Every player has a wagon by which they can store various types of items including all resources, artillery, materials, exotics, and unit kit.
Mechanics[ | ]
Outside of battle, players can access their wagon via the Wagon tab in the inventory menu (default key I). Players can transfer items between their wagon and their Supply Dump (provided they are at their camp) by dragging between them in the requisite menu. Players can choose the quantity of a stack of items to transfer by holding down the shift key as they drag items. Wagon items obtained via crafting will be automatically deposited to the player's wagon provided there is sufficient space and the player is present in the fief when the crafting job is completed; otherwise the crafted items will be sent to a resource pile instead.
All items are either storable in a player's inventory or their wagon; any item that is stored in a player's inventory cannot be stored in their wagon, and vice versa.
Volume[ | ]
Any item stored in the wagon will always have a corresponding volume. A wagon can hold any set of items whose total volume does not exceed 150,000.
Speed[ | ]
Each artillery piece as well as the total load in a wagon imposes a speed limit at which a player can march over the open world. The speed at which a warband marches is the minimum of the speed limits of all units included in the warband, the speed limits all item types in the player's wagon, and the speed limit imposed by the wagon's load (essentially, the warband marches as fast as its slowest unit or wagon).
Artillery Limit[ | ]
Each artillery piece imposes a limit on the speed a warband can march. For example, a Great Bombard imposes a limit of 2.20. The amount of any artillery piece in the wagon does not influence this particular limit; the speed limit is imposed if and only if at least one of the artillery type is in the wagon.
Load Limit[ | ]
The wagon's load also imposes a speed limit on marching speed. There are multiple breakpoints of which if the total volume of the items in the wagon exceeds the breakpoint, a corresponding speed limit is imposed. These breakpoints are as follows:
Load Breakpoint | Speed Limit | Displayed Speed |
---|---|---|
0 | 6.50 | Fast |
7,500 | 6.00 | Moderate |
52,500 | 4.50 | Slow |
112,500 | 3.00 | Very Slow |
The load must exceed a breakpoint for its speed limit to be applied. For example, if a wagon is at a load of 112,500, the speed limit imposed will be 4.50, but at 112,501 the speed limit will be 3.00 instead.