I always play on Marathon, but rarely above Noble and never successfully, (above Noble.) This game is less than a year old. A bunch of guys who had "mastered" Civ3 seem to regard it as their right that they win all the time at the highest difficulty levels. I don't think Firaxis intended that to be common. There's a thread right now called "Civ is dead" where people are saying this is the "ultimate" Civ and there will never be a Civ5. Maybe, but if people on the design team are looking at it that way, they probably expect you to take years to really learn how to win on Emperor/Raging Barbs/Marathon (I always play with Raging Barbs, too; and there has been a lot of whining about that,) and years more to win at the highest level with the other complicating conditions. That's what makes games last. (Despite stinky AI, there are still people playing Alpha Centauri, including me. That only had one expansion pack and no subsequent variants.)
Yaga's idea shows a way to win at Marathon by developing religion. Datajack's complaint I think derives mostly from the difficulty level. (Maybe you just aren't ready for it, dude--sorry, bad joke. ) I'm doing fine at Noble, but both there and the one game I'm running currently on Prince, you have to adopt the old kung fu mentality and fight without fighting (for long.)
It is clear AI attack more frequently on the higher difficulty levels. Right now, on Noble, by spurring trade and spreading religion and avoiding aggressive moves myself in favor of inner development, I can avoid war for centuries. (You can usually and I stress usually acquire enough cities in the early game territory grab to develop culture/religion/wonders, etc., without war, if that's all you want and you are not artificially attuned to war by your own temperament, Civ3 experience, multi-player experience, this last a whole different ball game, etc.)
In my Prince game, I was attacked. But like the kung fu master, I waged defensive war, which I am d-mn sight better at than AI and frustrated them to where they made peace after a reasonably short time. I was invited by a third party to join them to resume the war. I did, got poor results, but kept all my cities and eventually again got a treaty out of the b-stard, (Montezuma, of course.) Now I am developing my religion and culture again, while devoting some cities, (I have about six,) to building more and better defensive units. I'm about halfway up the power grid, far enough that nobody's seeing me as an easy mark. I might have to fight to get higher, but some of those above might take each other out and I have culture and religion now working my way, (I got my religion early; made it a priority in the early game, in fact, but I am Asoka. OTOH, if I didn't see religion as a priority, I probably would have picked a different leaderhead as all my games are custom.)
I haven't tried this on Emperor, but I can't help thinking, with practice, it can be done.
Yaga's idea shows a way to win at Marathon by developing religion. Datajack's complaint I think derives mostly from the difficulty level. (Maybe you just aren't ready for it, dude--sorry, bad joke. ) I'm doing fine at Noble, but both there and the one game I'm running currently on Prince, you have to adopt the old kung fu mentality and fight without fighting (for long.)
It is clear AI attack more frequently on the higher difficulty levels. Right now, on Noble, by spurring trade and spreading religion and avoiding aggressive moves myself in favor of inner development, I can avoid war for centuries. (You can usually and I stress usually acquire enough cities in the early game territory grab to develop culture/religion/wonders, etc., without war, if that's all you want and you are not artificially attuned to war by your own temperament, Civ3 experience, multi-player experience, this last a whole different ball game, etc.)
In my Prince game, I was attacked. But like the kung fu master, I waged defensive war, which I am d-mn sight better at than AI and frustrated them to where they made peace after a reasonably short time. I was invited by a third party to join them to resume the war. I did, got poor results, but kept all my cities and eventually again got a treaty out of the b-stard, (Montezuma, of course.) Now I am developing my religion and culture again, while devoting some cities, (I have about six,) to building more and better defensive units. I'm about halfway up the power grid, far enough that nobody's seeing me as an easy mark. I might have to fight to get higher, but some of those above might take each other out and I have culture and religion now working my way, (I got my religion early; made it a priority in the early game, in fact, but I am Asoka. OTOH, if I didn't see religion as a priority, I probably would have picked a different leaderhead as all my games are custom.)
I haven't tried this on Emperor, but I can't help thinking, with practice, it can be done.
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