Start with the cheapest plan.
If you ever find yourself wishing steam installed a game faster, then upgrade to the next best one. See if that feels like enough.
I pay a bit more for 600mbps, but that's because I have a home server which runs services for friends and family. It might be streaming media, be syncing nextcloud data, and uploading a snapshot to off-site backup, all at the same time, and it needs to do that without hiccups for anyone accessing it. Even then it's more than strictly necessary. 350mbps would be VERY fast, and enough.
Along with that comes the ability to install small games basically instantly on my gaming desktop, and big ones in the time it takes me to grab a snack, but even the cheapest speed available would otherwise be more than enough for single-person use.
My siblings and mother live on 10mbps home wifi, and they never even complain.
Your client is probably de-duplicating the post because they act like cross-posts. Check from your profile, or use the cross-post link in the post to get to the other one.
I can see both posts from your instance, so it shiuld be there.
Moomin mugs are like 50% of the fandom.
They are collectors items, rare ones can go for hundreds of euros.
It's not a survival sim. Dear god if I had to do actual busywork like manage fatigue or hunger bars, in order to get to the fun part of building stuff.
There's some combat involved in exploring, but at its core, the game is a management sim. It's a giant spreadsheet dressed up as an FPS.
Balancing the numbers of the production lines, is the point. Can a factory still run if you don't do that? Sure, but very inefficiently. If you're running out of stuff faster than you can use it to build stuff, your factory isn't big or efficient enough.
If you have time to kill before your factory produces what's needed for the next milestone, you have time to increase capacity or load balance inputs and outputs.
If you're leaving the game to run to achieve your goals instead of doing that while your existing machinery works through the milestones, the game probably isn't for you. Doubly so if you need something to "press you to do things" because constructing automated factories while doing the math to maintain efficiency is somehow not its own reward for you.
@MentalEdge
@sopuli.xyz