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Guilds/Black Sheep

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Carpenter.gif WELCOME TO == Black Sheep Guild == Carpenter.gif == wuzz est in t4 We are a newbie-friendly guild and are always looking for new members. Our guild prides itself on helping others. We all help each other on tests and actively donate to research. If you are interested in joining, please stop by the guild hall and introduce yourself. at 1124, -3916 You can also chat our guild leader,sana for more details We are a family . hear ==


Guild Hall 1124, -3916

Members

sana,/ Spooner,/ Hanid,/ Tao,/ Rania ,/ Blessed ,/ Nitocris ,/ BillyTesch,/ Shazza ,/ Katma ,/ SueVN,/ Sharae,/ Nobody ,/

TonyG ,/


Links

Black Sheep cooking

Black Sheep Mushrooms

Black Sheep fishing spot

Black Sheep Wood Treatment Recipes

Black Sheep Chemical Bath Recipes

Black Sheep quarry

Black Sheep MINES

Black Sheep Raeli Ovens

MINE COORD

ZOOM MAP OUT TO SEE FULL MAP


The Black Sheep have access to the following mines:


==Guild Hall 1124, -3916

Titanium/ruby 1488, -5406 Tungsten 1077, -3966 Magnesium/quartz 1101,-3947 Sand/diamond 1285,-4710 Lead 2843,-5811 Tin 1322,-4719 Iron 1339,-4713 Strontium 2191, 3460 and Strontium 2166, 3488 Copper 661, -3301 Silver/Topaz 1052, -4513

==


()


[edit] Extraction Methods

[edit] Aluminum The best way I can describe it is that you want the most emissive crystal, the most... luminescent. I've gotten very good return on working the crystal with the highest brightness. ~McArine I've gotten very good returns using the crystal with the highest max(r,g,b) value. -Eldrad I've gotten almost excellent results using the crystal with the max V value on HSV colorspace or just max(R,G,B) ;). -Talos You can play the memory game for up to 6 time steps ago for 7 ore/pull (ore extraction level doesn't matter).

[edit] Antimony There are two crystals of the 7 that share have similar color, but different brightness/intensity. Click the slightly more saturated of the matched pair. It can be difficult at times to spot the correct pair. Successive correct clicks will build a chain to 7.

I can find 3 crystals of the same hue, a pair, and 2 odd ones. Anyone else find them? I've had most luck with pairing the two with the same hue(closest to each other hue) and choosing the most saturated. ~McArine

I've had the best luck doing as McArine, selecting the most saturated crystal from the pair that is closest in hue. I have NO luck trying to select the proper one by my own judgment. I use the Pixie color tool. - Tamb

[edit] Copper Copper ore is extracted by clicking on the crystal with the highest color saturation (i.e. the "least gray" or "most vivid"). Success yields 3 ore/pull. Each level of ore extraction allows you to play the memory game with one more time step for +1 ore/pull.

[edit] Gold At every round there is a yellowish crystal. At odd round pick the yellowish one. At even round, check which one is yellow and pick his "linked" one. This gold mine has the linked crystals on the mine menu, counting from left to right and top to bottom. Upper left is #1, Lower right is #7.


[edit] Iron To extract iron ore, click on the mismatched color crystal. Success yields 3 at Ore Extraction levels 1 and 2. Success yields 3 ore/pull. Each level of ore extraction allows you to play the memory game with one more time step for +1 ore/pull.

[edit] Lead Six crystals will be one color, and the last crystal is a different color (the "odd one out"). The correct crystal is the crystal that was the odd one out the least number of times in the last 14 pulls, including the current one. In the case of a tie, pick the lowest-numbered crystal out of those that tie (number the crystals 1-3 left-to-right across the top and 4-7 left-to-right across the bottom).

(Previously, this said to pick the highest-numbered crystal in the case of a tie, but my experience is that it is the lowest-numbered crystal that is correct. --Inkoaten 05:00, 3 April 2009 (EST)) Perhaps it varies with the mine. Highest seems to work for me. --Numaris 12:54, 8 April 2009 (EST) It alternates I believe. --delilah

For example, if the previous 14 "odd" crystals out were 3-6-7-2-1-3-7-1-6-5-2-4-2-1, then the correct crystal is 4. 4 and 5 both occur only once each - a tie - and 4 is the lower-numbered crystal of the two tied crystals.

The first successful pull will yield 1 ore. For each consecutive pull with the right crystal, the yield increases by 1, up to a maximum of 7 per pull. Choosing the wrong crystal yields no ore and resets the yield count back to 1. There is no additional memory game (beyond what you need to know to pick the odd crystal out)

[edit] Lithium Lithium mines have the same visual appearance as Iron and Lead mines; that is, 6 crystals of one color, and one odd crystal. The proper crystal to pick (referred to hereafter as the "active crystal") is the one that has been the odd crystal the most times over the last 7 pulls, plus the current pull (an 8 pull history in total).

In case of a tie, the previous pull's active crystal will remain active if it is still at least tied for the lead. In other words, the active crystal doesn't change until another crystal's count surpasses it, or until its count drops below another. In case of a tie where the previous active crystal is no longer eligible, the new active crystal will be the one among the count leaders whose oldest entry in the 8-pull history is most recent. (I need to verify that again... I thought that's what it was, but it doesn't sound right. --Numaris)

Yield starts at 1 ore for the first correct pull, and increases by 1 per subsequent correct pull up to a maximum of 7 per pull. An incorrect pull resets the count.

[edit] Magnesium Click the blue crystal, or one with greatest blue component.

You can play the memory game for up to 6 time steps ago for 7 ore/pull (ore extraction level doesn't matter).

[edit] Platinum Like Gold, each crystal has a corresponding crystal. This can even be it self. When a crystal is the odd crystal, work it's corresponding crystal. This can be done with the memory game, to gain 7 pr pull. The corresponding crystals are different from mine to mine. ~McArine

My experience is that the colors can at times be very close, so it's hard to distinguish the odd one. I don't know if there, like gold, is a specific color where the rules are different. This might be the reason why I couldn't keep a steady run of 7. ~McArine

the 'link' seems to vary from person to person - Elfus

I found the above information to somewhat confusing. Every pull on a platinum mine is on the odd colored crystals linked pair. Once you know the linked pairs for your particular mine, determine which crystal is the odd colored one then work its linked pair. To determine the linked pairs see Linked Pair Identification Guide. - Akmenotep

[edit] Silver Similar to copper: rate the crystals in order of saturation and pick the second from most saturated crystal. Using the memory-game to increase yield works in the same way as tin to provide up to a 7-silver yield (depending on length of sequence being repeated). The result of mining is "silver", and not "silver ore", i.e. it's ready to use and does not need smelting.

[edit] Strontium Each mine has a different circuit, click on crystals in that order. one crystal can be present in the circuit multiple times. I have seen circuit with 7 to 10 crystals. Yield come from 1 to 7, then stays at 7. Color doesn't seem to matter in any fashion.

[edit] Tin The correct crystal is usually most colors of green, red and yellow and grey even the washed colors (careful though they shades look similar). Also described as "Most brownish". Also described as lowest blue in the RGB palette or Highest green in the RGB palette. All of these interpretations give the right result. The exact answer isn't quite known. Using colour cop program lowest blue on rgb scale is working reliably. Most obvious colours are brown orange red but very dark blue is sometimes the answer which can throw off the pattern unless checking with something other than sight alone.

You can play the memory game for up to 6 time steps ago for 7 ore/pull (ore extraction level doesn't matter).

[edit] Titanium Mine the crystal that has remained the same the longest. You will receive ore in proportion to how many times you are correct, up to 7 ore after 7 correct pulls in a row. As long as you maintain correct pulls you will continue to receive 7 ore. OE level appears to have no impact.

[edit] Tungsten Click on the odd one out, there are 3 pairs and a crystal that doesn't have an equal pair. The crystals are paired by hue, so if you're using a screen pixel reader as an aid, look for the hue without a similar crystal among the rest.

You can play the memory game for up to 6 time steps ago for 7 ore/pull (ore extraction level doesn't matter).

[edit] Zinc Active crystal is the one with the most different saturation. If you have 6 crystals with high saturation and 1 with low it's the crystal with low saturation. If you have 6 with low saturation it's the one with high saturation.

You can play the memory game for up to 6 time steps ago for 7 ore/pull (ore extraction level doesn't matter).

[edit] Increasing your yield: the mining memory game If you continually click on the correct crystal, you'll always get the base amount. If however you remember what's gone before and start clicking on the crystal that came up *previously*, then you'll get extra ore yield for as long as you can keep up the correct sequence. For example, if you perform a run consistently working the from a history of 3 crystal ago, then each pull will give you 4 extra ore. As soon as you hit an error in your sequence (because you guessed the wrong crystal) then the run stops and you need to restart your memory. It's easiest with iron where the correct crystal is most obvious, but the technique has been tested (Nicodemus) with copper, iron and tin.

As an example: label each crystal with a number. If it's the first crystal that's correct then write down "1" in your sequence. If it's the second crystal, write down "2", etc. When you've got the desired history length (e.g. 3 numbers written down), then keep writing down the correct crystal, but don't click on it. Instead, click on the crystal 3 back in your history. So, if a mine is giving a sequence of 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, then select the first 3 crystals as normal (and you'll get 1 ore each time if this is tin) by clicking 1, then clicking 2, then clicking 3. On the next pull you start using your history instead of the current correct crystal and select 1 and then 2. Both of those pulls will say "no ore" because you haven't yet hit the correct sequence, but from then on (when you select 3, 4, 5, 6, etc) you'll get 4 ore every time so long as you keep the sequence correct (i.e. as long as you click on the correct crystal 3 pulls ago). The bonus pull seems to vary. With tin (i.e. a base pull of 1 ore), then you get a bonus ore per run-length of your sequence. That means that a sequence of 2 will give 3 ore. A sequence of 3 will give 4 ore, etc. For copper and iron I've only ever got a bonus of 1 no matter the length of the sequence. Whereas for tin and silver you can get up to a pull of 7. The 7 sequence appears to be the limit.

Note that if you're just mining normally and a sequence comes up "naturally" (e.g. the same crystal is correct 3 pulls in a row), then on the third pull you'll get the sequence bonus.

[edit] Saturation, Colour Some mines require you to determine which crystal has the most saturation, or the second-most saturation (e.g. silver). Some ask you to pick "the most blue". Sometimes it's not easy to tell which one this is (especially if you have colour blindness!). The most important thing to do is to turn off the "time-of-day" lighting, since it really makes things harder to differentiate. If you've done that and you still can't tell, then try using some magnifying software that shows you colours. For example, on the Mac(confirmed : works on windows; also runs under Wine on Linux, although possibly not all features work), you can run "Pixie" (a developer toolkit application) that magnifies a portion of the screen and provides information about where the cursor is pointing. If you enable the Pixie preferences "Float window" and "Show colour values", then you can easily wave the mouse over the crystals to quickly see which crystal is correct. Note that "most blue" would be the highest "B" value in the R/G/B section, whereas "most saturated" would be the highest "S" value in the H/S/B section of the information.

Retrieved from "http://www.atitd.org/wiki/tale4/Mine"

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(GH)1124, -3916 Guild Hall @ 1124, -3916 (M) 1488, -5406 Titanium/ruby 1488, -5406 (m)1101,-3947 Magnesium 1101,-3947 (M)1285,-4710 Sand/diamond 1285,-4710 (M)2843,-5811 Lead 2843,-5811 (M)1322,-4719 Tin 1322,-4719 (M)1339,-4713 Iron 1339,-4713 (M)2191, 3460 Strontium 2191, 3460 and (M)2166, 3488 Strontium 2166, 3488 (G)Copper 661, -3301 (M) gold 1095, -3444 gold 1095, -3444 (mine) silver/topaz @ 1052, -4513 (sheep) 1062, -3892 @ 1062, -3892 (camel) 1062, -3890 @ 1062, -3890 (r)176, -7000, WhiteSand coords (QR) (r)2643, -7192, Tar pit (QR) (r)2971, -5437, Sulp/WhiteSand (QR) (r)776, -2966, Red Sand (QR) (r)-2537, -7277, Tar pit (QR) (Silver)1052, -4513 (mine)Silver/Topaz 1052, -4513 (mine)1485, -5404 titanium 1485, -5404 (warehouse) 1013, -3661, lime/1013, -3661(Meroe)