In other languages: 日本語 简体中文

Yumako seed: Difference between revisions

From Official Factorio Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Explained how seeds work.)
(Information about seed production rate proportional to consumption)
Line 3: Line 3:
{{Stub}}
{{Stub}}
{{About/Space age}}
{{About/Space age}}
'''Yumako seed''' is an item used to plant [[Yumako tree]]s, either manually or with a [[Agricultural tower]]. These trees produce [[Yumako]] fruits when harvested. The seeds are then extracted from those fruits when processed.  
'''Yumako seed''' is an item used to plant [[Yumako tree]]s, either manually or with a [[Agricultural tower]]. These trees produce [[Yumako]] fruits when harvested. The seeds are then extracted from those fruits when processed.
 
On average, the yumako processing recipe produces exactly one seed from each mature yumako tree being harvested, making yumako processing by hand a barely and unreliably self-sustaining process. However, the built-in productivity of a [[biochamber]] increases this statistic to one and a half seeds from each tree harvested, which is a net positive, thereby making yumako tree production a reliably self-sustaining process. However, one must still make sure to dispose of excess seeds to avoid clobbering belts.


== History ==
== History ==

Revision as of 16:04, 16 November 2024

Yumako seed.png
Yumako seed

Stack size

10

Prototype type

item

Internal name

yumako-seed

Consumed by

Artificial yumako soil.png
Overgrowth yumako soil.png
No-building-material-icon.png
This article is a stub, and not comprehensive.
You can help this wiki by expanding it.

Space Age expansion exclusive feature.

Yumako seed is an item used to plant Yumako trees, either manually or with a Agricultural tower. These trees produce Yumako fruits when harvested. The seeds are then extracted from those fruits when processed.

On average, the yumako processing recipe produces exactly one seed from each mature yumako tree being harvested, making yumako processing by hand a barely and unreliably self-sustaining process. However, the built-in productivity of a biochamber increases this statistic to one and a half seeds from each tree harvested, which is a net positive, thereby making yumako tree production a reliably self-sustaining process. However, one must still make sure to dispose of excess seeds to avoid clobbering belts.

History

See also