New added locations

I was talking about Averholm Manor collectable after '21 feb update. Do you also ?

There are 22 mix tapes to collect and I have 21 of them. The 22nd was in Averholm manor but it has been burnt down and boarded up, even the door/ entrance doesn’t exist, replaced by ivy on a frame.

Ok I see. I have got all mix tapes long before. I can’t remember if the Manor had an collectable. Maybe someone else knows. I have no notes on that. But it could explain the faulty collectable counter i get there. If there was an collectable, and it’s no longer available then this needs to be a bug report.

Check this first.

Tape: Carl Vråla

Carl Vråla is a very famous Swedish pop singer-songwriter. He’s sold millions of records and has fans* all over Sweden, which is a feat in a country with a population of less than 10 million.

I checked the forbidden map.
It had in fact one there.
So, I understand yes.
You should make a bug out of this.
That way at least someone might know where it is

Yeah, I will have to look into reporting the issue . I checked on youtube vids and it was there before, plain as day, the guys just stroll in and pick it up. ty anyway.

2 Likes

Not a new location, but the felled trees now have a sticker with “E.F.N 23980” on it, and I wondered if someone from Sweden knows what E.F.N stands for?

I would say its something to do with quality of the wood - a kind of grading tag. Number is the batch maybe?

Managed to find a link on how they grade lumber in general - maybe this is just a Swedish abbreviation…?

I am swedish and i dont know what EFN means, but i searched it and i found that EFN means: Ekonomikanalen EFN (Ekonomi- och Finansnyheterna)

So sorry i wasnt so helpful

But is that abbreviation some way connected to grading the wood?

I agree that it is most likely a grading for the wood quality or hardness. Swe111 mentions Ekonomi- och Finansnyheterna which google translates to “Economic and Financial News”. But if this has any connection to wood, I don’t know.

I don’t think it has anything to ekonomi- och finansnyheterna has anything to do with wood grading. I have some friends that has land owners here in Sweden, I’ll ask them and see if they can give some clarity in this.

1 Like

Those stapled small labels served as a trademark for the wood owners and told the sawmill who would get paid and what the logs would be sawn up to. Though I have never heard or remembered what the abbreviations meant or if it was part of the trademark?

1 Like

European Forest Network? A quick Google suggests it replaced the Nordic Forestry Union in 1990 so it may be a bit ‘out of time’ for that.

1 Like

I was ambling about today and at 307/-4467 on the northern tip of the map and found a huge square hole in the ground, very deep, with water at bottom. It’s on a flat piece of ground surrounded by trees and is a definite feature (not accidental). I’ve not seen it before. Is it new? What is it for?

Nobody knows. It not new, saw it long ago. And I posted it in my 2nd Route

Thanks. Bit bizarre really, perhaps it will find a use in future updates.

That’s Apex Engine for you. When devs remove/add something in the world, another part of the world either terraforms or POIs go outright missing.

So far, unintended anomalies (without any particular order) are:

  1. Disappearance of all POIs in Himfjäll (only for PS4). [fixed]
  2. Disappearance of big doors in FOA2. [fixed]
  3. Disappearance of many sections of walls in FOA2. [fixed]
  4. Several sinkholes in FOA2. [fixed]
  5. Disappearance of Boo bridge. [fixed]
  6. Sinkhole near Hagaboda.
  7. Disappearance of barn, NE from Östra Mark.

There could be more but those i can recall at the moment.

2 Likes

add: Strange fences around or through buildings.

If you end up in an area you’re not supposed to be in, it’s likely not an intended feature of the game. Communcating that violates the forum rules as it falls within exploit territory. It also spoils future content. Therefor, I’ve removed the post.

//Mod

@Gysbert Hey, I just saw what you posted back in march about the lumber tags.
The tags are there to mark which owner the lumber came from. When the logs arrive at the sawmill, they can see who the forest owner was and where to send the payment.
The number is probably a customer number at the sawmill, or some kind of registry number on a local farm. The letters could simply be the initials of the owner. :blush:

3 Likes