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{The List} Terrain and terrain improvements

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  • #46
    Originally posted by skywalker
    I'd like to see it so that pollution causes unhappiness. I think superlarge cities should be more difficult to manage. It really shouldn't be so easy to keep everyone happy. Having pollution affect this would help to create that effect.

    This, I like.
    Hmmm, an idea that had worked its way into CTP2. I guess there is something positive there...
    Yes, let's be optimistic until we have reason to be otherwise...No, let's be pessimistic until we are forced to do otherwise...Maybe, let's be balanced until we are convinced to do otherwise. -- DrSpike, Skanky Burns, Shogun Gunner
    ...aisdhieort...dticcok...

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    • #47
      Some more random suggestions:

      The number of sides a city has facing the sea should give it a discount on the cost of city walls, and an increase in the cost of a coastal fortress.

      A city with three sides facing the sea should pay 5/8 of what a fully land-locked city has to pay for city walls. A city with only one side facing the land, on a near island, should pay only 1/8.

      Bring back the diagonal channel that allowed ships to pass through. Just another bizarre design change in civ3 that needs to be rectified.

      Each city on the banks of a river should get +1 trade for each other city on that river.

      Cities that are only one square away from the coast, and are on a river that leads to that coast should be able to build sea improvements.

      There should be a 'natural harbour' type of terrain that makes sea improvements much cheaper to any city built on it and also gives extra trade.

      And, of course, flexible city radii so we can build cities in cool defensive locations without having to worry about overlap.

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      • #48
        Originally posted by wrylachlan
        How about a Public Works Director that works by automating workers? You could paint down roads like in Sim City, and workers would automatically start building them... or you could give a worker a direct order, and she would finish that project before going back to the Public Works Director for new instructions.

        Each city could have a Public Works Submenu which would show three graphs of the maximum possible Food/Shields/Commerce if you optimized for each of those. So at a glance you can see - "The most Food I could possibly get out of this city is X, and the most shields is Y", etc. Then there would be a slider where you set the percentage priority of each of those.

        When workers have no specific tasks given them directly nor any specific improvements from the Public Works Director (like roads or colonies, etc.) a worker will start upgrading the city radius based on the percentages you've chosen. If you go 50% Food 25% Shields 25% Commerce, the worker will build 2 food improvements, then one shield improvement, then 1 commerce.

        This system would be flexible enough to allow you to micromanage in the early stages of the game when its most important, then forget about them later on, yet still have the ability to direct them if you want to. It would also be a lot more precise than the current automation of workers. And it preserves the ability to take slave workers to improve your civ's production.
        Hmm, I like that idea. For some reason I want the system of building up infrastructure within your borders to be handled by something other than workers. I'm not sure why, maybe just to add variety. But a system like this makes me think otherwise.
        Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
        "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

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        • #49
          Originally posted by Sandman
          Some more random suggestions:

          The number of sides a city has facing the sea should give it a discount on the cost of city walls, and an increase in the cost of a coastal fortress.

          A city with three sides facing the sea should pay 5/8 of what a fully land-locked city has to pay for city walls. A city with only one side facing the land, on a near island, should pay only 1/8.


          (though the little voice in my head screams "make it optional in the editor!" )

          Bring back the diagonal channel that allowed ships to pass through. Just another bizarre design change in civ3 that needs to be rectified.


          Make it so that some diagonals let ships through and some don't. Also make it so that some diagonals let land units through and some don't.

          Each city on the banks of a river should get +1 trade for each other city on that river.


          Wow, that's a really good idea.

          Cities that are only one square away from the coast, and are on a river that leads to that coast should be able to build sea improvements.


          (see response to city walls)

          There should be a 'natural harbour' type of terrain that makes sea improvements much cheaper to any city built on it and also gives extra trade.


          *drools*

          And, of course, flexible city radii so we can build cities in cool defensive locations without having to worry about overlap.


          *drools some more*

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          • #50
            1.9.7 (or 2.6) Canals.

            It should be possible to build a canal when the knowledge and resources are in place. But to avoid it to be too crazy, limit the lenght to a few tiles starting or ending (or both) at the sea.
            First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.

            Gandhi

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            • #51
              1.9.8 (or 1.9.7 if above suggestion is placed under 2.6): Shallow water type, at allows only small ships to sail there.

              Why? To make it easier to defend coastal lines from massive invasions.

              How to manage an invasion from sea then? Not sure, either the big ships must carry those small ships as cargo with the other units or you could allow units to "cross" that watertype using all movementpoints to advance only one tile. I am sure some has better ideas for this.

              How to bombard then? Again not sure.... But you could allow bombarding units to fire up to two (or three or more) tiles away, couldn't you?! AFAIR that was possible in the old war-game The Perfect General 2.

              BTW: There was another thing in that old game I loved. LOS was different for different types of land. You could only see tiles just around you in the forrest while you could see far away on plains or over sea.......
              First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.

              Gandhi

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              • #52
                If you have that "shallow water", then how would the big ships get built? They couldn't leave the city.

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                • #53
                  Originally posted by skywalker
                  If you have that "shallow water", then how would the big ships get built? They couldn't leave the city.
                  My thought was, that it should represent either a reel low water type or water with reefs. That type of shallow water shouldn't necessarily cover the whole coastline.

                  Edit: Or make a canal......
                  First they ignore you. Then they laugh at you. Then they fight you. Then you win.

                  Gandhi

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                  • #54
                    How about a loading unloading speed? Unless its in a city, boats can only load or unload a certain amount of units per turn. And certain types of ocean tiles can modify that number and or the adjacent land type - unloading onto a cliff takes forever, where unloading in a deep bay next to the plains could be faster.

                    Also certain units can modify that number. Like Marines unload faster than infantry. And Viking Longships unload faster than Galleys.

                    This would do 2 things, allow for faster ocean movement, since it will now take comparitively longer to bring the landing party to shore, you have longer to get your land defenses in order. Also the ship is a sitting duck while unloading (maybe they have a bombard or defense penalty while unloading).

                    Another outcome, would be that getting a beachhead city would be really important since it would allow much faster loading and unloading. You could also confer this ability on a colony, so a tactic might be to unload on the coast, and fortify that coastal tile while a worker builds a colony to make way for the invasion force.

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                    • #55
                      That would be annoying and add MM. Given turn length, I don't think you should have any trouble unloading everything.

                      Oh, and beachheads are already important for those reasons. If you control a city, you can unload units directly in the city, giving them their full moves. Plus, if you have a beachhead you have a better defense for unloaded troops.

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                      • #56
                        Then perhaps a turn wait before you can unload units. IMHO anything that slows down the landing rate of attackers is good, because it would allow you to increase the movement of all seagoing vessels without unbalancing the game. This would allow a lot more fun naval combat.

                        P.S. Once, just once, it would be nice if you'd say something like, "I don't think that would work well, but how about X". I'm not sure what your interest in a Civ4 suggestions forum is if you don't give any suggestions?

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                        • #57
                          Originally posted by wrylachlan
                          Then perhaps a turn wait before you can unload units. IMHO anything that slows down the landing rate of attackers is good, because it would allow you to increase the movement of all seagoing vessels without unbalancing the game. This would allow a lot more fun naval combat.
                          That I almost agree with. There'd be more incentive to protect your transports and more of a reason to keep a sort of Coast Guard in place.
                          Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
                          "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

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                          • #58
                            Originally posted by wrylachlan
                            Then perhaps a turn wait before you can unload units. IMHO anything that slows down the landing rate of attackers is good, because it would allow you to increase the movement of all seagoing vessels without unbalancing the game. This would allow a lot more fun naval combat.

                            P.S. Once, just once, it would be nice if you'd say something like, "I don't think that would work well, but how about X". I'm not sure what your interest in a Civ4 suggestions forum is if you don't give any suggestions?
                            I do make suggestions. I just more often shoot them down. I would say it is just important that they don't use [what I see as] "bad" ideas as that they do use "good" ones. I'm just better at pointing out flaws in things than I am at coming up with entirely new ideas

                            However, I have a question about your suggestion to slow down the unload rate - what would you do to Marines?

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                            • #59
                              Originally posted by skywalker
                              However, I have a question about your suggestion to slow down the unload rate - what would you do to Marines?
                              Make them immune to the penalty, which would help to differentiate them even more. Scouts should also be exempt from the penalty, thus it wouldn't effect your exploring islands. And workers should be exempt as well - enabling you to get a beachhead with your marines, and build a colony to allow your incoming recruits to get there faster.

                              I might even suggest that wheeled units, especially artillery units, get a stiffer penalty or even are unable to disembark from a standard galley without a city or colony. Maybe this penalty goes away for Modern Transports.Who knows.

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                              • #60
                                How about give the penalty only to Wheeled units? I don't think it should apply on loading/unloading in a city, but that's me.

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