Sengoku Dynasty Map and Locations Guide - Cover Image A Partial Sengoku Dynasty Map at an Angle

Sengoku Dynasty Map and Locations Guide

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Published: November 12, 2024 1:53 AM

This guide will show you the Sengoku Dynasty Map and give you information on some of the notable locations such as the towns filled with merchants.

You'll land on the northwestern shore of the Sengoku Dynasty map at the start of the game. Soon after, you'll want to start exploring the land and leveling up your perks. Read on to see the map and get an idea of what you can find in the area!


Sengoku Dynasty Map

Sengoku Dynasty Map with TechRaptor Watermark

The Sengoku Dynasty map has quite a few towns and enemy fortresses to visit, although much of this information will be concealed from you until you actually walk near these areas.


Notable Sengoku Dynasty Locations

Here are the notable locations on the Sengoku Dynasty map:

Animal Spawns

There are several animal spawns throughout the map. Each spawn is centered on a general area where you can reliably find animals of that type. When you encounter one of these areas, it will be permanently marked on your map.

Knowing where the more passive animals (such as rabbits and foxes) are is a useful tool for when you want to go hunting yourself. On the flip side

Aratani

Aratani is the "farming village" of the region. This is realistically the only place you can get seeds for farming until you build the Tailor's Shop and you can make your own seed bags.

There are several traders available in Aratani:

  • Farming Trader: Sells seeds, farming tools, some herbs, and some raw crops such as rice and wheat
  • Healer: Sells herms, mushrooms, feathers, and some basic medicine
  • Herbs Trader: Sells mushrooms, herbs, some medicine, sake, and feathers
  • Tavernkeeper: Sells simple prepared food, water, and liquor

Caves

Caves are... well, they're big holes in the ground with stuff in them. You should know what a cave is by now. In Sengoku Dynasty, caves are a reliable place to find Iron Ore. I've never encountered any enemies or wild animals in caves, so you shouldn't have to worry about them all that much. You'll need a Bronze Pickaxe to collect Iron Ore from these caves.

Enemy Camps

Enemy Camps are exactly what they say on the tin: a camp full of enemy humans. There are two types of Enemy Camps: Minor Enemy Camps and Enemy Camps.

Minor Enemy Camps can be found all over the map and are indicated by a red X. Typically, these will have 1–3 enemy soldiers at an appropriate level of equipment for the zone, a loot chest, and occasionally, a prisoner. The prisoner can be a refugee or a wild animal.

The Enemy Camps are much deadlier affairs. It is no exaggeration to say that you could face 10, 20, or more enemies along with a boss. However, there will be multiple loot chests and a special boss loot chest with even better equipment in it.

Clearing enemy camps is a requirement for liberating some regions. As far as I can tell, the enemies in these camps may not respawn; if they do, it takes at least a few seasons before any enemies reappear.

Generally speaking, enemy camps get more dangerous as you head further south and east.

Enjiro Rebels Camp

The Enjiro Rebels Camp doesn't have much use in the early game other than as a place to go shopping and mine ore. A cook selling raw food, water, and simple cooked meals can be found in the camp. A General Trader is located in the lower cave and sells a mix of wood, raw materials, and advanced materials such as Linen and Paper.

You can find a cave with Iron Ore to the north of the camp and another cave with Iron Ore a short distance away to the southeast. A Medium Jizo Shrine can be found in the hills to the northeast, and a broken shrine to Ryujin is nearby, across a broken bridge.

A refugee can be found south of the camp near the road, and a second refugee can be found slightly further south in a shack by the beach.

Iwasaki

Iwasaki is a mining town. There is a fair amount of bamboo available not too far away from the town. Naturally, there is a mine nearby as well. There are two notable vendors in this town:

  • Food Trader: Sells water, food, and light meals
  • Mining Trader: Sells stone, ore, torches, lanterns, and mining tools

Onsen

The Onsen is a hot spring. Its location in the center of the northern half of the map makes it ideal for getting to some of the more inland locations. It is also surrounded by a large quantity of bamboo right next to the fast travel point, making it ideal for bamboo farming. A Tavernkeeper merchant can be found inside.

Segi

Segi is a village in a forest that specializes in wood items and animal parts.

  • Bowmaker: Sells feathers, meat, fur, fat, animal parts (such as antlers and fangs), bows, and arrows
  • Carpenter: Sells wood products and tools used for harvesting wood
  • Hunting Trader: Sells feathers, meat, fur, fat, animal parts (such as antlers and fangs), bows, and arrows
  • Impure: Sells feathers, meat, fur, fat, animal parts (such as antlers and fangs), bows, and arrows
  • Wood Trader: Sells wood products and tools used for harvesting wood
  • Tavernkeeper: Sells simple prepared food, water, and liquor

Special Projects

Special Projects are things like bridges, watchtowers, and destroyed temples that can be restored by building a Special Project Construction Workshop nearby, supplying it with the needed materials, and assigning villagers to it. You'll usually have to wait until the season changes before it's completed; the villagers will then become unemployed.

Most Special Projects are required for liberating regions. There are other available projects, though, which may give you tangible benefits depending on the structure.

Temple

The Temple is a major location that you'll have to visit after you develop your village to a certain degree; the Abbot will give you permission to build a second village if you so choose.

The area outside of the temple has several merchants: a Beggar, a Warrior Monk (who sells basic weapons), a Food Trader, and an Exotic Goods Trader. The Exotic Goods Trader is the most important of the bunch — he is one of the only sources of Ice year-round (which is needed for brewing) and statues of the gods (which are needed for shrines).


How to Fast Travel in Sengoku Dynasty

You can fast travel in Sengoku Dynasty by interacting with stone markers or the bells in the villages marked on the map. You can also build your own fast travel points once you take the Traveler Outposts perk in the Way of the Leader perk tree.


That's the end of our Sengoku Dynasty Map and Locations Guide, but there's plenty more to explore — check out our other guides below!

A photograph of TechRaptor Senior Writer Robert N. Adams.
| Senior Writer

One of my earliest memories is playing Super Mario Bros. on the Nintendo Entertainment System. I've had a controller in my hand since I was 4 and I… More about Robert N

More Info About This Game
Learn More About Sengoku Dynasty
Game Page Sengoku Dynasty
Developer
Superkami
Platforms
PC
Release Date
November 7, 2024 (Calendar)
Genre
Survival
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