![]() This gives you space which you can use for bathrooms, games, research desks, fire extinguishers, waitress stations, or whatever else you want. You can cram a 9th in there if you want, but I don’t recommend it. So, my layout below has 8 rooms to a floor, all around the perimeter. Even Worse, those whiny customers insist on having access to their rooms, which means that the door has to connect to a hallway that connects to a staircase. Every room needs to have 2 windows and a door. Each room takes up 6 grid sections, and there’s 60 grid sections to a floor, so in theory you can put 10 rooms in a floor, right? Problem is, there’s some restrictions. So, a good inn has more than one room available to rent, so let’s put more in. ![]() That’s an average of 222 gold per sleeping space, which is 2000 gold per room per night (depending on how you round) which is a pretty solid amount of money. So what’s the ideal price point? A bit of trial and error tells me that the ideal price point is 333-334 gold, which comes with a 2/3 chance the bed will be rented for the night. Higher prices lessen the odds that someone will rend the room, and lower prices increase the odds of a rental. The only question left is how much you charge. As far as I can tell, you don’t technically need to be able to access any of the other furniture in the room, so long as it’s there. A good way to test is to go into third-person mode and walk through the room yourself, making sure you can get to both sides of every bed. If the headboard is blocking access to a bed, guests won’t pay for the spot and waitresses won’t make the bed. A person can walk by the foot and sides of the bed, but the headboard is impassible. You do have to be a little careful with positioning here. But if you go with one bed to a room, you end up buying five times the amount of furniture and using up a lot more space, so this method give you more profit for less investment and in a maximally compact form. ![]() Now, that premium isn’t as high as they would pay if they had the room to themselves. This gives you total sleeping area for 9 people, each of whom is paying a premium for a 5 star room. There’s even room for an extra decoration or two if you’re feeling generous. All told, you can fit four double beds and a single, plus all the other stuff, in 384 spaces (6 sections). You still only need one wardrobe, one nightstand, one bath, etc., regardless of how many beds you have in the room. And adding more beds doesn’t require adding anything else. It turns out, a hotel room can have up to 5 beds in it and still be valid. And empty space means missed profit we can do better. Putting all of these in an area of at least 256 spaces (4 sections) will give you a 5 star room with one bed and a lot of empty space. You need a 5 star bed, a 5 star wardrobe, one door, two window, a bath, fireplace, nightstand, and a light (I use a chandelier). And the most profitable rooms are, not surprisingly, 5 star rooms. Only star rating matters increasing the number of decorations, adding extra furniture, putting in more windows, none of that stuff will help you sell a room. Each room is classified from 1-5 stars, and the more stars it has, the more someone is willing to pay for it. ![]() So, to optimize your hotel rooms, you need to understand how profit is determined. Money! Success! What more could you want? Guide to Set Up Hotels Laying Out the Hotel Room Follow these instructions to earn over 15,000 gold per floor, from hotel rooms that rent for an average of 2000 gold for a single room. This guide tells you how to set up hotels to maximize income and conserve space. ![]()
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