How to survive the early game

How to survive the early game

1. The Basics


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Before I get into the nitty gritty, I wanted to give a very simple rundown of the game and its mechanics.

Hundred Days is, in essence, a card game. Your cards represent tasks you can do, the board represents the amount of time you have to do those tasks. A bigger board means more time, which means you can fit on more tasks. Actions such as weeding, crushing or bottling are relatively small. Something like harvesting is a much more involved task and will take up the majority of your board in the early game.

So, just make sure you are managing space well and fitting in as many tasks at once as possible. As you get more vineyards, more equipment and more things to manage this will become more difficult, but it is fairly easy to manage early game as long as you pay attention. Let's get into some more detail on the game and what you need to look out for.

The cards

Here, you can see an example of a card you'll see in game. We only care about 4 things on this card. The shape (what shape it takes up on the grid), the days (how many turns for the task to complete), the conditions (what kind of weather conditions are required for the task to be completed), and the price (how much it costs to complete the task). Some tasks, such as bottling, do not require any specific conditions. Some do not have a price. Most tasks will have different shapes, though plenty of them are shared. Just pay attention to those 4 markers and you'll be fine.

The buildings

You have 3 buildings to manage as part of your winery. Each one can be upgraded several times, costing more money per turn as you upgrade. You have the tool shed (top left), winery (top right) and warehouse (bottom right). For the purpose of this guide we won't be buying anything in the warehouse or tool shed, but I'll briefly mention what each building does.

Tool shed

This building houses most of the tractors and other pieces of machinery you'll be using later in the game. It's also where you'll find employees and other grapes, 2 key mechanics for later on into the game.

Warehouse

This is where your wine gets stored, along with housing operations such as your marketing department and tasting room. Once you start producing chardonnay wine, you'll want to increase your storage space and even potentially buy the shop upgrade, but I don't wanna get too deep on the timing for that here.

Winery

This is where the wine-making process occurs. Crushing grapes, pressing them, fermentation, aging and bottling all happen here. This guide makes use of several upgrades to the winery, but I will talk about those in the relevant sections below.

With all that out of the way, let's actually get into the guide for the early game and walk through the steps you need to get your winery to grow!

2. The Actual Guide


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Step 1: Buy the first board upgrade and Aging in technology. Then, in your winery, buy the Small Cask.

These 2 techs are the most important for early game success. Aging lets you use barrels to age your wine, increasing body without increasing tannins. At minimum, it allows you to produce 80/100 barbera wines, as long as you're not using low quality grapes.

Don't forget to actually buy the casks, otherwise you won't be able to age your wine.

UPDATE: As of patch 1.07, the small cask has been swapped for the traditional cask. You can still run the same strategy, since the price of both the technology and barrel itself are unchanged.

OPTIONAL STEP: Buy additional storage

This is not necessary at the start, but you can buy more storage if you want to right now. I would recommend the pallet rack over all else, as it is the most dense storage you can get while being more efficient in terms of price. In this example, I will not be buying the extra storage space.

Step 2: Play your cards as they come up

Not much is going to be happening until you reach your 1st harvest at the start of Autumn. Once you do reach the start of Autumn, however, you will get your first harvest card, which you want to play ASAP.

OPTIONAL STEP: As you're crushing your grapes, treat your plants for downy and powdery mildew

Again, you won't have much to do at this stage, and treating your grapes for these diseases is both completely free and relatively quick. Pay attention to the little shield icon at the top of the screen so you know when to renew the protection.

Step 3: When you get your first pruning card, set the number of buds to Very Low

This just makes your wine better, which is far more important than shoving out more bottles, especially with barbera. You can certainly keep more buds on the plant, but this has consistently gotten the best results for me.

Step 4: During your fermentation, set the duration to the shortest time possible and pump-over once per day

This is completely anecdotal, but I have found doing no punch-down increases the chances of faults showing up in the wine, usually reduction or mercaptan. It may increase tannins later down the line, but I think it's worth it to avoid negative flavors.

Step 5: Press the wine to where you get the most body possible while also adding the fewest tannins

Basically, you want to get a good amount of body without adding too much tannin. I've found that going to 35% gives me the most body while also only adding a single point in tannin.

Step 6: Age it for the maximum allowed time

Barbera is optimal when it has 8 body. That is basically impossible to do without having large casks, but this gets you pretty close.

One thing to keep in mind, is that you should clean your equipment as soon you are able to do so. Clean equipment means lower chances of faults and breakdowns, which can both put a damper on wine production. So, clean as you go and you'll be in good shape.

Step 7: When bottling, choose a green bottle

You really want to start off on the right foot with your first wine, and this is something that can save you from other faults. Oxidation is the big one you'll be avoiding by using a green bottle, and it is not that much more expensive compared to dark or even clear glass. Bite the bullet and use green glass.

Congratulations! You have successfully made your first wine, and it should be a pretty good one, too! You likely won't get 100 on your first go-around unless you get very lucky with flavors, but anything above an 80 is a great base to work off of. Now, sell that wine, reap the profits and keep up the cycle!

3. How To Continue

So, this section is meant to be a catch-all area for helpful tips I didn't mention up above.

-The shop is a massive trap, stay away from it until you have multiple vineyards.

Might seem a little extreme, but I'm serious. The shop is a technology you can find in the warehouse section, which you then need to build in your warehouse. On the surface, it seems like it would be useful, since it says it attracts new customers. But that might as well be a lie, because as far as I can tell, all it does is handle orders automatically. This might seem helpful, until you realize it costs 500 euros a turn. Your ENTIRE winery before any upgrades costs 150 a turn to manage. So, once you have a second vineyard up and running, usually you want to be producing chardonnay there, then the shop might be worth it to deal with the massive amount of bottles you get from a chardonnay harvest. Otherwise, stay away. Same goes for the commercial office, though that does have some value. It,s still very expensive, however, so its best to wait until you have more wine being produced.

-Upgrade slowly, and focus on getting the first few board upgrades before looking to expand your vineyards.

Board upgrades are one of the most powerful things you can buy in the game, since it just allows you to do more stuff, which is super valuable. I'd recommend getting the first 3, at least, before looking to expand your winery into other grapes.

-Always make sure you have enough money for bottling.

The worst situation you could get yourself into is dumping cash into a bunch of upgrades then not having enough money in the bank to cover the costs of bottling your most recent batch. Don't get too trigger happy, make sure you have a couple thousand still in the bank before bottling day.

-Make sure you have enough tanks for your grapes.

Selling grapes off in bulk is super inefficient. You get a tiny bulk payment and that's it. So to never have an issue, make sure you have enough tanks for all your vineyards, so you always have storage for every harvest of grapes.

As I answer questions in the guide, I'll add more stuff down here, but those are some of the big ones that I think are important. One thing to remember, every save is different. You will have to deal with situations I haven't talked about here. Just keep calm, and take it slow. Wine takes a long time to make in real life, and it's the same here.

If you have any questions, shoot them to me in the comments, or join the Hundred Days discord and ask any questions you may need!

Discord: https://discord.gg/XUwd8Du6cu

Source: https://steamcommunity.com/sharedfiles/filedetails/?id=2501916244					

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