So, what's a good barn size/silo size for your level. Is there a specific chart or something so I can know if I am just holding myself back while I level?
My sig has my current stats. Is that decent? Am I leveling too fast for my barn/silo?
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So, what's a good barn size/silo size for your level. Is there a specific chart or something so I can know if I am just holding myself back while I level?
My sig has my current stats. Is that decent? Am I leveling too fast for my barn/silo?
I really need a chart too, can someone make one? If someone can right a list of almost every item in the game, then make a list of a appropriately sized silo and barn depending on your level. And barn should be bigger to hold expansion items, mining items, etc. Silo is just for fruit and vegetables.
I imagine that ideal barn/silo size would vary from player to player depending on play style. As a wheater, silo size is important to me. This in turn means that barn size is important as I have ever larger quantities of silo expansion items to hold.
This question is asked very frequently, and there really isn't an answer. Some people never have a big enough barn or silo. Some very high level players do fine with 500 spaces in their barns.
It really depends on how you play. Wheaters need bigger silos. People who grow a lot of fruit for coins don't need big barns or silos; they can keep their product on the tree until they need it. (They may have to trade their expansion items for saws and axes, however.)
Many players find they need bigger barns than silos, and will start selling silo items while still expanding their barns. Also, you may find you need a larger barn and silo as you level up. Once the land and town opens to you, you'll have a bunch more expansion items to collect. And salads, sandwiches, and sushi need a ton of lettuce and rice, so your old silo might not be big enough once you unlock those.
As has been said there isn't really an answer to barn/silo size per level. If you want to see what others barn/silo are at compared to their level check out this thread;
http://forum.supercell.net/showthrea...evel-Thread%21
My husband is level 68 and his barn is 575 and silo is 550... he refuses to upgrade them because he wants to prove a point that u dont need a huge barn, which frustrates the bejeebers out of me if he asks me to do something on his farm because theres never enough room to pick up feeds and collect from animals without doing it 1 or 2 at a time.
Im level 71 (or 72 I cant remember) and my barn is at 775, which is ok if I dont carry too much of everything and give away all the expansion things I get.
As the others have said it is mostly down to playing style. I'm level 73. My silo is 675. My barn is 1150 and I am happy with both for now but having levelled up twice during the truck event and unlocked more products to make, I can't see it lasting long! My barn was only in the 800s until level 65. It was a nightmare!
This Is a question I too have wondered but I think it depends on how you play your game and what your priorities are.
I'm nearing level 34 and my barn/silo are both at 350. I help out a lot in Derbys and feel the space is beneficial as I like to load up my barn ready for the start of each Derby and it also comes in useful when doing harvesting tasks. Not only that but I will be unlocking the town on level 34 and feel I may need the space then.
The only thing is expansion items cost money and I think I am going to hold fire on expanding barn/silo for a short while to build up some money so I can buy more machinery as it does not come cheap!!
Except, with the more and more items your barn will need to hold as items unlock to you, storing the ever increasing number of expansion items can become very tricky. I wish I'd expanded my barn earlier in my game to make life easier before there were lots of products I needed.
try wheating or having pets as a way of getting expansion items without buying them. Also, try to keep your expansion items reasonably level to each other by selling off excess - for a lot of players (myself included) the game tends to give you what you have most of. So if you have 10 planks but only 2 tape and bolts, you will continue to get mostly planks.
I was once said by someone in this forum,
Everytime u will need "X" amount of each tool to upgrade your barn and the X should be greater than or equal to 3/4 of ur level
level 85
2000/2000
I am usually comfortable until I am getting close to the next town rep level and have tems stockpiled by the hundreds.
Does anyone know how many items there are in total to be kept in the barn? I'd like to stockpile a bit of everything so looking for how many of everything I'd be able to keep evenly
I am a storer, wheaten and decorator, everything I need.
Vicky, It depends on your level and what you choose to count. If you look at your barn inventory, you will see it also lists things you have zero of. I went down to the bottom and scrolled up by page. There are ten items per "page". The last time I did this I came up with an even 100 and with my 3400 size barn, I figured I could keep over 30 of each item, but then I noticed that TEM were in that count and I didn't need any and there were over 50 nails and I certainly didn't want to get rid of any of those since I needed many more to expand. So knowing how many barn items didn't really give me a good inventory number.
So... You have to decide what you want to count and how much of your barn you want to reserve for expansion items. If you do what many in my NH do and just upgrade one building at a time, and say you need 50 of each item to expand, then I'd suggest reserving 175 spaces for expansion items and tools like saws. Subtract this from your barn size. Take that number and divide the number of products you have unlocked into it. For example (and these numbers are chosen for simplicity). If your barn is 1200 and you decide to reserve 200 spaces for expansion and tools. That leaves 1000. If you have 50 products unlocked, you have space to keep 20 of each item.
Anyway. That's what the math does for you. Since I stack I don't follow a really set number of each item, but I know many folks do try to do that. Lastly you might want to consider that certain products are asked for in much larger quantities. When boats ask for popcorn for example, they want a whole lot more than when they ask for pumpkin pie. So you may want to base your thresholds on something like that. Does that make sense?