Is it at all worthwhile, assuming that you aren't actually particullary cramped and are just conquering for fun or to take some cities.
Like I'm playing a game as Mongols on Great Plains (prince difficulty, the fat leader with creative/agressive) and immediately killed off the Spanish and Indians, keeping their cities. I also "finded" Buddhism in Dehli, built the shrine and spreaded it around as my own.
But I ended up deep in the hole from the distance-upkeep and it took quite a while to reach 70%+ research again, the Americans ran away with the tech. They even surpassed me and became #1 and I'm still playing catchup (lucky they are my buddies).
But what was worse with the early conquests was the large cavity of empty space. Destroying 2 civs not only gave ME more room to expand, but all the other civs too! And expand they did, in fact I managed to find my empire split completely in half by hostile civs!
My empire is the two large brown turds. I'm COMPLETELY seperated from my ally America, and enemies can come from SEVEN directions!
Thanks to a tech advantage I actually fought off all 3 of them (with lots of screaming GET THE MY LAWN YOU LITTLE PUNKS!), then signed "rolling peace treaties" so I could focus on laying the hurt on one of them at a time. (I lost 1 city... but took 2 cities and razed a 3rd, so fair trade)
As the Axis of evil discovered, when you try to trample a turd, it simply spreads out and gets stuck to everything! (Such as the Hinduism holy city!)
Altough I'm winning quite convincely and it's been my most fun CIV game so far, I have to wonder at what I actually gained from the early conquests. Sure Isabella WOULD have been a thorn in my side, and Ghandi my largest competitor... but the "void" got filled by the other AI's and left me extremely vunerable in every way possible.
Like I'm playing a game as Mongols on Great Plains (prince difficulty, the fat leader with creative/agressive) and immediately killed off the Spanish and Indians, keeping their cities. I also "finded" Buddhism in Dehli, built the shrine and spreaded it around as my own.
But I ended up deep in the hole from the distance-upkeep and it took quite a while to reach 70%+ research again, the Americans ran away with the tech. They even surpassed me and became #1 and I'm still playing catchup (lucky they are my buddies).
But what was worse with the early conquests was the large cavity of empty space. Destroying 2 civs not only gave ME more room to expand, but all the other civs too! And expand they did, in fact I managed to find my empire split completely in half by hostile civs!
My empire is the two large brown turds. I'm COMPLETELY seperated from my ally America, and enemies can come from SEVEN directions!
Thanks to a tech advantage I actually fought off all 3 of them (with lots of screaming GET THE MY LAWN YOU LITTLE PUNKS!), then signed "rolling peace treaties" so I could focus on laying the hurt on one of them at a time. (I lost 1 city... but took 2 cities and razed a 3rd, so fair trade)
As the Axis of evil discovered, when you try to trample a turd, it simply spreads out and gets stuck to everything! (Such as the Hinduism holy city!)
Altough I'm winning quite convincely and it's been my most fun CIV game so far, I have to wonder at what I actually gained from the early conquests. Sure Isabella WOULD have been a thorn in my side, and Ghandi my largest competitor... but the "void" got filled by the other AI's and left me extremely vunerable in every way possible.
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