Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - Sea Merchant King 1, I am in Macarita, Spain, can you give me a better automatic trade route, and why does he say that my trade route is blocked?

Sea Merchant King 1, I am in Macarita, Spain, can you give me a better automatic trade route, and why does he say that my trade route is blocked?

First. Let’s start with the issue of trade being hindered.

Possible problems: 1. Cargo is overloaded.

2. Insufficient sailors.

3. The ship was seriously damaged.

Second. A better trade route.

Give you two plans.

The first set is the simplest. It is also the route that best develops one's own country. First, continue to expand your fleet. A fleet requires 10 fleets, each fleet has 10 ships. And they also require that their supply of goods be guaranteed.

Divided into 6 routes.

1. Starting from Macalita and going to the right, it is responsible for Port of Spain, George Town, Santa Lucia, and other towns.

2. Starting from Macarita, going left, responsible for the towns of Caracas, Cartagena, Belize, and others.

3. Starting from Macalita, going up to the left, responsible for Port-au-Prince, Havana, and other towns.

4, starting from Macalita and going up to the left, is responsible for the coastal town of Velakuz Bay.

Each of the above four lines can be traded by two fleets at a certain interval.

5, 6. My personal favorites are "Southern Hemisphere Trade Number" and "Northern Hemisphere Trade Number". Haha, although it is in the Caribbean, the name of the ship can be more grand.

These two trade lines are mainly used to fill the trade gaps among the above four.

The second plan. It's very specific.

In St. Lucia, an archipelago near Martinique, fish are generally rare. Can be considered.

Big towns generally buy European goods (grapes, hardware, porcelain, clothes), and small towns generally buy food (cereals, fish, potatoes, etc.).

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