Patch 1.2 (Dutch Version) available For all owners of the dutch version of Patrician 2 there is an new patch, v 1.2 ready for download. The patch fixes the crash in the town hall when accepting an transport order and fixes some minor translation bugs.
I bought Patrician 3 from GOG. It was pretty fun but it's 1024x768 or 1280x1024 resolutions looked dumb on my very wide screen MacBook Pro at 1440x900. I subsequently read about several people who had patched foreign or older versions of the game. However, none of the easy methods for patching the game (hex editor instructions, patch utilities) worked on GOG's 2.0.0.5 version, so I made this Java program to make patching GOG's latest version easy for everyone--hopefully.
How To Use This
NOTE: I take no responsibility if this breaks your game, deletes your save games, or turns your computer into a murderous AI bent on world domination!
This will patch the Patrician 3 game to use a resolution that you select instead of the default 1280x1024. The game will still say 1280x1024 in its settings but it will actually be running at your selected resolution instead.
- Back up your game, including all save games!
- Download and install Patrician 3 from GOG.
- Install a Java 8 JRE or JDK, if you don't have one installed already. It must be Java version 8 or later!
- Download the latest
P3WideScreen.jar
file. - Run the
P3WideScreen.jar
file (hopefully you can just double click it, or elsejava -jar P3WideScreen.jar
):- Select the directory where you have installed Patrician 3.
- Enter in the resolution you'd like to use instead of 1280x1024.
- Hit the patch button.
- Run Patrician 3 and select the 1280x1024 resolution.
While the menus may be at a different resolution, once you're actually playing the game, you should be at your selected resolution instead of 1280x1024.
If Things Go Wrong
To go back to regular 1280x1024:
- Look at the log output. This tool will tell you when it backs up a file and what name it is using for the backup. Restore the backup P3WideScreen made of the
Patrician3.exe
file. (Quite likelyPatrician3.exe.bak
, unless that file already existed.) If you've lost the log output, try sorting by date and looking for the most recentPatrician3.exe*.bak
file created in your Patrician 3 directory. - Delete the following files from your Patrician 3 directory:
images/HauptscreenE1280.bmp
images/Vollansichtskarte1280.bmp
scripts/accelMap.ini
scripts/screenGame.ini
scripts/textures.ini
Credits
All credit for this goes to the people who figured out how to patch this game in the first place. That seems primarily to be brotkohl at some German Patrician forum. Thanks to billyplod at the Kalypso Media forums for translating that. Thanks to whatnames at the Widescreen Gaming Forum for trying to pull together all the various sources of information about how to patch this game, and for detailing how he applied them to the GOG release of Patrician 3.
I used the CPR format page on the XeNTaX wiki to figure out how to get the needed BMP and INI out of Patrician's CPR file. (Though the format page there is incomplete, as it doesn't mention that the CPR file can contain many headers. Check out my
CPRFile
class.)About the Code
I'm sorry if this code sucks ass. I haven't used Java in anger for 8-10 years. I decided to write this program in Java because patching Patrician 3 is a pretty simple task, and because I wanted this program to be cross-platform, especially since I'm developing on a Mac. I decided to use Java 8 because I wanted to get a taste of the new features added to Java since I last used it. This is probably my first Java GUI program.
I developed this program with IntelliJ IDEA 13.1 Community Edition.
License
Copyright (C) 2014 Dale Sedivec
P3WideScreen is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modifyit under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published bythe Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or(at your option) any later version.
P3WideScreen is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty ofMERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See theGNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public Licensealong with P3WideScreen. If not, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/.
Return to the dawn of the Age of Sail, a time when nearly unlimited wealth and power could be claimed by those brave enough to travel the high seas and profit from the exchange of goods. While remaining true to the proven real-time empire-building approach of the first two games in the series, Patrician III offers a number of enhanced and new features. A new map editor allows users to choose and customize between 16 and 25 towns, from a selection of 40. Seasonal weather produces new graphical effects, and can affect the flow of trade. New land routes and expanded trading options also enrich this edition. Up to eight networked players can compete for domination of the 14th century game world.
For those of us who haven't played its predecessor, Patrician III is a game where you take on the role of one of the late middle age's trade Patricians. Your goal is to build a strong trade empire and dominate the Hanseatic League (or the Hansa) which is a trade union consisting of the many free Baltic cities. Your final goal is to be elected the leader (Alderman) of the league, handle its foreign relations and directing its defense against marauding pirate fleets or jealous renaissance princes. Reaching this position involves gradually maneuvering from the position of a simple trader to a rich patrician. Procuring a large merchant fleet, setting up trade routes and acquiring more and more responsibility along the way. Of course, the acquiring of wealth can be achieved in more than one way, if you wish it's possible to prey on other people's wealth and build up a mighty pirate fleet rather than a trade empire. This path is not very likely to earn you the respect of the Hanseatic cities however.
Firstly, in Patrician III there are two game types. You can play a campaign, like for instance 'The rise of the Hanseatic league', or you can play a standard game where you define the parameters yourself. Adjustable parameters include your name, your gender, the difficulty level (this can also be customized in detail), your home town (one of twelve major Hanseatic towns around the Baltic), objective conditions (reaching a certain title, amount of wealth or population number), which map to play on (only the Baltic is included but there is support for fan made maps) and last of all the game speed (but this can be adjusted as much as you want during the game). Depending a little on your choices you'll then start with a trading office in a Baltic city, a ship and some money to get you started.
![Patrician 3 Patch 1.2 Patrician 3 Patch 1.2](http://img.brothersoft.com/screenshots/softimage/p/patrician_iv_english_patch-405935-1284861902.jpeg)
Patrician III is a trade simulation game, you turn a profit by supplying cities that demand certain commodities. A wide range of commodities are available and the demand for them in each city is determined by that city's population amount. Population is divided into three groups: poor, well off and rich people. Depending on the amount of the respective groups different goods come to be in demand. For instance rich people is going to demand luxury products like wine while poor people will demand goods like beer or grain. Of course as you buy a product the city's supply will decrease, and thus the price at which you buy the goods will increase. Therefore it might be wise not to buy the entire stock of a certain good in a city even if you can afford it. Seasonal changes and special circumstances like the plague, a siege or a famine also affect the demand in certain cities greatly. At the various houses in port you are given a lot of different choices in Patrician. You'll likely end up using or at least trying most of them (joining the traders guild can be very profitable for instance as it allows you to know where convoys are headed and what parts of the Mediterranean that has been discovered).
Once you start to gain more money you will be able to build more ships, which you can then equip as you like and hire a crew for. The game also allows you to recruit captains at the various taverns around the Baltic. This is very useful as you can order these captains to steer your ships along trade routes you define (this is done well, you define a trade route and give the captain orders about what to buy or sell and at what maximum or minimum price), thus saving you the hassle of controlling your entire merchant fleet at all times. Captains also gain experience and affect a number of things like for instance how the ship fares in sea battles or the prices at which you buy goods with that ship. If you get rich enough, you're even able to create expeditions to go search for new markets in the Mediterranean Sea.
Should your ships be attacked by pirates, or if you chose to attack your competitors ships you will be taken to the sea battle screen. Here you are given control of your ships allowing you to defend yourself against or attack enemy ships. Sea battles typically take about 10 minutes to resolve and while not the main point of the game they work very well. Things like wind gauge and the amount of goods loaded unto your ships effect the speed at which they maneuver. The outcome depends a lot on how well equipped and manned your ships are. The controls are easy to learn and ship battles are generally rather enjoyable. In port there's a plethora of different weapons to arm your ships and crews with. Hiring large crews is a good way to ensure that you won't get boarded by pirates, however these large crews comes with a large price tag.
Another way of earning money in Patrician is to take the various missions that will be offered to you at the city hall or in the taverns of the cities you visit. You can be offered everything from smuggling goods or hiding stolen merchandise in your warehouses, to hunting down pirates, defending the city harbor or supplying starving cities with food. These missions are usually limited by time and might also affect your reputation (for instance people will come to disregard you if you smuggle goods for someone, especially if you're caught).
By keeping cities supplied with the goods that they need and by building workshops and housing in cities where you have trade offices you encourage them to grow and at the same time you increase your reputation. This in turn will make them demand and produce more goods. As you get more popular among the townsfolk (and arranging a few festivals with lots of free beer and food, along with a nice donation towards the extension of the church will go a long way towards assuring this) you may join the city council. This in turn will allow you to influence the decisions in the city and will even make it possible to become the new Lord Mayor.
As mayor you get the added responsibility of managing your city's defenses, which if you do it well will give you the possibility to rise even higher in the Hansa hierarchy. Even closer to your ultimate goal, to become the Alderman and leader of the entire organization.
When a city is under siege you'll be able to see the enemy soldiers approaching your city with siege weapons fighting the guards and most likely looting the houses outside the city walls. Building outside the city walls is cheaper but doing so means there's a greater risk of destruction when the city comes under attack.
The interface of Patrician III is quite well thought out, and while it takes a little while to get used to, it works very well to allow you to control the game effectively. Everything from the sea battles to the buying and selling of goods works very well and is smoothly integrated. It feels as if a lot of thought has gone into the planning of the interface, and this has paid off.
The graphics are as can be seen in the screenshots very good over all. Everything from the landscape of the bustling cities or the animations of the various buildings you can enter, to the overall Baltic map and to the battle scenes at sea are very nicely depicted. Along with the music one can hear while in port and the many ambient sounds this works well to create the appropriate atmosphere of a medieval trade game.
Overall this is a very well thought out and well put together game. Ascaron has created a detailed medieval trade simulation game yet managed to avoid making it too complicated to be enjoyable. The inclusion of a map editor and support for multiplayer with up to 8 players also ensures longevity. This game is in my opinion definitely worth downloading.
How to run this game on modern Windows PC?
This game has been set up to work on modern Windows (10/8/7/Vista/XP 64/32-bit) computers without problems.
People who downloaded Patrician 3: Rise of the Hanse have also downloaded:
Patrician 2: Quest for Power, Port Royale 2, Port Royale: Gold, Power and Pirates, Patrician, The, Pirate Hunter, Pharaoh and Cleopatra, Sid Meier's Pirates!, Railroad Tycoon 3
Patrician 2: Quest for Power, Port Royale 2, Port Royale: Gold, Power and Pirates, Patrician, The, Pirate Hunter, Pharaoh and Cleopatra, Sid Meier's Pirates!, Railroad Tycoon 3