Link to full size picture: https://farming-simulator.com/cms/uploa ... 123852.jpg
About what country does the landscape on the manual let you think of?
Mwal wrote: ↑Sun Jun 13, 2021 12:39 am It depends on where you are in the world, agco manufacturers their tractors in different places all over the world, all the article you posted says it’s where they’re manufactured in Europe. Massey is built in multiple countries including Canada yet, I think you’re googling yourself in a hole.
Is Erlangrat a German map? I thought it was Swiss.Manfi wrote: ↑Sun Jun 13, 2021 1:12 am Guys dont look at the main factory of the brands.In the first blog post on FS site there are 3 machines.
Fendt with German plates, JohnDeere with US plates and MF with French plates.
3 maps = 3 plates , btw looks at the manual of the game on Collectors Edition there is a scenerio looking like this:
Moreover, there was a French flag on the FS22 launch counter.
You’re missing what I’m saying, Massey gets manufactured all over so does Case and John Deere. So you think giants is opening the doors on real tractors seeing where they’re stamped from and that’s what they’re basing everything on? So in that case I’m pretty sure most their equipment would have Austrian plates. Pretty sure the guy above is right and the plates only indicate map locationsDEERE317 wrote: ↑Sun Jun 13, 2021 12:50 am
I never said Massey was a French company, I said that tractor in the screenshot (with a French plate) was built in France. And the Fendt Katana chopper is built in Germany and has a German plate. So a reasonable hypothesis from our sample size of 2 is that machines will be plated with the country they were built in. (Deere (7R, 8R, 9R, CNH (Magnum/T8, Steiger/T9), and Agco (Challenger/Fendt tracked and 4wds)machines would be interesting as they are built in the US)
So what hole am I “Googling” [sic] for myself?
The fact apparently no one understands “Based on where the machines from?” Is different from “Based on where the company is based/from?”
Edit: http://blog.agcocorp.com/2011/05/the-fi ... e-factory/