5 Answers2025-08-28 12:02:28
I still get a little giddy every time I stroll into a new town in 'Mount & Blade: Warband' hoping to find a fresh face to help me storm castles. The most reliable method is simply: visit taverns. Go into the big towns’ taverns and talk to the patrons — some of them are potential companions with their own portraits and short bios. When you chat, choose dialogue options that ask about work or whether they'd join you; some will require a bit of persuasion or a completed favor first.
Beyond taverns, keep an eye on quests. Certain people only join after you help them with a problem, rescue someone, or finish a particular task for their village. Your renown and relationships matter too: high renown or a good reputation in a region can open doors. Also keep party space, wages, and food in mind — companions expect pay and can affect morale, so don’t grab everyone without planning. I once found a brilliant surgeon after winning a tournament and a hefty bribe later he joined; that kind of luck makes the journey fun.
5 Answers2025-08-28 23:00:08
I still get excited thinking about the first time I swapped into a huge total-conversion mod for 'Mount & Blade: Warband'—it felt like rediscovering the game. If you want a deep, story-rich single-player campaign with new factions, heroes, and items, start with 'Prophesy of Pendor' or 'Perisno'. Both overhaul troop trees, add quests and unique gear, and make every battle feel consequential.
For a more polished, all-in-one experience that keeps the spirit of the original but improves balance, economy, and UI, 'Floris Mod Pack' is my go-to. It bundles tons of improvements: better sieges, more equipment, and useful gameplay tweaks. Pair it with 'Diplomacy' for smarter kingdom mechanics and improved vassal relations.
If you love historical or regional flavors, 'Gekokujo' (feudal Japan) and 'Brytenwalda' (early medieval Britain) are exceptional. Multiplayer folks should check out 'Persistent World' or the official 'Napoleonic Wars' DLC for era-specific battles. Tip: always back up saves and read compatibility notes—mixing big mods can be messy, but the payoff is huge.
5 Answers2025-08-28 23:04:49
I've been plagued by random crashes in 'Mount & Blade: Warband' more times than I'd like to admit, and I found a combo of fixes that usually works for me.
First I always verify game files through Steam (right-click game > Properties > Local Files > Verify integrity). If you're running mods, disable them and try vanilla — corrupted or outdated mods are the number-one culprit in my experience. While testing vanilla, check the rgl_log.txt in the game folder; it often gives clues about missing DLLs or shader failures.
Next, update your GPU drivers, install the DirectX end-user runtime (June 2010) and the Visual C++ redistributables (2015-2019). Turn off overlays (Discord, Steam, Nvidia) and any recording/streaming software. If the crash happens with a particular save or map, try loading an earlier save or move your save files out temporarily. Run the launcher as administrator and try windowed mode if fullscreen gives trouble. If nothing helps, do a fresh reinstall of the game and reinstall mods one at a time — that usually narrows down the offender. If you want, paste your rgl_log.txt and I can help parse it.
5 Answers2025-08-28 22:27:36
I still get a rush every time a perfectly timed cavalry charge breaks an enemy line in 'Mount & Blade: Warband'. If I could condense what works best into a few practical habits, they’d be: know your role, stay clustered, and pick the right kit for the job.
For roles: archers and crossbowmen want elevation or cover and a protective ring of infantry; spearmen and polearm users should form a curtain to stop horses; cavalry should save the lance for the first pass and aim for flanks or exposed archers. Never assume one class will win everything—balance matters more than having five star players all playing the same class. Also check server rules (friendly fire? headshot multipliers?), because that changes how cautious you need to be around teammates.
Lastly, practice the little mechanical things: time your blocks and swings, don’t chase every kill (objectives matter), and learn remount/dismount rhythm. I often hop into custom battles to rehearse formations with friends and experiment with loadouts before jumping into public matches. It’s the tiny routines that win matches for me more than flashy plays.
5 Answers2025-08-28 23:08:54
I’ve been noodling around with this game on and off for years, and yes — you can absolutely play 'Mount & Blade: Warband' with a controller on PC, but it’s not something that works out of the box. The game doesn’t have official controller support, so you’re basically choosing between two routes: use Steam’s controller input to map the keyboard/mouse to your gamepad, or run a third-party mapper that converts controller inputs to keys and mouse movements.
If you go the Steam route, open Big Picture Mode (or right-click the game > Controller Configuration) and look for community templates or create your own. I usually set one stick to emulate mouse movement (or use Steam’s gyro on a DualShock/Steam Controller for aiming), map face buttons to common actions, and make triggers for melee attacks. It requires fiddling — sensitivity, deadzones, and which button does what all need tuning — but once you get a config you like it’s surprisingly playable. For more precise aiming (throwing javelins or archery), gyro or a mouse-emulation mode helps a lot. Third-party tools like JoyToKey, AntiMicro, x360ce, or DS4Windows can do similar things if you don’t use Steam.
Heads-up: some menus and siege controls can feel clumsy with a pad, and multiplayer precision can suffer. Still, I’ve spent entire sessions with a controller after dialing in the config, and it’s a comfy, couch-friendly way to enjoy the game if you don’t want to sit at a keyboard and mouse.
5 Answers2025-08-28 01:09:59
I got hooked on modding 'Mount & Blade: Warband' because it turned a six-hour weekend into months of tinkering — here's the friendly, practical way I do it.
First route: Steam Workshop. Open Steam, go to the 'Mount & Blade: Warband' store page, click 'Community Hub' → 'Workshop'. Find a mod you like and hit 'Subscribe'. Steam will download and install it automatically. Launch the game and pick the new module from the module dropdown in the game launcher. Easy, but remember: not every mod lives on Workshop.
Second route: manual install (ModDB/Nexus/Mod page). Download the mod archive, unzip it, and put the top-level mod folder into the game's Modules folder (usually in your Steam install under steamapps/common/'Mount & Blade: Warband'/Modules). The folder must contain a module.ini — if it doesn’t, it won’t show up. Backup your save files (Documents/My Games or the game's Profiles folder) and start a fresh playthrough when trying a big overhaul mod. Read the mod's readme for dependencies or special launch instructions. If the mod doesn't show up, check folder structure and spelling, and clear Steam’s workshop cache if you're mixing Workshop items with manual installs. Happy sieging!
5 Answers2025-08-28 00:59:54
I've been fiddling with trade in 'Mount and Blade: Warband' for years and honestly the best routes feel more like reading a mood than following a fixed map. Start by thinking regionally: the Sarranid cities in the south usually import luxury goods like silk and spices and export things like dates and salt. That means one reliable loop is buying cheap grain, timber, or furs up north (Nords/Vaegirs/Rhodoks depending on map shifts) and taking them south where luxury money flows and food sells for a premium.
Another classic is horses: the Khergit steppes often have cheap horses you can buy in bulk and sell in Swadian or Nord towns that want cavalry. Weapons and armor tend to be more valuable in war-heavy regions or fortress towns; if a castle nearby rebuilds its garrison, sell there. Watch for towns with low food or high troop counts — prices spike. I usually caravan with a modest escort, check market prices each visit, and rotate goods so I’m not stuck with dozens of one item.
Finally, give commerce skill and enterprise investing some love. Buying a workshop or investing in village enterprises (or using mods that expand the economy) smooths income and makes longer routes much more profitable. You’ll get a rhythm: buy where it’s abundant, sell where it’s rare, and always keep enough cash for ransom, repairs, and the occasional reinforcements.
5 Answers2025-08-28 02:23:39
My PC is ancient by today's standards, but 'Mount & Blade: Warband' runs like a dream on it, so I'll give you the practical minimums and a tiny reality check.
Minimum (practical): Windows XP/Vista/7 (32-bit or 64-bit), CPU around 1.5–2.0 GHz single core, 512 MB to 1 GB RAM, a DirectX 8.1/9 compatible GPU with ~64–128 MB VRAM, and about 500 MB of free hard drive space. DirectX 9 support helps. You’ll want a basic OpenGL/DX-capable card; integrated Intel video from the mid-2000s can often handle it at low settings.
Recommended (for smooth play, skirmishes and mods): dual-core ~2.0+ GHz, 1–2 GB RAM, a DirectX 9 card with 128+ MB VRAM, and a few GB free for mods. Modern laptops and desktops absolutely crush these requirements, so if your machine is less than 10 years old you’re almost certainly fine. For exact, current numbers check the Steam/GOG store page, but in practice the game is very light on hardware and CPU/GPU limits are easy to meet.