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Well, I'm no expert, but I'll give a couple of these a shot at answering:
1) Specialists are people in a cities population who do not work a tile, but instead specialize on science, art, engineering, etc...they are very, very useful people. some wonders grant you specialists in every city or in the city that the wonder was built. There are certain limits to how many specialists you can have ain a city depending on what ha been built there and what type of goverment you are using. when the computer is managing your cities they will assign people to be specialists. Until you have more experience with the game you may want to take the AI's suggestion, but you don't have to. Yuo may find it interesting to play around with the specialists to see if you can do better. You will find as you learn the game you can certainly do better then the AI.
2) Wonders, yes they take long, if they didn't they wouldn't be wonders . different epople have different opinions about this, but I really like to build wonders, I find them very useful. Depending on which leader you choose certain wonders will be better then others. For example, if you are a leader who has the creative traint, then Stonehenge is pretty much worthless IMHO. but the Pyaramids and the Oracle are pretty critical in my style of play. there are many others as well.
3) Religions: well, I tend to only get one or two. As I take over other civs I'll pick up the rest Some peopel will not agree with me on this. For example, if you want any shot at a cultural victory, you must get many of the religions.
40 How to become better? Play the game more, experiment, read some posts here, and read the civlopedia. Oh, and fight wars. It's really okj, it's just a game. this will teach you much about the AI and it's weaknesses. And, don't be afraid to loose. Build wonders. also, maybe find just one leader who you can master with the traits, special building, and special unit that ytou like. you will find many people here say to play as Rome because you get the way overpowered pratorian (can't spell). Also, I think a Pangea map is one of the easier ones to play on, so you may start there. I think Archipelgo (sp??) is one of the hardest.
I hope that helps
sparky
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Much has already been answered by spakyal.
As fort your question:
What are specialists? Are they the people who sometimes appear in my cities?
They are no specialists but great people. People wo really excelled in their professions and therefore are known even today, sometimes centuries after the time they lived, for example Leonardo da Vinci, Galileo Galilei, Moses and many others.
Every city has the ability to produce great people points (GPP), which make these great people appear. One way to do so is build wonders in the city, the other way is to build specialists. Every wonder and specialist produces a certain amount of GPPs and by selecting the wonders or specialists fpor the city you can influence the chances for the type of the great person to appear in the city (for example the Stonehenge increases the chances for an great prophet, and specialists increase the chance for a great person in their profession [with many scientists in the city for example chances are high to get a great scientist])
How many GPPs you need to get the next great person is determined nationwide (and with every great person the number of GPP your cities need for the next great person increases.
As, on the other hand every city collects its GPP separately (i.e. your nation doesn´t pool the GPP from alll of its cities) most players specialize some of their cities as great people factories, which have a lot of farms, so that these cities can suppport a lot of specialists (which, as mentioned before, produce GPPs). This way you have a higher "production rate" of great persons as well as a big influence on the type of the next great person (as you can select the specialists in your great person factories accordingly).Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"
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Originally posted by AmericanCitizen
How do I make more of those people appear?
Speaking of which, what are the best wonders?
I try to go after them all, but I don't really know if this is something I should do or not.
Really general, but whatever: How do I become better?
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Re: Hello!
Originally posted by AmericanCitizen
Really general, but whatever: How do I become better?"As far as general advice on mod-making: Go slow as far as adding new things to the game until you have the basic game all smoothed out ... Make sure the things you change are really imbalances and not just something that doesn't fit with your particular style of play." - WesW
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Wow, thanks for all the replies! I have a couple follow-up questions.
Specialists don't seem like they'd be all that useful! Wouldn't it always be better to work a tile for food or production or money than to make them a specialist? A specialist still consumes food, right?
Great people....Hmm, maybe I should try out this farm idea.
New question: What improvements are best for what tiles? I usually do farm in grassland, cottages in the plains, and mines on the hills (unless there is something special, like cows or something). Is this good?
What about city placement? I know that if you go too quickly your economy suffers, but in all my games, it tends to be the person with the most or second most number of cities who does really well.
I'm having trouble finding a balance between building lots of stuff and building a military. I'm not very aggressive, but the AI often invades me...it just seems like a waste to build a warrior instead of, say, a worker in a new city.
What civilization is best to choose? I mainly play as America, but only because I'm from there I don't really know if its good or not.
Thanks!Empty.
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Specialists don't seem like they'd be all that useful! Wouldn't it always be better to work a tile for food or production or money than to make them a specialist? A specialist still consumes food, right?
The more farms, the more specialist you can have in your cities (and the more GPPs you produce)
Of course, most of the times citizens working tiles are better than specialists, but sometimes it is good to use them as specialists (aside from the specialists in GP factories).
One example would be culture wars. A city of another nation which is adjacent to your teritory starts to produce lots of culture points and pushes yxour borders back, this would be a good reason to employ some artists, so that you produce more culture to halt the border expansion (at your costs) of the other civ.
New question: What improvements are best for what tiles? I usually do farm in grassland, cottages in the plains, and mines on the hills (unless there is something special, like cows or something). Is this good?
Depends; I normally use plains, grassland and floodplains either for cottages or for famrs, depending on the sourrounding fields of the city and the number of citizens I want to have there (it´s rather easy to calculate, as, before biology, every farm gives you +1 food [+2 after biology, if irrigated])
Hills get either used for mines, of, if they have woods, sometimes for lumbermills (I always try to keep some woods around my cities, normally 4-6 if possible, as each wood tile gives you +0.5 health]).
What about city placement? I know that if you go too quickly your economy suffers, but in all my games, it tends to be the person with the most or second most number of cities who does really well.
I'm having trouble finding a balance between building lots of stuff and building a military. I'm not very aggressive, but the AI often invades me...it just seems like a waste to build a warrior instead of, say, a worker in a new city.
Much of your actions should depend on the neighbors you have. Against some of them it is really advisable, to have a strong army whereas others are rather peacefullsy and won´t attack you even if you are rather weak.
It´s best tonalways keep an eye on the powergraph,. If you fall behind too much you should build more units. Normally it´s best to be (at least) in the upper half of all civilizations in terms of power.Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"
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What civilization is best to choose? I mainly play as America, but only because I'm from there I don't really know if its good or not.
1.Rome
2.Rome
3.If your playing Warlords: Rome.USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA! USA!
The video may avatar is from
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Alright, here is my game so far. I took your advice and decided to play as the Romans...
I didn't expand very much early on, but I got pyramids, and great wall, and hanging gardens, so I had a bunch of engineers...but I never had anything to spend them on, so I eventually had them join Rome.
Eventually I decided to take some Viking cities, which helped a lot.
I've been using slavery to help build stuff, except until recently where I switched to caste system so that I could load up on scientists.
It just doesn't seem like its worth it to me, though.
So if you could look over it and offer suggestions, I'd be quite happy ThanksEmpty.
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Originally posted by AmericanCitizen
Specialists don't seem like they'd be all that useful! Wouldn't it always be better to work a tile for food or production or money than to make them a specialist? A specialist still consumes food, right?
New question: What improvements are best for what tiles? I usually do farm in grassland, cottages in the plains, and mines on the hills (unless there is something special, like cows or something). Is this good?
Myself, I like to put my Cottages on Grassland. That way the 2 food you get makes it sef-supporting. My Plains squares don't usually get developed until there's nothing left anymore. And I usually try to go for production on those, since they already provide a Hammer. Having a Watermill on a Plains square next to a River can really help your Hammer production.
What about city placement? I know that if you go too quickly your economy suffers, but in all my games, it tends to be the person with the most or second most number of cities who does really well.
I'm having trouble finding a balance between building lots of stuff and building a military. I'm not very aggressive, but the AI often invades me...it just seems like a waste to build a warrior instead of, say, a worker in a new city.
What civilization is best to choose? I mainly play as America, but only because I'm from there I don't really know if its good or not.
And if you're playing vanilla Civ, not Warlords, Washington is one of the most powerful civs in the game. His traits were changed in the expansion, probably because he was a bit over-powered.
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Originally posted by AmericanCitizen
I've been using slavery to help build stuff, except until recently where I switched to caste system so that I could load up on scientists.
It just doesn't seem like its worth it to me, though.
Also, when you get to the Representation civic, all specialists add 3 beakers to your research. That gives each Scientist you have an output of 6 beakers per turn. That's definitely worth it. But the main reason to have them is the Great Scientists they can create.
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Playing a random civ, as Willem suggested, is no bad idea.
You learn more of the traits this way.
Rome, which Will9 suggested for example is a very good civ for warmongers, as you get the praetorians, which is a very powerful early unit. For builders (and people who rather prefer late wars) Rome in most of the cases is of much less use however.Tamsin (Lost Girl): "I am the Harbinger of Death. I arrive on winds of blessed air. Air that you no longer deserve."
Tamsin (Lost Girl): "He has fallen in battle and I must take him to the Einherjar in Valhalla"
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