I know there are tough times in the world, that's not helping, but I just reached my 7 year anniversary in 2021 leading the guild, and the last 2 years was harder than the previous 5. I hit my limit late August 2020 with the PvP Arena fiasco and message center changes dropped on us without warning, then the first couple of days of a new Battleground dealing with attitudes and siege camp greed, as always. It takes about 30 seconds to create a forum account and link it to your game account you just need your password. Contact support is for game bugs and rules violations the only avenue to influence game features (or lack thereof) and direction of the game is really the feedback threads on the Innogames Forums bulletin boards. Also there's an info box (dove icon tool) you can filter to BG fights that will show you like a log what's happening while you sit on the map, that X guild is hitting Y sector at 20/130 instead of trying to spot movement on the map, you see hits similar to the GvG log.Ĭomplaining amongst ourselves doesn't do anything - no one's listening to our guild conversations but us. And no more yelling stop and not knowing who is plowing ahead. I was able to find who is fighting on the wrong sector between 2 or 3 people. Once you have it installed, open the BG guild and member activity screen, it basically takes a snapshot of the member activity list, and then the next time you open it highlights indicators on whose fight totals moved. You can also just google search forge of empires helper chrome extension. It's like the missing half of the game (the details and analytics) that Inno didn't make. ***The game has to be running under HTML5 in either browser to work.Īll guild leaders or BG leaders should have it or you're flying blind in BG and it has other useful tools also, 1.9x calculator, city overview and production summary, negotiation tool. To install in opera you first need the extension called "install chrome extensions" and then install the Foe helper from the chrome store. It works in chrome or opera Gx, I have it running successfully in both browsers on windows 10 and chrome OS. You should install the FoE helper extension. If you need help calculating the 1.9 amounts, try the website GB calculator: foe.tools/gb-investment/ This allows you to search by server (en) world (en3) Guild name (Arrowheads) and pick a Great Building you need blueprints for to search who is near leveling. If you want to find specific buildings within the guild (we have at least one of everything somewhere in the guild!) there is a website with a GB finder you can use: This site is currently down! Data hasn't been updated since. This used to work to import your current game city, still useful to try out layouts but can't import: Ĭity Planner tool from FOE Helper is quite neat : Original wildgunner s ite: This site is currently down! It concludes that, while certain features were similar to the work of today's major global consultancies, there were also important differences.There is a player maintained wiki with detailed building, units, and events info: įorge of Empires has a wiki made by Innogames with help and explanations of game concepts: The paper also considers the wider (and varied) significance of these global planners on the international spread of planning knowledge and the extent to which they themselves were changed by their encounters with other countries. Other more specific aspects of the milieux, within which planning developed were also conducive to international practice, such as the popularity of international exhibitions, conferences and competitions. Also important were the more specific quantitative international imbalances in planning expertise and the common tendencies to see specific cities as models which, in being emulated, often required planners from the appropriate country to be commissioned. These include broader contextual factors such as international communications, linguistic considerations, border formalities and the importance of imperialism. It also examines the roots of this practice. It explores the early history of international planning practice from 1890-1939, drawing on the careers of individual practitioners from several countries. The paper considers whether their activities can be seen as a pioneer 'global intelligence corps' of the type which some researchers have identified in the contemporary world. A high proportion of early planners practised in countries other than their own. The development of modern planning practice from the late nineteenth century was, from the outset, an international activity.
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