dario to speak to Leonardo north of your 
base. There's a free quarry in the west.

There are a few chests around the map - they all contain thalers, so you might 
want to send Dario around to pick them up. There is a serf south east of your 
base who will give you 500 thalers for nothing; and a trader to the south west 
who will buy your iron.

Build and research everything else before your barracks, and when you are 
ready you can trigger the next objective. Buy the soldiers from the two 
governors, then build your third town centre at the site south of the 
barbarian base, and then build your barracks to the north west, next to the 
river crossing. Once your barracks is up you get another objective.

---
HURRY TO HELP YOUR MOTHER
---

Soon after this you will get a visual warning that the barbarians are planning 
to attack, and a countdown will begin. Start building soldiers from your 
barracks. Build a watchtower near your barracks and build up your army. You 
should be able to easily beat the barbarians with the units given to you by 
the governors, plus a few more soldiers from the barracks. Free the gatekeeper 
from the tower and he then scarpers east to the gate.

To complete the level just talk to him with Dario. He'll then open the gate 
and you can take your men through.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

3 / R3 - North of the river
5 / R3 - Next to the serf who gives you 500 thalers
6 / R3 - Due south of the stone shaft south of your keep
9 / R3 - West of the stone shaft
10 / R3 - On the mountains west of the waterfall (3)
12 / R3 - North of Leonardo's workshop

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                3.2 RIDGEWOOD
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Other villages in the surrounding area were also not left unharmed by the 
attacks of the Black Knights. Just like the village where Dario's mother 
lived..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This mission is pretty much over once you've dealt with the bandits, and if 
you have a barracks built by the time they launch their first attack it 
becomes extremely easy.

==============================================================================

RESCUE RIDGEWOOD!
---

Your falcon will find enemies on the eastern road, so take everyone north and 
round into the centre of town. Kill off the enemies attacking the keep and 
watch the cutscene.

---
DEFEND RIDGEWOOD TILL EREC RETURNS!
---

Build some serfs and get them to repair the buildings, chop wood and build a 
mine in the nearby clay pit. Take Dario and your soldiers west to the 
mountains. There is a miner along the way who tells you about the mines over 
there. Clear away the enemies in the area and bring a serf over to build a 
stone quarry and an iron pit, followed by houses and farms.

Build a college in town and start researching. You will also spend a lot of 
time trying to get more clay and wood for your infrastructure, so build at 
least ten serfs and get them to help out with both. There is another clay pit 
in the south of the map, and a miner nearby to tell you about it.

As soon as your soldiers and Dario have killed off the bandits at the iron 
pit, send them south of your base to take out the ones you would have met had 
you gone east at the beginning of the level. Then go south to the robbery 
tower, where you can fight and kill more enemies, as well as destroy their 
barracks and tower. This can be done easily if you use Dario's Protect Units 
ability when he's surrounded.

While attacking this southern bandit camp you will receive a warning from 
Leonardo, who tells you to prepare for an assault on your base in around four 
minutes. Get rid of the southern bandit base and then park whatever soldiers 
you still have at the hill road south of your keep. You should be able to 
research and build a barracks in time to have more soldiers in place for when 
the bandits attack. If not you will have to fend off more and more until your 
barracks is up.

With the bandits dead, you get a new objective.

---
TALK TO THE MAYOR OF OBERKIRCH!
---

Before that you can go into the other bandit camp on the hill to free 
Leonardo, who will come out of his cage once the bandits up here are dead, 
bringing with him five extra serfs. Leonardo follows Dario around, so you 
can't lose him accidentally. Talk to him and he will let you upgrade your 
watchtowers to ballista towers.

There is a trader due north of your clay pit, across the river. You can sell 
100 wood for 200 thalers, then 200 iron for 400 thalers, through the tribute 
menu.

Spend some time exploring the map, picking up the treasure and admiring the 
view. Eventually this gets boring and you'll want to talk to the mayor of 
Oberkirch (beware of bandits just north east of your base). Before you talk to 
him build up a barracks, an army, and a couple of ballista towers just east of 
his town centre, and make sure you've built a village centre on the western 
site to give yourself more space in your population limit.

---
HELP OBERKIRCH!
---

Hopefully you waited around for a while and you now have tons of thalers. 
Tribute the mayor some so that he can build his own troops, and position all 
your forces to the east beside his while you wait for the countdown to end. 
Your second barracks in the east ensures that the bandits will attack it 
instead of the Oberkirch town centre.

When this pathetic bandit "attack" is taken care of, Erec will appear with 
some troops.

---
REPEL THE LAST ATTACK OF THE BLACK ROBBER-KNIGHTS
---

Send Dario and his lads to meet up with Erec's mob, then send everyone due 
north of Erec's position to the other cave mouth (you could also have built a 
couple of ballista towers here earlier in preparation for this bit). Let the 
bandits pour out at the end of the countdown and use Erec's great powers to 
finish them all off and end the level.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

5 / R3 - Among the trees just east of the river
6 / R3 - On the riverbank next to the waterfall
6 / R3 - North of the robbery tower
6 / R2 - Next to Leonardo's cage
9 / R3 - On the snaking road on top of the mountains
10 / R3 - On the snaking road on top of the mountains

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                                 3.3 CRAWFORD
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"After his mother's death, Dario was advised by his old friend Erec to visit 
his only living relative - the wise priest Helias - in Crawford."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This is one of the most lucrative levels in the game, and resources should 
never be a problem. You can also postpone meeting too many enemies by simply 
avoiding their territory until you're strong enough to destroy them.

==============================================================================

ERECT TWO BALLISTA TOWERS IN THE WESTERN PART OF TOWN!
---

The hermit and forger near your keep tell you about different areas you might 
want to check out, but I prefer going to the south to build my mines and so 
on. If you build a quarry at the stone pit just west of your base but then 
never go farther west than that, the bandits in the west won't ever bother 
your base.

Ignore the objective for now and build up your town instead. There are lots of 
pits around the south: you should find at least two of each, as well as lots 
of trees for sawmills to sit among. Look west for a quarry close to your 
village centre too, and there is another village centre site to the south, 
between two mountains.

By the way, there are three traders hanging around in Crawford: one each for 
clay, stone and wood.

Your two heroes can explore the southern area of the map, and they will run 
into a few bandits. You'll have to keep them holding position at the eastern 
path which leads to the big area with the iron pit and the sulphur pit in it. 
If you are attacked it will be from there, as the bandits have a camp nearby. 
Your heroes can hold off the bandit attacks easily, but try to get some 
soldiers to help them out when you get a barracks built.

You also have a lot of new buildings and upgrades for your town, though many 
of them are a bit worthless in a level where your enemies are so weak. All you 
really need are swordsmen and some archers.

Once your town is built up and you have a few soldiers, send them east of your 
southern mines to find the bandit camp and its towers. There are three 
ballista towers to watch out for, but the camp is easy to knock down. The best 
thing about it is that you can destroy the town centre to the north to give 
yourself another much needed village centre. 

There's another camp up in the north west, beyond where Helias wants you to 
build the first two ballista towers. Build the towers first if you like, but 
this second base is no harder than the first one to kill off, and it gives you 
another village centre site.

Once the two towers are built and upgraded near the marker you get a new 
objective.

---
ERECT TWO BALLISTA TOWERS IN THE EAST!
---

Build these two and get another objective. Occasionally you might be told 
about the buildings the bandits are coming from, but you've probably already 
erased those buildings by now, so forget this.

You can also explore to the west, where you avoided earlier. There may be a 
few more bandits around here, but there are lots of mines and even yet another 
village centre site.

---
ERECT TWO BALLISTA TOWERS IN THE NORTH-WEST!
---

Explore the map for treasures if you like, and build a barracks and an archery 
range as close to that locked gate as you can. There's ANOTHER village centre 
site in the east of the map, as well as more resources, but you should never 
be having so much trouble that you need to go over there. Once you're ready 
build the fifth and sixth towers and get another objective.

---
DRIVE THE ENEMY GENERAL OUT OF HIS BASE!

TALK TO REGENT DOVBAR
---

If you just talk to Dovbar you can give him 2000 iron for him to hire soldiers 
with. This doesn't open the gate, however, so talk to the bishop to discover 
that he wants 2000 thalers.

---
PROVIDE REGENT DOVBAR WITH IRON!

GIVE MONEY TO THE BISHOP
---

Give the bishop the money and he will try to do a runner, but he'll be cut 
down before he can flee to the enemy base. Now the gates open and you can 
prepare your attack.

Don't underestimate the enemy base, though with five village centres and so 
many resources you should have no trouble just steaming in and erasing the 
bandits with a large army. With the main buildings and enemy units gone, you 
win.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 / R3 - Among trees west of the enemy base (only accessible once the gate 
is open)
3 / R2 - Across the river, west of the easternmost clay shaft (only 
accessible once the gate is open)
3 / R3 - East of the easternmost stone shaft
7 / R3 - Due south of the westernmost stone shaft
8 / R3 - On the mountainside, due south of the two iron shafts
9 / R3 - On the mountain path west of the two iron shafts (get serfs to cut 
down the trees)
10 / R3 - Under one of the bandits' white tents

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                3.4 CLEYCOURT
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Once united, the towns of Cleycourt and Barmecia now represented two 
completely separate realms. But still, both of them had to be gained as allies 
for the resurrection of the OLD EMPIRE."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

There's not much to this mission. If you take your heroes straight to your 
enemies from the start and keep capturing the enemy units with Helias, you can 
destroy a few buildings early and control the level from then on. You may not 
even have to build any military buildings.

==============================================================================

VISIT THE GOVERNOR OF BARMECIA
---

Build your village centre and hunt west and south west for clay and stone 
pits. Get your serfs to construct mines, houses and farms while you take your 
heroes south west as soon as the level starts. You can also send a serf north 
through the mountains to find Leonardo and his machine - you'll be coming back 
here later.

Your nearest enemies are a little too near - just south west of your village - 
and you'll want to get them out of the way as soon as possible. Helias's 
Persuasion can help a lot with this, and you can end up nicking most of your 
opponents and putting them in your own army.

The two miners to the south west will tell you about the location of 
Kerberos's nearest base, planted right next to the only iron in the vicinity; 
and they'll also tell you that you can get iron from the Vanlow brothers way 
up in the north - one wants thalers for iron, the other wants wood. This is 
needless, however, so take your heroes south until you find the little mining 
operation, and begin attacking and converting the black units. You can get rid 
of every building (prioritise the ballista towers - watch out for any new ones 
being built) and unit around here in this way, without having to build a 
barracks or call any serfs to arms.

While you're attacking these buildings there will be more and more of 
Kerberos's squadrons coming at you from the little grassy crossing to the 
west. Park whatever military units you've managed to get at that crossing and 
just let your guys kill theirs. Grab some with Helias whenever his Persuasion 
ability has recharged.

Leave them all here for a while and start developing your base, as well as 
buying upgrades and erecting mines at all the pits in the area. The only thing 
you won't have much of is sulphur, but that's not important right now. You 
should have a flourishing town after a while, with most of your serfs on 
lumberjack duty.

Bring in a serf and build a village centre at the site that the black knights 
recently vacated, then build two or three ballista towers at the crossing to 
catch any stray black attackers. These towers will defend your entire base 
from now on, and you can keep building up your army with Helias's help until 
you feel strong enough to assault the keep to the south west.

The keep is tough and it will be constantly producing more and more units of 
swordsmen and archers. Keep Helias back at the towers to collect more of them, 
while the rest of your army heads to the keep and attacks it. It's not hard, 
it just takes quite a while. Once the keep falls you'll find a chest that you 
can't open yet, and there will be no more attacks on your base.

Start exploring more of the map. There is a mountain pass to the north of your 
keep which leads to a grassy area with a weather machine in it - you'll come 
back here later. The area north of the black knights' wooden enclosure has a 
waterfall to the west, just over the river. Talk to the yellow guy guarding 
the gate, who tells you to go north and talk to the mayor of Barmecia, which 
you were going to do anyway.

At this point send one of your heroes (it doesn't matter which) up to Leonardo 
and keep him there.

Head farther north and explore Cleycourt to the west; then up into Barmecia to 
meet the mayor (send a couple of serfs up as well to save time). The mayor 
gives you new objectives.

---
EXPLORE THE BANDIT CAMP

SEARCH THE ROBBER BAND 
---

Open the chest you recovered from the black keep earlier, and this gives you 
the key to open the gate in the west. Get to that waterfall and find that the 
way is now open. Work your way up and into Ari's camp - she surrenders and the 
gates open.

Then you get a new objective.

---
BUILD A UNIVERSITY AT THE DESIGNATED PLACE IN BARMECIA.
---

Once you've built a college - you don't need to upgrade it - within the fenced 
area, the weather machine will be revealed on the map, if you hadn't already 
found it, and you can talk to Leonardo to complete the mission.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

N/A

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                3.5 THE FLOOD
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"When the rain finally stopped, the Weather Machine was already broken. But 
the land that Cleycourt was supposed to use for its development was already a 
swamp..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

Another one where an army is unnecessary. Your heroes can defend your base at 
the western bottleneck merely by using their special abilities, and pretty 
much all that remains is to get your resources up.

==============================================================================

VISIT LEONARDO
---

Send someone up to speak to Leonardo while you build a village centre and 
explore the swamps: you should find a clay pit and quarry nearby, and an iron 
pit farther south west. There's also a lot of trees and another village centre 
site away to the west, and you'll want about twenty serfs helping to mine clay 
and chop wood.

Leonardo needs to repair his machine, and he first needs 1000 wood to make a 
start.

---
VISIT LEONARDO

BUILD WEATHER MACHINE: WOOD; CLAY; IRON; SULPHUR
---

Send all your heroes west, since any enemies will be coming from there. 
Explore as much of the swamp as you can and you should find another iron pit 
and quarry near the mountains. You'll have to cut down some trees, but once 
the area just beside that second iron pit has been cleared out you can put a 
barracks and archery on it. Stick three or four ballista towers at the bottom 
of the mountain pass, and keep your three heroes parked beside them - this 
should be enough to take care of any enemies coming down the mountains or 
through that cave, but just keep your towers repaired.

Wait until you have 1000 wood, clay and iron, then send Helias to speak to 
Leonardo. Tribute Leonardo his wood and you get another objective: you then 
have to give him clay and iron, and after each he tells you about a trader in 
the north who can help you out if you can't get enough together from your 
village (you shouldn't need the traders).

Then he wants sulphur, but there's not much to be found around here. This time 
you really do need to visit the appropriate trader, so send Helias all the way 
north to meet him (the way should be safe; and even if it's not, Helias can 
outrun any bandits). Your base should be about as fully upgraded as you can 
get it, and you can start producing an army (if you want - you don't actually 
need it here). You could also send Dario, Erec and some soldiers through the 
mountain pass and take out the bandits camped beside the two towers - it's not 
a tough battle, especially with upgraded soldiers.

Anyway, the trader tells you that he's lost his key, and until you find it 
you're not getting any sulphur. 

---
LOOK FOR THE KEY
---

Ari now comes under your control, so send her down to the cave mouth and 
through into Cleycourt. The chest is in the north (typical) of the enclosed 
area, and you'll have to use her Camouflage ability to let her escape without 
getting killed.

Bring the key to the trader and give Leonardo his sulphur to finish the level.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

N/A

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                                 3.6 BARMECIA
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Now it was time to solve the problem of the second rivalling town: Barmecia! 
According to recent information, they seemed to be very interested in building 
a Cathedral. But till now, they did not get anywhere."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

Yet another non-barracks mission. Keep an eye on your stone and don't waste 
any by going overboard on a needlessly huge base, and you can tie this level 
up quickly and easily.

==============================================================================

HELP BARMECIA TO FINISH ITS CATHEDRAL!
---

You'll find a clay pit to the north and an iron pit to the south. There are 
lots of trees too, and tons of little stone deposits (no quarries though). Try 
not to build any unnecessary buildings or upgrades in this level, at least the 
ones that involve stone. This is a very simple mission, and you don't need 
every upgrade and building type - just the two pits, a college, and the 
requisite houses and farms. Keep the spending of stone to a minimum, and get 
all your spare serfs on stone mining throughout.

Send your heroes south to Cleycourt to reveal the entire town, then go west of 
the town to talk to the serf beside the first marketplace.

---
FIND THE KIDNAPPERS!
---

The bandits' camp is south west, so head down there and talk to them.

---
FREE THE MERCHANT
---

Your heroes can do this by themselves if you use their abilities in the battle 
- forget paying the stupidly high ransom. Delete the bandits to complete this 
objective; and with the first trader freed the southern marketplace will start 
operating. Pick up the chest from behind the eastern tower before you leave.

Head north to Barmecia and reveal that town too. Speak to the trader outside 
the walls, next to the burning marketplace. He will ask you for 1500 thalers 
and a new marketplace in the same spot.

---
HELP THE MERCHANT TO GET BACK TO WORK!
---

Build a storehouse at the marker, then upgrade to a marketplace (you'll have 
to do some upgrading back in your village). The treasure chests can help with 
the thalers if you're short - Barmecia will automatically take the thalers 
when you have them (I think, though check the tribute menu if they don't). 
With this done you'll get two new objectives.

---
SUPPLY 10,000 STONES FOR THE CATHEDRAL

TALK TO PILGRIM
---

Pilgrim wants a sulphur mine, so build one in the south, plus a farm and a 
dwelling. With this done Pilgrim gives you all of his buildings, so you'll 
need more farms and houses to support your new stone mines. It's a good idea 
to have a farm and a house per stone quarry in place before Pilgrim gives the 
mines to you, as well as having an extra stonemason hut built (Pilgrim gives 
you one). This will greatly speed things along after the mines become yours.

There are two other quarries waiting to be found, but they must be demolished 
first with Pilgrim's bombs. There is one hidden quarry east of your new 
village centre, and another one north of the easternmost stone pit. Build your 
own stone pits here, and upgrade all your pits to galleries if you can. There 
are other such hidden resource clumps around the map - explode them open with 
Pilgrim if you want to get at them.

Just sit back and let the stone roll in, though you might want to take care of 
those bandits in the north. Send your heroes in alone to grab the chest and 
run out again - don't try to take them on, as there are far too many. You 
don't have to destroy the bandits and their tower - just get the chest and 
leave, then guard the marketplace north of your new stone mines, as they will 
periodically attack you.

Don't bother building a marketplace - you can't buy stone here.

Upgrade your houses, farms, stone pits and stonemason, but don't spend stone 
on anything else other than a barracks sitting just south of Barmecia's walls. 
Build swordsmen just in case, as Cleycourt will be building soldiers of their 
own and ranging them along the central river. This is just a precaution 
however, as you should be able to get up to 10,000 before Cleycourt attacks.

Once you have the required stone, donate it to Barmecia from the tribute menu 
to complete the mission.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2 / R3 - Behind the robbery tower
4 / R3 - North east of the sulphur shafts
5 / R3 - South of the sulphur shafts
6 / R3 - Behind Cleycourt castle
7 / R3 - Behind the eastern robbery tower
9 / R3 - Behind your own keep
10 / R3 - Behind the Barmecia brickmaker

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                                 3.7 FOLKLUNG
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"The rough regions of the Highlands are notorious for conflicts with the 
barbarian people. Just like the next target: Folklung Castle is no 
exception..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This is the first mission where the winter has a big effect. If you pick up 
Pilgrim early you can open up the iron early, and from then on your only 
problem will be the slow build-up of clay. You will need a vast army in this 
one, even if you don't want to destroy every opposition unit.

==============================================================================

RESCUE FOLKLUNG

FIND A WAY TO GET TO FOLKLUNG!
---

There's everything in the immediate area except an iron pit, and to find 
substantial amounts of iron you'll have to explore very far afield. There's 
only one way in or out of your starting area, and that's to the east around 
the mountains. Luckily you won't be coming under attack, at least not until 
much later, so send your heroes immediately north to Folklung - quickly, while 
the winter is there - while you start building your town.

Your heroes will find Folklung and then be told to go on to the castle in the 
west. 

---
TALK TO SALIM!
---

Get over there and pick up Salim and Pilgrim, plus a new objective.

---
FIND A PATH TO THE BESIEGERS!
---

The ice will thaw and your heroes are now stuck beside Folklung, so while you 
wait for the winter to return, get Pilgrim to blow up the iron shaft just 
beside the lone green hut, south of Folklung's eastern gate. There are another 
two iron shafts waiting to be burst open in your own base, so open them when 
you finally get your six heroes back home.

Don't worry about your allies in this mission - they can hold out forever 
against the raids. Your only concern right now - at least until you decide to 
progress - is the bunch of bandits hanging around to the north east of your 
town. Take your heroes up there during winter and get rid of them early - it's 
not hard. Pull down their single tent and no more should be spawned.

Now you have tons of time to develop your town and build an army. You have 
plenty of resources: you should be able to build a couple of sawmills 
somewhere around your base; there's a hidden sulphur shaft north of Folklung; 
and there are clay deposits near where you killed off those bandits (you won't 
have loads of clay with just one shaft, so build brickmakers' huts and a 
marketplace to help out). The village centre site just north of your starting 
quarry can be built on, as well as the one next to your eastern quarry.

Once you've built and upgraded everything in sight, and built up an army to 
fill out your population limit of 375, get Pilgrim to blow up the southern 
pass through the mountains on the west side of your base. You will get a new 
objective.

---
CAPTURE THE LEADER OF THE BESIEGERS
---

This objective doesn't appear if you go through the other pass, so make it 
easy on yourself and choose this one. Opening the southern pass also means 
your base won't be attacked from the west, which isn't true of the northern 
one.

Wait until it's winter and then approach the purple tents. The leader should 
run down to the tents alone, and you can approach him with a hero to capture 
him. Whichever hero approaches him first is the one he will follow around, at 
least until that hero is knocked out. If all of your heroes are knocked out, 
or move too far away from him, he will escape and you have to approach him 
again to recapture him. The easiest way is to capture him with a weaker hero 
(I chose Ari), then send everyone else in first to keep the red army occupied. 
While the battle rages, slip your hero past and up to the prison, pulling the 
purple leader behind them.

You need a big army to beat the reds, and you need to do it now, because your 
base is being attacked from the east. You can also win by just killing off all 
of the besiegers in their camp, though there are a lot of them.

If you return the leader to the prison successfully, you win: if you kill all 
of the besiegers except the leader himself, you win.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2 / R3 - On a tiny island on the edge of the map - cross in winter
5 / R1 - North of your northernmost stone shaft, among the thick trees
6 / R1 - North of your northernmost stone shaft, on the other side of the 
mountains
8 / R3 - Next to the eastern purple tent of the besiegers' leader
9 / R3 - South of the western robbery tower
9 / R2 - North of the eastern robbery tower
10 / R2 - Behind Folklung Castle
12 / R3 - North of Folklung

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                                 3.8 NORFOLK
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Horrible news reached the companions: not only the barbarians, but also 
Mordred's troops are gathering themselves for an attack on Norfolk, which is 
still feeling secure."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

Though you have two potentially very strong enemies in this level, one of the 
enemy bases can be crippled early, and the other can be nullified by just 
avoiding it. Act fast and control the level from the start, though it does 
take a bit of micro-management.

==============================================================================

PROTECT THE MESSENGER
---

Use your heroes to escort the messenger to Norfolk, and build a village centre 
in the meantime. Once the messenger reaches the princess you get two new 
objectives.

---
DEFEND NORFOLK!

SAVE THE SCHOLAR
---

Bring your heroes home and get Pilgrim to open up the clay pit to the south. 
Build a mine and so on, and start producing serfs to get mining the stone and 
clay clumps nearby, as well as cutting down some trees.

This next part is crucial to your success and to your enemies' failure. The 
barbarians in the north west are about to start exploiting the nearby iron 
pits to the north (four of them), and if you move very fast you can make sure 
they never get their hands on the pits, and that you get them all instead.

North of your keep is a serf who will tell about what the barbarians are up 
to. Head north to the top of the hill and check that no pits have yet been 
opened up. If you're unlucky the barbarians will have begun mining, and may 
even have built a ballista tower to protect their house, farm and pit. Use 
your heroes to get rid of these buildings - if they're not there then you're 
in luck.

Now head west to the other iron pit, south of the lone yellow hut. This one 
will almost certainly be occupied, so get rid of anything and anyone you find 
there, then keep your heroes hanging around that yellow hut until the 
barbarian attacks calm down (you should have no trouble fending them off).

Once your heroes are holding position just south of the yellow hut, bring up 
some serfs and start building your own mines (don't open the two closed pits 
yet - just mine the two open ones), and build farms and houses alongside them.

The barbarians now have big problems - they have very little iron (actually 
they should have none, though they still cheat by producing soldiers 
eternally) and therefore cannot produce anywhere near the numbers that they 
would be bringing out if you had let them get at the shafts. As I said, do all 
this as soon as you've got the horsed messenger through to Norfolk, because if 
you leave it even a little while you will have serious trouble with the 
barbarians later, and may never progress.

Once all this is taken care of it's time to find more resources. Send some 
serfs east of your keep and down the mountain pass. The way is blocked by 
logs, but the nearby serf tells you that your own serfs can chop the wood out 
of the way. Do so and explore all the way around to the south, east, and then 
north again, until you meet Brother John at his church.

Now bring Pilgrim down from the north west and get him to blow up three 
things: the stone mine just at the south end of the first mountain range; the 
sulphur shaft to the east of that; and the single rock blocking the way 
through to the big waterfalls. Get your serfs to start building, including 
onto the new village centre site, while Pilgrim talks to Brother John.

---
TRANQUILLISING POTION: CHEST

TRANQUILLISING POTION: WATER
---

I recommend that you don't do this sub-quest; but if you do this is how, and 
what will happen.

The monk wants these two ingredients, so send Pilgrim through to the 
waterfalls you just opened to pick up the water. Now you just need the 
ingredients from the chest away to the east, so bring Ari up to the outer 
walls of Kerberos's town and camouflage her (though you can just run any hero 
through - they should make it alone). Grab the ingredients from the chest and 
then get Pilgrim to talk to Brother John again.

The monk will open up the gates leading through to Leonardo's hut, which you 
would otherwise have had to reach by charging through Kerberos's base with 
your fingers crossed. Send your heroes (or some soldiers) through the gap and 
erase the tower and the mines, then get serfs to put your own mines down 
there.

Opening that gap lets Kerberos's troops attack your town, which you probably 
don't want. If you don't do the monk's quest the gap remains closed and the 
barbarians are the only enemies you have to worry about defending your base 
from.

Anyway, once your heroes have managed to capture a few of the barbarian 
squadrons with Helias's Persuasion, you can easily charge into their base and 
destroy it early. You don't need an army here - just your heroes and their 
special abilities will do, plus a few captured reds. They have a couple of 
cannon towers at the gate which are easy to bring down fast, then you can 
progress north east to get rid of the garrison, and finally go north west to 
destroy the keep. Taking out the keep stops those annoying serfs from spilling 
out and repairing every building you attack. Now erase the rest of the red 
buildings while you bring your own serfs in to get at the village centre site 
and the two mines.

This takes care of the barbarians and you can concentrate on developing your 
base in peace. Build up whatever you want, especially a laboratory (upgraded 
alchemist). You don't need an army in this one, or even any new military 
units, but you may want to build a big army just in case you make a total 
trousers of the level.

You'll want to talk to Leonardo, the scholar, when you think you're ready, so 
take all your heroes east and through the grey base (just click them on the 
fenced area in the south east and they should all make it through Kerberos's 
base without dying). Once you reach Leo he will tell you about Kerberos's 
sulphur mines farther south, and you get a new objective.

---
HELP NORFOLK!
---

Destroy everything you find in the south, though you needn't bother trying to 
get serfs through the grey base to build on the mines. Kerberos now has no new 
sulphur coming in, and therefore cannot build artillery. This will make his 
attack on Norfolk much weaker when it comes. Send your heroes back through his 
base and home again, but not before you've found the chest south of the mines 
and spotted the one on the mountainside to the south west (you may want to 
leave one of your heroes here so that he / she can pick this chest up when 
winter comes).

After about ten minutes of waiting, Kerberos will manage to change the weather 
into winter, and he will start amassing his hordes in the north east, ready to 
attack Norfolk. He will always win if you don't help, so you need to be ready 
for him.

---
BUILD THE WEATHER MACHINE!
---

You have about twenty minutes before his troops attack from the north east, so 
research the appropriate things from the laboratory to allow you to change the 
weather, now that Leonardo has told you how. You want a weather tower and a 
weather centre in order to change the climate back to summer.

This is a good opportunity to attack Kerberos's base while his troops are 
away, though it's not necessary. Only do it if you've bothered building an 
army.

Once the timer runs down you will see Kerberos's army start to move in on 
Norfolk. This is the perfect time to trigger a weather change from your 
weather tower. Wait until all the grey units are on the ice together, then 
switch to summer from the weather tower and watch Kerberos's men and artillery 
drown in the swamps. The barbarians would also be attacking from the opposite 
direction, if only you hadn't already destroyed them. It might be a plan to 
move any combat units you have up into Norfolk, just in case the water doesn't 
catch all of Kerberos's goons.

With Kerberos's gimps dead the level is won.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2 / R1 - Next to the ruined church near Kerberos's base
2 / R3 - South of Kerberos's rally point
5 / R3 - South of Kerberos's sulphur mines
5 / R3 - South west of Kerberos's sulphur mines - reach it in winter
6 / R2 - On the mountainside in the river valley - reach it in winter
11 / R3 - On the peninsula leading north from the barbarians' base
12 / R3 - Behind a tree at the northernmost tip of Norfolk's base

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++==============+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++=================================
                                 3.9 KALOIX
===============================++++++++++++++=================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++==============+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"The bad reputation of the Countess Mary de Mortfichet had spread far beyond 
her borders. But what would the fellowship really find on her estate?"

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

Do everything fast in this level and you'll find it much easier, especially 
when you realise how simple attacking Mordred's base really is.

==============================================================================

PORT KALOIX IS IN DIRE STRAITS

PROTECT PORT KALOIX

MORDRED'S OUTPOST
---

Build a village centre while you take your heroes east to kill the first bunch 
of red bandits. Destroy their tower on the hill north of the clay pit next, 
then start building up a base slowly. There is a stone quarry just east of 
that tower, another quarry north of your keep, and another clay pit to the 
west of the keep.

Next to the western clay pit is an alchemist who will tell you about lightly 
guarded resources to the far west, as well as another village centre site. Get 
your heroes over there as soon as possible to grab the resources - you'll have 
to fight off a few bandits and destroy a tower, but it will be easy with just 
the heroes and archers you started with. Now start building more serfs to pick 
up the resource clumps.

Move your heroes to the east again, and explore the path north of your eastern 
stone pit. It leads up to the grey base, so park your heroes here from now on 
- they should be able to deal with lots of future attacks, even when Mordred's 
guys start throwing bombards at you. Just make sure you keep an eye on them 
and use their abilities whenever they are attacked.

You should tribute the resources to Port Kaloix as soon as you have them, then 
hang around for about ten minutes until you get a new objective. Work towards 
getting the clay and wood by building sawmills and mining from the two clay 
pits, and help out with at least fifteen serfs.

Once you tribute Kaloix you get a message about Helias negotiating with Mary 
de Mortfichet; and after about ten more minutes you will receive a new 
objective.

---
COUNTESS MARY DE MORTFICHET
---

Visit her with a hero, and she will donate four mines to your cause, though 
they are not yet under your control. You'll have to buy the four mines from 
her through the tribute menu, and also buy off the hordes of Tourte in the 
north west. Pay Tourte the thalers immediately (you should have them if you've 
been doing all of the above fast). This is far easier than fighting them, and 
much less expensive. The only downside is that you don't get their village 
centre site for yourself, but you won't actually need it if you're following 
my strategy.

So, pay Tourte and upgrade your two village centres to maximise your pop. 
limit at 200. This is more than enough. Now build up your base as quickly as 
you can: you'll want a barracks halfway up that northern path, and a few 
ballista / cannon towers to defend it; one or two treasuries for thalers; a 
cannon factory to build three or four siege cannons; and a weather tower and 
weather centre, in order to change the season to winter.

Once you have built four or five more squadrons of soldiers to help out your 
heroes, they can easily mop up every grey attack from the north, especially 
with the help of upgraded towers. You can greatly speed up the development of 
your town by building a marketplace and just buying what you need - with the 
combination of Mary's mines, all your other buildings, a couple of treasuries 
and a marketplace, you should be rolling in dough altogether.

All that remains is to attack Mordred's base. You could do it the hard way by 
charging past his horrible towers and guards; but there is a much easier way. 
Research your way to building the weather tower and centre, build an army of 
three of four siege cannons and a bunch of swordsmen, then amass your troops 
just north of the fence around your allies' base in the south east. Change the 
season to winter and take everyone east, across the ice to the far side, where 
you should find a path leading up the hill to Mordred's keep.

He will probably send one or two squadrons of goons down the path at you, but 
your cannons can wipe these guys away easily. Now just roll up the hill and 
destroy the keep at the top: Mordred is defeated and you've won the mission.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

N/A

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
                            3.10 THE GREAT PLAGUE
===============================+++++++++++++++================================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++===============++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Even more estates of the Countess Mary de Mortfichet are in despair and still 
she is keeping absolutely quiet about the whole thing. And the disappearance 
of the young Robber-Knight Ari is just another mystery..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This isn't easy, thanks to the many and constant attacks on your base, but if 
you know where the enemy is coming from and know how to channel them, your 
army can hold them off indefinitely while you develop your town. You'll need 
two armies though.

==============================================================================

FIND AND ELIMINATE THE CAUSE OF THE PLAGUE
---

Talk to the villager at your keep. He tells you he'll show you the way to 
Pilgrim for 100 thalers, but sod that. Send your six serfs north of your 
college and start building an iron mine. Start your other trios of serfs 
mining the resource clumps nearest them, and take your heroes south to talk to 
Tugor, beside the green tower. He gives you a new objective.

---
FREE ARI AND PILGRIM
---

He can also sell you reinforcements in three one-off deals. This is well worth 
the price, but you'll have to get your thalers up first. Now take everyone 
east to Verino, past the stone quarry and the lump of rock.

In Verino you can find an alchemist, who will tell you about pirates hiding 
treasure under that big rock; a miner who'll tell you what you already know 
about the castle; a trader who'll sell you sulphur; and of course Pilgrim, who 
will join your band. Get the chest east of the town before you leave.

Go back to the first rock and blow it up with Pilgrim's bomb - underneath is a 
chest. There's another explodable rock on the hill above that quarry - blow it 
up for another chest. Now send Pilgrim way up to the west of your base, where 
there is a clay pit waiting to be burst open. Start building and developing: 
the idea is to have a weather tower and centre up as soon as possible, as well 
as a good-sized army with which to defend your base.

Buy Tugor's squadrons of greens as soon as you can afford to, as they will 
greatly help defend against the constant attacks. You will be warned each time 
Mary's troops are preparing to assault you, then a few minutes later they will 
appear from the south, having cheated their way there from the northern castle 
(pff...). Station all your combat troops south of the pass leading south from 
your base (the pass with the iron clumps), and don't bother building a mine in 
that nearby quarry. You want to be able to channel all of your enemies up that 
mountain pass, but when you try to mine the stone it becomes very difficult to 
control your defenses. You'll have enough stone without two mines, but get 
serfs to mine the southern quarry slowly if you want.

Mary's attacks get stronger and stronger, until eventually you're fighting off 
siege cannons late in the level. Keep everyone guarding the south entrance to 
your base, and try to keep the green allied units healthy - if you keep Dario, 
Erec and Salim hanging around (the green units follow them) and trigger Erec's 
Aura Of Strength ability every time enemies approach, you can hold them off 
for ages, especially if you get up five or six cannon / ballista towers. 

Buying that sulphur from the trader in Verino can help speed your base along. 
Build it up fast and use the marketplace to bring in resources you need 
(always pay with thalers). Treasuries will help a lot too, but focus on the 
weather buildings primarily.

When you are ready to change the weather, change it to winter and build 
another town centre on the tiny island just next to that peninsula to the west 
of your base, the one with the clay clumps on it. Dario can find it with his 
falcon, and you can send a serf over the ice to build on the site.

Also send Pilgrim over to pick up the chest next to the site; then send him 
north to cross the ice north of your base. Here he should find a miner and 
some purple towers: talk to the miner to be told of a mountain range with lots 
of treasure to the north. Only Pilgrim can batter through the rocks with his 
bombs, so send him exploring. He will find lots of chests but he will also be 
jumped by some bands of purples, so it's up to you whether you want to try to 
run him in alone or to pick up all this stuff later.

If you have managed to build a few towers south of your base, you should build 
up swordsmen quickly and send them down there to guard the towers against the 
constant purple attacks. At the same time, send your heroes and their green 
escorts (you should still have lots left) up to join Pilgrim where he met that 
miner (you may want to leave Salim south of your base - the cannons following 
him are slow, and are more use in the defense of your base). This is a good 
place from which to assault the purple towers and buildings down to the east. 
Send a serf across the ice as well, and he can build a barracks and foundry 
around the miner's hut, once the towers are gone. Get those chests in the 
mountains with everyone if you didn't want Pilgrim to do it himself.

The ice will turn back to water when the summer comes back automatically, so 
get your heroes' half of the army up there and build your military buildings 
in preparation for the attack on the purples. You shouldn't need anything 
other than swordsmen if you still have most of the green units. Send your army 
south east along the path, knocking down the towers and buildings and getting 
rid of the purple units on the way. They have a lot of towers, but they're not 
tough if you stay out of the way or hit them fast. The bunch of cannons down 
in front of the infested town will give you problems, but hopefully you have 
enough units remaining to get them out of the way.

Throughout all of this you should be keeping watch over the soldiers defending 
your town in the south: six towers and nine squadrons of swordsmen were more 
than enough for me, and just keep repairing the towers with a nearby serf.

Now go into the town and kill off the towers and cannons in there. Talk to the 
forger about Mary de Mortfichet; talk to the trader inside the graveyard; pick 
up the chest in the ruined church; and finally go north of the village and 
pick up Helias, who gives you a new objective.

---
DESTROY THE CASTLE OF MARY DE MORTFICHET
---

A few things about the infested town. Build another village centre on the free 
site, and run around the side of the town to pick up the chest just over the 
fence on the east. There is another chest south of the town, which can be 
reached by sending a hero through the bottleneck between the walls of Verino 
and the walls of the infested town. And there are some sulphur clumps inside 
the walls of the town.

There are three more enemy towers in that pass leading south between the 
infested town and your own base - knock them out so you don't have to keep 
freezing the water every time you want to go anywhere. Now you can pass back 
and forwards and you have more space in your pop. limit for a bigger army.

You won't really need one, to be honest. I built another foundry and archery 
in the infested town (there's an iron shaft waiting to be burst open by 
Pilgrim), and then bolstered my army before attacking to the north. I went 
with five siege cannons (upgraded from the alchemist), and a bunch of 
arbalests, as well as my heroes. There are mostly ranged units up there, so 
you'll want to be able to hit them just as quickly as they can hit you. You 
definitely need a few cannons for the many towers.

Freeze the river whenever you're ready and cross to the north, working your 
way around the mountain pass. You'll meet a lot of units, but your guys should 
be able to charge past eventually. There is also a chest on one of the hills, 
though you won't be needing whatever's in it by now. When you reach the castle 
just smash it to half health to complete the mission.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 / R3 - On a cliff above the path leading towards Mary's castle
3 / R3 - On a cliff outside the walls of the infested town
5 / R3 - At the eastern end of Verino
5 / R3 - At the end of the bottleneck between the walls of Verino and the 
infested town
6 / R3 - Under a rock, on the hill north of the green tower
6 / R3 - Under a rock, east of the green tower
8 / R3 - On the island with the village centre site
10 / R3 - In the mountains - blow up the rocks (12)

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
                            3.11 OLD KING'S CASTLE
===============================++++++++++++++++===============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++================+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Finally! The Old King's Castle - former centre of the Old Empire - is lying 
directly ahead of the heroes. Many years ago, everything started here, but 
now, the Old Castle was left to decay..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This one seems a lot harder than it is once you get your base up and running. 
If you know where to build - and definitely where not to build - you can 
predict where your enemies will be and fend them off with just your heroes. Do 
everything you can to build those weather machines as early as possible.

==============================================================================

REACH ANDALA

REACH THE OLD KING'S CASTLE
---

Send Helias and Ari east to the edge of the map, at around the four o'clock 
position - look for the river in the fog of war. They should find a locked 
chest at the riverside which will take Ari nine seconds to open. Send Helias 
in first to decoy the nearby bandits away, and then run both heroes north of 
the camp when they have the key - don't bother fighting the bandits, just run 
like hell. You will find a gate and the key will open it for you when Ari 
approaches it. Now shift your view to the area circled on the minimap and send 
Ari and Helias up there blindly, through another bandit camp, past another 
chest, until they reach Andala. Speak to the governor there to get a new 
objective.

---
GAIN THE TRUST OF ANDALA'S INHABITANTS
---

Ari and Helias are now useless until you can let them through to the other 
side of the map, so sit them in Andala and get over to the other four.

Forget the objective for now and take your other four heroes north of where 
they are. They will meet some of Ari's followers, and they may get attacked by 
bandits. Ignore the bandits and run up the ridge to the east. You will come to 
a rock on the hill, which can be blown up by Pilgrim to let your heroes 
through. Keep running from the bandits and head all the way around this ridge 
to the west, where there is a chest on the edge. Now run up the next ridge to 
the east and through the gates, past more bandits.

Dario will talk with Garok, and you get another objective.

---
FREE THE VILLAGE!
---

Dario now has spiffing new armour, though you'll have to add him to your 
numbered group again. Run your four heroes down to the village revealed in the 
west, and when they arrive you can turn around and fight off the bandits.

---
BRING FORTH SUMMER
---

Now you have the beginnings of a base but there's a lot of work to be done 
here. First you want clay and wood, so build a college in your town and then 
farms and houses for the miners in your two mines, as well as the scholars. 
Produce up to twenty serfs at the next tax day, and send half of them north 
west with Pilgrim, while the other half build, chop wood or mine stone in your 
town.

You will find a green abbey to the north west, and nearby is plenty of wood, 
some clay and stone, a stone quarry, and an iron shaft waiting to be blown 
open. Open it with Pilgrim and build your first iron mine, while you wait to 
research Construction from the college. This will let you build sawmills, so 
put one in your town and one near your iron pit in the north west. And build 
on that village centre site in the north west too. This area will rarely come 
under attack, if ever.

You'll only ever have one clay pit in this level (there's another one in 
Kerberos's territory, but by the time you can get to it you've won anyway), so 
you have to get the most out of it. Your next priority is building 
brickmakers' huts near the mine, though you'll also have to do lots more 
researching and building of farms and houses. Building up your base can take a 
while in this level, especially once you start coming under attack.

Kerberos will be sending troops from his outpost in the south west, and they 
will cross the ice to hit your base at the village centre. Keep your four 
heroes here and do your best to fend them off, which is really all you can do 
for a long time. Don't build an iron pit on the hill to the south, as it is 
far too hard to defend. If you want more iron there are two more shafts down 
south somewhere, but you have to clear away any lurking bandits and also 
somehow defend them from continuous attack, which is impossible in such a big 
area. Leave them alone and be happy with one - the other three are just too 
much trouble.

You have to keep a constant eye on your heroes and village centre while your 
base is developing. Forget building the towers mentioned in the objective, and 
forget tributing Andala for now. The towers may come under attack at some 
point, and once they fall your base defence will get easier, not harder.

Anyway, build your base as fast as you can, with the idea being to produce a 
few soldiers to help defend your town (you don't need a big army - the 
emphasis here is on speedy development), while also working towards building 
the weather buildings. The sooner you do this the better, as Kerberos's 
Outpost will be completely cut off as soon as you melt the ice. Keep using 
your heroes' special abilities at your village centre and you should be able 
to hold the greys off. Move fast though, because they'll be sending cannons 
and cavalry later. Get a barracks built whenever you can afford it, and keep 
the iron coming in.

There is a sulphur shaft awaiting you on the hill east of the castle, but it 
will be easier to defend once the nearby tower has been attacked and 
destroyed, since your enemies should not come up that side road from then on. 
You should end up with two stone quarries, one clay pit, one iron pit, one 
sulphur pit, and two sawmills (plus smithys, brickmakers, etc.) - this should 
be enough to let you succeed here.

If you still need more sulphur you could try talking to Leonardo in the west, 
as he can sell you some. I didn't bother with this though - I just built my 
sulphur mine and an alchemist's hut pretty early, so that I had lots of 
sulphur by the time I needed it later on.

Eventually, after spending a lot on upgrades, you will have your laboratory 
and be able to build the weather tower and centre. Turn winter to summer as 
soon as you can, but make sure you tribute Andala before you trigger the 
season change.

---
DRIVE KERBEROS AWAY
---

The routes to Kerberos's base in the north east are now open, and it will be 
much easier to protect your base at the northern pass if you've given Andala 
their money. Kerberos is very likely to pour lots of troops through the pass 
leading into your base if Andala are not yet your allies, but if Andala is on 
side then you will see far fewer units, and will be able to build up your army 
in relative peace.

Start upgrading everything relating to your soldiers and cannons - I built 
seven siege cannons and filled out the rest of my 250 pop. limit (two city 
centres) with broadswordsmen. Since this is the maximum you can have, this 
will be enough to attack Kerberos with.

Once your army is in place and is as big and tough as you can make it, pour 
everyone down the hill into Kerberos's territory, and start hitting his towers 
and units. Keep all of your troops together, keep using your heroes' 
abilities, and keep a close eye on your cannons - protect them from sneak 
attacks and you surely can't lose.

Your ultimate aim is to head east and find Kerberos's stronghold on the hill, 
beside the garrison. You'll have to roll over a lot of his troops (as usual, 
far more than a base that size could possibly support), but once the 
stronghold's down he surrenders and you are safe, with a new objective.

---
DARIO MUST REACH THE CLOUDY MOUNTAINS
---

Now that you're free from danger, there are a few things you could do if you 
feel like wasting time. You could explore to find all the chests; you could 
try bringing back winter so you can attack Kerberos's Outpost; or you could 
explode the rock behind Leonardo's workshop to allow you to get down there by 
land.

If you do feel like attacking the Outpost guys, you should know that you will 
definitely lose. They have impossible numbers of units for such a tiny base, 
and more and more keep spawning from thin air. One village centre and three 
hundred plus troops? I don't think so...

Another thing: you can restore the castle to its former glory through the 
tribute menu, though I fail to see the point. Pricy as hell too.

Anyway, send Dario north to the stone gate to finish this horror show off.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 / R2 - Among the trees west of Kerberos's cannon towers
2 / R3 - On a mountaintop north of Andala
4 / R2 - South west of the fire in the bandit camp
4 / R3 - On the southern riverbank, near the chest containing the gate key
6 / R3 - Among some trees behind a curved mountain
7 / R3 - On the mountainside south of the end of the river
7 / R3 - Beside Kerberos's Outpost's university
8 / R2 - On the ridge leading to the castle
9 / R3 - On the mountain behind Leonardo's workshop
11 / R3 - On a tiny island north of the north west stone quarry - reach it in 
winter

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
                             3.12 CLOUDY MOUNTAINS
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"A stony path to the Cloudy Mountains lies ahead of the heroes, but after the 
early obstacles, a surprisingly settlement-friendly region reveals itself 
before their eyes..."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This mission can be done without going anywhere near your enemies, or even 
leaving your starting territory. Do it the hard way if you want, but the city 
planning way takes a bit more thought.

==============================================================================

You now have Kerberos instead of Salim - use his abilities whenever you're 
surrounded by enemies, and just pray that he's not the one who responds when 
you're moving your heroes around.

Blow open the first rock to speak to Leonardo, who gives you your first 
objective.

---
BUILD A PROSPERING VILLAGE
---

You get a keep and four serfs, so take everyone north to blow open the next 
rock. Get your serfs to build a college and a village centre in here, while 
you send your heroes exploring. Pilgrim has another rock to blow up in the 
north (the logs can be chopped out of the way by serfs), and there are some 
hidden shafts waiting to be opened by his bombs. Don't open the rocks at the 
miner yet.

Build a clay pit in one of the shafts, and start building serfs to help with 
early resourcing. Research Construction when you can afford it, then build a 
sawmill to go with your clay pit. This will help you get wood and clay from 
the start, so build the farms and houses and keep resourcing with the serfs.

It's a good plan to work towards building a university and stronghold, then 
researching Standing Army, using the 200 iron you have available. The little 
batch of 200 iron at the northern exit will let you research Gear Wheels 
later, which will come in handy. You have no sulphur yet, but there is an all 
important batch next to the north west clay shaft - pick it up with serfs so 
you can research Alchemy, allowing you to upgrade your college to get to the 
next lot of researches.

Build mines at each of the five shafts too, and upgrade your village centre to 
a town centre once you've researched Trading. To get over 100 civilian workers 
and fulfil the quota, you'll have to have a city centre and a lot of 
buildings, which will take quite a while. It's still easier and calmer than 
doing anything else, however.

It should be obvious what to do from here. Build as many civilian buildings as 
you can, but avoid building any military structures. You don't need soldiers 
if you're never leaving your base, but you do need over 100 civilians (check 
your stats menu to keep up with the tally).

Break through the rock leading west and fight off the purple bandits. Destroy 
the two tents and the tower, then talk to the trader. He will sell you 1500 
iron for 2000 clay, and 1500 sulphur for 2000 more clay. This will be very 
useful for your purposes, so build two brickmakers' huts to go with your clay 
mines.

To cut a long story short, you can complete the mission without going anywhere 
near Mordred or finding a second village centre. By the end of the mission I 
had at least one of every non-military building, except a chapel; I had bought 
every upgrade except Architecture, Horse Breeding and Tactics, and the smithy 
upgrades; I had upgraded every building to the highest level except my pits 
and brickmakers; and I had two treasuries to bring in the thalers.

Anyway, once you get over 100 civilian workers, Leonardo congratulates you by 
giving you the weather technology for free.

---
LET IT SNOW!
---

You should already have your alchemist built, so get a weather tower and 
centre up next and wait for the gauge to charge. If you can't fit engineers 
into your pop. limit of 125, just destroy certain other buildings or kill some 
serfs.

Freeze the place to get the next objective.

---
OBTAIN THE RELICT!
---

Now just sit back and wait for your thalers to hit 20,000 - you should be 
pretty close, especially with a couple of treasuries. Sell some stuff at the 
marketplace to hurry things along.

I also tried this level the long and interesting way: it involved building 
statues, grabbing iron mines, looking for sulphur clumps, building cannon 
towers, and putting together a big army. Since the xenophobic way is easier, I 
won't bother going into detail about breaking through the rocks and into 
Mordred's territory.

Paying the thalers to Glenhill via the tribute menu wins you the level.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

2 / R3 - On the mountain road east of the sulphur clumps
9 / R3 - North of the trader
11 / R3 - In a corner on the edge of the map, north west of Glenhill's gates

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
                                 3.13 EVELANCE
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"Almost unreachable, Evelance Castle sits on top of sharp cliffs in this 
gloomy and almost surreal environment. Finally, Dario would meet his 
antagonist Mordred, or would he?"

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

Your enemies here are insanely powerful, and it's a mystery why they don't 
just charge through the mountains and crush you. As it is, all you need is a 
bunch of cannon towers and the help of your allies to keep them at bay. 
There's a huge portion of the map which you never even need to enter.

==============================================================================

DARIO MUST VISIT THE REGENT OF TENDREL!
---

Talk to the miner - he'll tell you about unclaimed towers up in the north. 
There's a clay pit already dug at the south east of your base, so build a farm 
and hut near it with two of your serfs; get another two serfs to build on the 
clay shaft just north of your town centre; and get the last two started on a 
college near your keep. There's also an iron shaft west of your keep, which 
you should exploit as soon as you can.

Send Dario west and then north until you find water, then follow it along and 
up to find Leonardo standing by his yellow gates. Speak to him for another 
objective.

---
REBUILD THE 4 BURIED SULPHUR MINES
---

Just east of Leonardo are two stone quarries waiting to be mined. You can 
build his sulphur mines later, but right now start producing serfs and 
building up your base. Instead of building sulphur mines (which you can't 
really do right now), send some serfs to the little area revealed in the west, 
where there's a chest and some piles of stone and sulphur. Start your serfs 
collecting the sulphur here, and there will be plenty in your stores by the 
time you need it.

Send Dario over to speak to the regent of Tendrel while your civilians get to 
work on the basics. Talk to the regent with Dario for two more objectives.

---
RESCUE THE DAUGHTER OF TENDREL'S REGENT!

REBUILD THE CATHEDRAL OF EVELANCE
---

These are both objectives that you should do as soon as possible, for a couple 
of reasons. To rescue the princess you will need an army; and to reach the 
building site of the cathedral you will need to change the weather to winter 
(surprise surprise).

Explore the southern half of the map just so you know what there is around 
you. There are no hostiles farther south than Tendrel, so you're safe that far 
up all along the map. There's another village centre site south east of 
Tendrel. 

You may also want to look for those towers the miner mentioned: there are 
twelve of them - six pairs. Once you've got them all, park your heroes at the 
western four, since you'll want to let these towers stand as long as possible 
- they're great early warnings. Don't worry if you lose some - or even all - 
of them eventually, but try to keep at least a few safe until you're capable 
of building your own cannon towers. Keeping a serf nearby to conduct repairs 
might help, but the towers aren't essential.

By the way, there's also a forger in between the two middle bunches of towers, 
just desperate to tell you about the hill he's found. Pick up the chest on top 
of it to shut him up. Don't go too far north here - you're very close to 
enemies and you can't beat them by attacking them first.

At some point during all of this Pilgrim will start wondering where Kerberos 
is. This is your warning that an attack is imminent. Hopefully you've 
collected the twelve towers, so hang around the westernmost ones and wait for 
your enemies to appear (don't bother upgrading the towers). Your heroes can 
hold the enemy off with the help of the ballistas, but you should be heading 
towards building at least a barracks, in order to produce soldiers to help out 
(though you probably won't need any). 

When you do build the barracks, put it in a specific place - your northern 
clay pit has a bit of land just north of it, where the mountain curves between 
the two wooden walls at the four ballista towers. Put the barracks just north 
of the clay pit, and protect its northern walls with six to ten cannon towers 
as a priority - this will be enough to defend your base forever once those 
ballista towers are downed. Move your heroes down behind your new towers and 
keep them there, ignoring the free ballista towers and letting them get 
destroyed. Don't upgrade your barracks or spend any money on swordsmen or 
spearmen if your towers are up - your barracks is just a safety net.

Stone is vital for building and upgrading your own towers, so try to have a 
couple of stonemasons to go with your two quarries. You should have tons of 
resources coming in, and once your base is safe you can get a move on with 
building the weather tower and centre. Once they're done and you can change 
the weather, switch to winter and take Pilgrim and a few serfs south east to 
the now accessible island.

Get Pilgrim to pick up the chest, talk to the alchemist, and blow open the two 
iron shafts. Now get your serfs to build two mines and a village centre, then 
build a chapel and upgrade it to a cathedral. Build houses and farms to go 
with the new buildings. When the cathedral is up you've completed that side of 
the regent's objective (though you also lose the cathedral).

Now would be a good time to build Leonardo's mines, so send Pilgrim up there, 
along with a handful of serfs. Open all four shafts with Pilgrim's bombs, then 
get your serfs to build four sulphur mines. Don't bother building houses or 
farms - you lose the mines as soon as they're built. As far as I know, 
Leonardo sends his cannons to hit a nearby robbery tower, thereby slightly 
reducing the danger your base is in. This seems a bit crap...

Anyway, now to rescue the princess. Not hard: just build a bunch of light and 
heavy cavalry (build an enclosure behind your barracks, and build only cavalry 
from now on), then send everyone up to destroy the robbery tower and the two 
ballista towers, clearing out all enemy units you meet on the way. Once the 
tower falls the princess comes out - talk to her with a hero.

---
SAFELY RETURN THE PRINCESS TO HER FATHER IN TENDREL
---

Head over to the regent of Tendrel (the governor in front of the town centre) 
with whichever hero she talked to (pick up the chest behind the tower and the 
one in the nearby graveyard first). If you lose her she tends to follow the 
next nearest hero, so try checking the rest of your army for an idiot with an 
exclamation mark over her head.

Once you return her safely home you've completed both the regent's objectives 
(if you've built that cathedral), and he gives you a new objective.

---
ORGANISE GUNPOWDER!
---

Run over and talk to Leonardo again. You've already built his mines, so quite 
a lot happens here. Leonardo delivers the gunpowder to Tendrel, the governor 
gives you 200 thalers, the pass to the north opens up from Tendrel's north 
gate, Tendrel gives you a barracks and an archery, and they also start 
producing their own military. Now you have your final objective.

---
FIND THE LAST PIECE OF THE ORB!
---

At this point I like to build and upgrade another enclosure at the place where 
the easternmost ballista towers were, up on the hill west of Tendrel. Protect 
it with a few cannon towers, as it will come under attack. Your base will be 
fine while you're away, if it's protected by enough cannons.

If you're at all interested in exploring all that space up north and west, you 
should know that there's not a lot of point. There's a few chests dotted 
about, and there's a nice place in the west - just north of Leonardo's base - 
which contains lots more resources for free. But there are also tons of enemy 
units, robbery towers, cannon towers, siege cannons, etc... And even if you do 
battle all the way through and find and destroy the three reachable village 
centres and the stronghold, you are locked out of the main base, as it's 
surrounded by walls, closed gates and cannon towers. Not worth the effort - 
just do things the easy way.

Build up an overkill-sized army of horses, and send them and your heroes north 
from Tendrel's gates. You'll pass through a swamp, up the hill to the east, 
past the closed sulphur shaft, all the way around to the north west, past two 
more chests, and finally arrive at the outpost, guarded by a bunch of units 
and a few ballista towers.

There should be zero up here that can cause you trouble if you sent nothing 
but horses and heroes, so kill off the outpost to complete the level.

------------------------------------------------------------------------------
                                   TREASURE
------------------------------------------------------------------------------

1 / R1 - In the graveyard east of the princess
1 / R2 - Next to Mordred's easternmost village centre
1 / R3 - Due south of the outpost
2 / R1 - In the ruined church
2 / R2 - On the curving mountain road south east of Mordred's easternmost 
village centre
2 / R3 - On the north east mountain road leading to the outpost
2 / R2 - North of the easternmost ballista towers
3 / R3 - Beside Tendrel's treasury
9 / R3 - In a graveyard on the mountain, due east of the northern area of 
Leonardo's base (3)
5 / R1 - On the viewpoint hill, near the forger
4 / R3 - On the cathedral site island, next to the alchemist
8 / R3 - Next to the sulphur clumps revealed from the beginning
10 / R2 - Under the stronghold in the cannon tower enclosure
12 / R1 - Behind the robbery tower containing the princess
12 / R2 - Between two ruined houses

+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
                                3.14 WASTELANDS
===============================+++++++++++++++++==============================
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++=================++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

"There are quite a few outcast villages and communities in the Wastelands 
longing for revenge for Mordred's and Kerberos' nefarious deeds."

+++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++--++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ ++++-++++ +++

This is quite a peaceful level after the previous one, and you can take it at 
your own pace. There are no difficult objectives, and if you plan it properly 
this mission should give you no problems at all. An easy penultimate level.

==============================================================================

SAVE THE RESIDENTS!

LOOK FOR ALLIES!
---

Talk to the two serfs near your gates first - they tell you about some 
prisoners to the west. Forget this for now. Explore the area where you'll be 
building your base, and with Pilgrim's help you should end up with two clay 
pits and one of each of the other three. There is also a serf near the 
graveyard in the west, who can give you a new objective.

---
LIBERATE KILLARNEY!
---

He wants you to freeze the swamp, so go and talk to Brother John in the north 
of your territory, just west of the northern clay shaft. He wants 2000 thalers 
to change the season to winter. Forget this for now (switching to winter at 
this point is a big mistake) and just build up your base, while your heroes 
hang around inside your city walls. Your base will (as far as I know) never 
come under attack until you do something, so don't worry about that.

You only have one village centre around here, and it will be a while before 
you get another one. Start getting serfs, wood and clay in fast to develop 
with speed, then begin upgrading, etc. By the time you've upgraded to a city 
centre you should have lots of resources.

Once your population is near its current limit you have two options. One will 
get you another village centre site early, which you would otherwise have had 
to wait a long time for. The other lets you attack Kerberos's nearby base and 
free the prisoners before doing anything else, though it can be a tough 
battle. Having tried both options, I'm going to go with the one which gets you 
the second village centre.

You should be prepared for a couple of battles first. You'll also need lots of 
stone, so build at least two stonemasons' huts to go with your quarry. You 
could try a marketplace too for even more stone. Build a weather centre and 
tower too, and wait until the engineers are ready to change the weather before 
you progress.

Build three or four cannon towers as close to your northern clay pit as you 
can, and build another few down at your sulphur pit. The sulphur pit area will 
come under only one attack once winter appears, though it can cause trouble: 
the clay pit area will be attacked over and over by Kerberos, as long as the 
ice is there. It's up to you where you put your heroes, but just put them at 
either battle area to make sure your towers stay up.

Once you're ready tribute 2000 thalers to Brother John, at which point he will 
give you some resources, tell you of someone in the north west, and freeze the 
water to ice. Ring the town bell and keep watch over both the areas of battle. 
By the way, you have just liberated the first town, simply by freezing the 
water.

If you successfully deal with both of these attacks on your base, move your 
heroes and soldiers to the northern clay pit, and send some serfs north over 
the ice to explore around where the reds came from (go due north from your 
westernmost clay pit to find the little beach area). They should find an 
unoccupied village centre site on a small area of land, surrounded by two 
quarries and a closed clay shaft. Send Pilgrim over there to open it, and 
begin colonising this area. This gets you a lot more resources, as well as 
much more room in which to put soldiers into your army. This area should 
always be safe from attacks, so don't bother defending it.

Presumably you don't want to have to deal with numerous attacks on your 
northern towers, so change the weather back to summer as soon as your serfs 
arrive at the second village centre. Now you have a lot of space in your 
population, so fill out your army with whatever you like (I jus