

Oh, fair enough, yes, that’d be no fun at all.


Oh, fair enough, yes, that’d be no fun at all.


Maybe we’re talking across each other, I haven’t played Project Zomboid, so I can’t comment on that, but I was replying to the rest of your comment.
It could be down to different play styles; I can certainly see it being very frustrating if you’re all doing different things and someone is hogging the resources, but if you’re working together on a shared plan there’s no waiting around. Maybe some people are collecting resources, some are processing them and some are building for instance. You’re not waiting for your turn to build, because you, colkectively, have a plan and everyone is working together to achieve it.


I’ve found it’s helpful to actually talk to your friends, discuss what you want to do, and agree at least a rough plan if who does what. If you are actually friends, or even just a bunch of reasonable aquaintances, you’re going to be able to come up with something that is satisfactory everyone, then, when that’s done, come up with a new plan, thus time prioritising those who got less of what they want lst time.
Only because it’s frozen solid!
That would be similar to the “web of trust” approach where users vouch for each other, and you can determine how much you trust someone, or at least their account, based on how many others vouch for them, and much you trust those users.
I know it’s an old photo, and they probably had to stay very still, but she look so totally done with his nonsense.
That’s going to make for a fascinating episode of an “mysterious unsolved crimes” programme one day soon.
I can’t help but feel that the general lack of mammouths may also put a bit of a crimp on that plan. Sorry to burst your bubble. Maybe you could diversify a little? Maybe start with squirrels and work your way up?