[AIDE JEU PC] Zeus le maitre de l'olympe

Bonjour,

Voilà mon soucis, j’ai donc décidé de ressortir Zeus.
Installé et patché à priori.
Dans la deuxième campagne, une des 2 ou 3 premières missions, on me donne le choix d’une ville tout à fait à l’ouest de la grece et une autre quasiment en perse. je prends la perse et là on est dans un scénario mettant en scène un Kraken, Persée et on doit monter 2 temples: hermes et athéna.

Je construis le temps de persée , je réuni les éléments , et il détruit le kraken.
0 partir de là la mission est quasiment finie, SAUF
une espece de sous quete ou hermes me raconte un truc avec ses grolles magiques que persée doit utiliser .

et à partir de là , tout déraille : impossible de forcer persée à faire quoi que ce soit .

résultat je continue ad vitam eternam la mission.

j’ai détruit rebatit le monument hermes, idem pour le temple de persée

je suis bloqué là.

help!
(si personne ne sait, qq un connaitrait il un site qui donnerait la soluce du jeu mission par mission?)

http://www.gamefaqs.com/computer/doswin/game/291596.html

Alors pas mal du tout , voici la mission que je joue :
[i]Miletos - The Eastern Frontier
-----------------------------------------------------------------------

Goals:  Slay a Monster
        [b]Fulfill a Forthcoming Request[/b]
        Rule Ethiopia
        16 Sheaves of Wheat for Parent City
        24 Planks of Wood for Parent City
        8 Bars of Bronze for Parent City

No Greek has ventured this far east before, across the great sea, and
you'll have to tread very softly to start a city in this land.  Great
nations shoulder against each other here, and they'll be suspicious
of you, a newcomer.  Cassiopeia, Queen of Ethiopia, will be particularly
annoyed that you have come near her territory.  But she has much bigger
things to worry about.  Ever the proud mother, Cassiopeia boasted that
her own daughter, Andromeda, is more beautiful than Poseidon's daughters,
the Nereids.  Now, Andromeda is to be fed to the Kraken, and Casiopeia
is devastated.  If you can find a way to rescue Andromeda, the powerful
Cassiopeia will certainly appreciate it, and you may gain a valuable
friend.

The fleet-footed Hermes has also been spotted in the area, looking for
Perseus.  The god says that he's seen an item in his travels that Perseus
might find useful.

While the Kraken roams free, life along the water might be difficult,
and trade might be prone to disruption.  Look to other cities, even your
rivals, for the things you need.  Worshipping the gods also can be a boon
to you, as any of their sanctuaries have valuable resources of their
own.

------------------

Ahh, a new map, and another colony to build.

Let's see what the map and control panel tell us.  There are three
breeding areas for Boars, which will serve as a major food resource.
There is more than enough woodland.  We are given the Timber Mill,
which will show that we'll have to do some chopping eventually.  Also,
none of the cities currently buy wood.  We do get access to a Mint,
which requires silver, which is available at the bottom-lefthand corner
on the map.  We also get a Sculpture Studio, which needs bronze.

The introduction warns you of Kraken, which is an ugly dude.
Unfortunately, your city doesn't produce very much.  One thing that you
need is fleece.  You have to have that for your housing evolution.
You should start importing goods before Kraken arrives in the waters.

Cyprus will soon be discovered by explorers.  Cyprus will sell you
bronze, which will be needed for building sculptures.  Cyprus will
buy Wine.

Argos will give you gifts of fleece.

Hermes will eventually announce his quest for Perseus.  Perseus needs
the following:

- A Sanctuary to Athena
- A Sanctuary to Hermes
- 3000 Drachmas
- 16 Skeins of Fleece
- 6 Pieces of Sculpture

To get the marble for the sanctuaries, you'll have to request it from
Argos.  Sculptures can be made from bronze, which you can import via
land trade from Cyprus.

The Impressions walkthrough suggests that you limit your population
at 1000.  Try doing that!  It's virtually impossible producing
sufficient amounts of food for populations much larger than that.

The sooner you are able to defeat Kraken the better.  This will
allow you to build Piers along the river for trade.  You can also
use the riverbank for a few fisheries.

At one point or another, a city will trade wood, which will be great
for you, since you can produce a ton of it.  My notes say that this
place is Egypt.  They buy wood and wine, and sell wheat and armor.
You could always import wheat (hint, hint) if you have a food problem.

Argos will request food at one point.

Let's talk money.  Importing wheat isn't a very expensive situation,
but importing bronze is.  You can also import fleece from Argos,
which can be an expensive proposition as well.  So, how do you
compensate for all of this spending?  There are several ways.

I suggest exporting wood, you can cut down a lot of timber.  Taxes.
The higher the house has evolved, the more taxes they pay.  Wine.
A lot of the cities buy wine.  You can open a wine industry.  But,
you'll need the Grove of Dionysus.  Mints.  You can harvest the silver
from the nearby silver-ore bearing rocks.  Also, you can build a
Sanctuary to Hades.  His sanctuary has two large chunks of silver-ore
bearing rocks, which can be harvested.  If you place the Mints just right,
Hades can walk by them and bless them, thus turning out 4x the normal
amount of drachmas.  Hades can also bless Tax Collectors, which will 
temporary increase the amount of taxes the people pay.  You can pray
to Hades, and he'll give you something like 4200 Drachmas.  This
is a problem.  You can only build one or the other, either a sanctuary
for Dionysus or one for Hades.  I went the route of Hades, but it's your
decision.  Building more Mints will help out by bringing in more silver
and Drachmas.[/i]

Mais…Fulfill a Forthcoming Request
Bah, c’est ca qui coince… et le gars n’en parle pas … Moi une fois que j’ai tué le kraken, mon persée glande à travers la ville, Hermes fait rien…
ca doit etre un bug du jeu ptet , pourtant je l’ai patché …