The Tribal Marketplace is exclusive to the Haudenosaunee and Lakota. It must be built next to mines, which will allow Villagers to gather coin (at same rate as default, 0.6 coin per second) from the mine it is adjacent to by assigning them to work on the Tribal Marketplace, and make mines yield 10% more coin. Haudenosaunee and Lakota Villagers cannot directly gather coin from mines otherwise. It collapses once the coin resource is depleted.
As Tribal Marketplaces are exclusive to the Haudenosaunee and Lakota, only their cards and other civilizations' TEAM cards are shown in the following tables:
Click for a list of Home City Cards related to the Tribal Marketplace
Some cards are highlighted with:
Green
TEAM Shipment that is sent to each player in a team
Tribal Marketplaces cost 25 wood and have an 10% increased gather rate.
Knights of the Mediterranean[]
With update 13.12327, Tribal Marketplaces are free to construct and make the mines last 10% longer, but the gather rate bonus is reverted.
Trivia[]
The reason why direct coin mining is disabled for the Haudenosaunee and Lakota, and for the Tribal Marketplace to be introduced, is due to the belief among both that one must respect nature, and mining (among other things) is seen to be offensive towards nature.[1]
History[]
Haudenosaunee[]
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The Haudenosaunee primarily traded tobacco, pelts and wampum (a traditional shell bead currency of the Northeastern Woodland nations of North America). Like the Lakota, the Haudenosaunee also traded with neighboring tribes; and after the arrival of Europeans, they began to trade fur and tobacco with them, acquiring metal items like knives, axe-heads and cooking pots as well as firearms.
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Lakota[]
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The Lakota traded buffalo (bison) hides and meats with other tribes and also with the non-Indigenous settlers of the Great Plains. Buffalo was very important to the Lakota because they used nearly every part of the animal to supply their needs, and it was also one of their main sources of food. They created a preserved cake called pemmican—a mixture of dried buffalo meat, fat and wild berries or fruit. Buffalo bones were used to make their utensils, and the skins were utilized for tipis, clothes, and bedding. Even buffalo bladders were put to a practical use: they served as water containers supported on wooden tripods (look for one in the Lakota Home City).