About time we start this up again, I think this would be nice to get new players up to speed faster, I wish I knew some of this stuff sooner! I will revisit this to expand
Very useful stuff to know if you are new to multiplayer:
Always take stuff further and faster for more money
Hold control when levelling land to level diagonally
Hold control when cloning vehicles/trains to use shared orders
Plant trees to increase your rating if a town wont let you build a station
Grow a town fast by having 5 bus stops with regular buses, (less than 20 days between a bus)
For faster building get to know the short-cut keys: for building rail try 'A' or '1' '2' '3' '4' For levelling land: 'q' 'w' 'e' Signals are 's', and 'd' is for demolition!
Hiding scenery is useful for building rails, especially in temperate when there are lots of trees, to hide buildings, bridges, trees and anything blocking your view press 'x' ('x' again to unhide). To just hide trees press 'ctrl+2'
Best industries for making money
Temperate: coal for fast easy start, farms/goods for major money (farms are effectively 2 industries in one, not much money made in transporting but lots made from goods from factories) Passengers/mail can also be good.
Desert: Water is good for quick start, oil wells/goods or fruit/goods can generate good income, passengers/mail also ok. Max money made from buying sawmills (later in game)
General train network building tips
Plan your network without having sharp turns, these will slow your trains and cost you money, see :
Corners on Openttd wiki
Start without electric rails and trains, better to build a longer route with diesel trains until money come in to upgrade.
Single tracks with passing places are a good cheap way of building a large effective network in early game, upgrade to double track/double stations later.
If you have a large complex network, force trains to service before picking up, this stops them from wandering all over the place trying to find a depot when they should be delivering stuff, and keeps breakdowns to a minimum.
Use longer trains if congestion is becoming a problem with your networks, but short trains (7 tiles or under) are generaly more effective for picking up from industries.
Train Signals
These can be tricky to get the hang of but there are some
good tutorials out there
, be aware there is a legacy set of signals in OTTD, and some tutorials teach things with these, but the only signals you really need to use are the newer path signals which are easier and more effective (the two on the bottom right of the selection box)
Hold control then click and drag a signal to copy the signal down whole line until it reaches a break or a junction.
You can set the gap between signals, a gap of 2-4 is generally recommended, setting a gap of 1 has no practical benefit but will cost twice as much (as a gap of 2)
(work in progress, comments welcome on this if you disagree with anything let me know
*Useful links*
www.tt-forums.net
(do a search before asking anything or they get grumpy)
www.openttdcoop.org/
(dont go on their servers and ask why the hell anybody would ever need such a big junction , its just their thing
)
n-ice.org/openttd/
(friends of BTPro)