Jordan J. Ballor of Blogcritics magazine posted an article that reviews Civilization IV from a religious perspective. First summing up what other religious sources have said about the game, Ballor postulates:
He continues to explain what role religion plays in the game but how in the end it still boils down to
The author concludes the the game's popularity is well deserved as it
Read the full two-page review on the Blogcritics site.
Indeed, while Civ IV deserves praise for integrating non-material elements like religion and culture into the game play, in the end these pieces suffer the same fate as the rest of the game's components. Civ IV, ultimately, is less about the development of civilization than it is about the expansion of imperial tyranny.
He continues to explain what role religion plays in the game but how in the end it still boils down to
conquer[ing] your opponents, by any means necessary.
The author concludes the the game's popularity is well deserved as it
taps in to a fundamental human drive for dominance in a way that promotes critical thinking, problem solving, and creativity.He compliments the interface while taking issue with the repetive nature of the gameplay and some of its bugs, as well as the underwhelming graphics. Overall the author considers it a suberb game though, but
the adeptness with which it meets the deepest human desires for power and control teaches us as much about ourselves as it does about the progressive unfolding of history.
Read the full two-page review on the Blogcritics site.
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