I've tried the beeline to Civil Service in two Monarch games, and failed to get to the Oracle first in both games. I was playing as Qin, Epic speed.
In the first game I had an unfortunate starting position. My capital had rice but no other good food-producing tile, since I had no rivers or lakes nearby. That hurt right off, since I couldn't do any pop rushing. I researched the Wheel, Pottery and Writing, then Mysticism, etc., to Code of Laws. I built a library in my capital and set two pop to research, but it still took an awfully long time to research Code of Laws. The AI beat me to the Oracle by one turn.
In that first game, I had only two cities and it seemed to take forever to build the library. I thought that I might research bronze working first and hopefully produce a second settler on the way by chopping a lot. That worked just fine. I ended up with three cities, but I got beat to the Oracle again. I was 10-11 turns away from Code of Laws when the AI built it. It was again taking a hell of a long time to research Code of Laws, something over 30 turns total since I didn't have the gold to run 100% research, but even if I had been able to run 100% research, it would have taken somewhere around 25 turns.
My conclusion after this admittedly limited test is that this beeline to Civil Service strategy only works with great reliability when you're using a civilization that starts with Mysticism.
In the first game I had an unfortunate starting position. My capital had rice but no other good food-producing tile, since I had no rivers or lakes nearby. That hurt right off, since I couldn't do any pop rushing. I researched the Wheel, Pottery and Writing, then Mysticism, etc., to Code of Laws. I built a library in my capital and set two pop to research, but it still took an awfully long time to research Code of Laws. The AI beat me to the Oracle by one turn.
In that first game, I had only two cities and it seemed to take forever to build the library. I thought that I might research bronze working first and hopefully produce a second settler on the way by chopping a lot. That worked just fine. I ended up with three cities, but I got beat to the Oracle again. I was 10-11 turns away from Code of Laws when the AI built it. It was again taking a hell of a long time to research Code of Laws, something over 30 turns total since I didn't have the gold to run 100% research, but even if I had been able to run 100% research, it would have taken somewhere around 25 turns.
My conclusion after this admittedly limited test is that this beeline to Civil Service strategy only works with great reliability when you're using a civilization that starts with Mysticism.
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