Translations:Welt/11/en

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Depending on the type of terrain, different numbers of peasants will find space in the region to earn their weekly wage in the fields. A plain, for example, provides work for significantly more peasants than a swamp. Furthermore, the number of available jobs is reduced by trees. Each peasant takes away one job, each sapling four jobs and each tree eight jobs. Although an almost infinite number of trees can grow in any type of terrain, in a very forested region there will be virtually no jobs. In a glacier, very few trees are enough to take away almost all the jobs, in a plain there can be a few hundred trees and still a few thousand peasants working in the fields. But even a very densely forested region still yields enough fruit, roots or mushrooms for a few peasants to make a living. This means that a small number of peasants always find a job in the region: 10% of the maximum number of jobs in a region, but no more than 200, are therefore never blocked by trees or saplings. For example, if there are 150 trees in a mountain, 100 peasants will still find a job (10% of the maximum number of jobs), even though there are actually no more jobs available due to the large number of trees (150 trees x 8 occupied jobs = 1200 occupied jobs > 1000 maximum available jobs).