With it you can unleash special powers, like temporarily adding another worker or making your little guys move a lot faster. Fortunately there's a nifty little gadget called a bonus meter which fills up over time. Adding to the difficulty are lurking creatures such as wolves, ghosts, and hornets that require specialists to deal with, requiring more buildings and thus more materials on hand. The trick is to manage your wood, food, and gold in such a way as to complete all given tasks within a certain amount of time. Workers will encounter obstacles that require more resources to deal with, such as steep ravines that need bridges, or heavy boulders that require smashing. The level ends when all goals are met and the little workers are back safe in the hut. Eventually buildings can be upgraded to produce more resources or, in the case of the work hut, house more workers with which to accomplish the various tasks. Farms, Sawmills, mines, and other buildings that can help generate more resources can be built, but you need to have enough wood to do that as well. Picking up a resource costs nothing, but some things must be gotten from hard labor, such as chopping wood, which costs food stocks. Said worker must gather supplies of wood, food, or gold and use those supplies to accomplish their task, whether it be to build adequate roads, dig mines, find valuable artifacts, what have you. You begin with a hut that contains a single worker (and why do these princes never do the work themselves, seriously?). My Kingdom for the Princess is a simple resource management type of game. My Kingdom for the Princess III follows Andrew's story as he works first to build up his inadequate lands, then as he attempts to escape the treachery of his older brothers, and eventually as he must rescue his own father the king and take down the ungrateful princes before they completely wreck the kingdom. First, Andrew must compete against his older brothers for the hand of said princess, using only some fetid swampland as a base of operations. The youngest of Arthur and Helen's three children, Prince Andrew is secretly in love with the Princess Elizabeth, whose father has decided that she will marry one of King Arthur's sons, albeit the most worthy. This is the story of what happens after "they lived happily ever after", although the gist of the tale may just be never have kids. Prince (now King) Arthur and his lovely Queen Helen are back for more time management shenanigans in Nevosoft's My Kingdom for the Princess III, which explores what happens when the kids try their hands at running the kingdom. Have you ever wondered what happens after a fairy tale ending? If you are the hero of the first two My Kingdom for the Princess games, then happily ever after means watching your children degenerate into a three-way battle for the hand of a royal princess.
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