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Agriculture = Ultimate ICS trait = Too Powerful?
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Originally posted by Saint Marcus
Seafaring is still pretty pointless.
Seriously, seafaring, religious and agricultural now really give industrious a run for its money as the most powerful trait.A true ally stabs you in the front.
Secretary General of the U.N. & IV Emperor of the Glory of War PTWDG | VIII Consul of Apolyton PTW ISDG | GoWman in Stormia CIVDG | Lurker Troll Extraordinaire C3C ISDG Final | V Gran Huevote Team Latin Lover | Webmaster Master Zen Online | CivELO (3°)
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master zen,
to me, commercial is one of the best too. i even like playing the french, although their UU isn't that great.
mainly i think commercial is that powerful because it's great from the first turn on and holds on until the end. you get a lot more trade from your centre tile (which means 10% lux can sometimes apease 2 citizens). corruption is a much lesser problem. and best of all: you start with alphabet, which means you can have map making or literature (depending of your starting location) in 80 turns.- Artificial Intelligence usually beats real stupidity
- Atheism is a nonprophet organization.
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Actually now that you mention it, commercial also gets a huge boost in C3C thanks to the elimination of RCP. For the last months those of us who had used RCP for our city placements had pretty much overruled the benefits of Comercial civs. Now that RCP is no longer feasable, commercial will rank among the best too.
Overall my impression of C3C was that the traits are now more evenly balanced. Back then it was mostly a question of "Industrial and what else?". Now you really have to think about it and that is very good even though some players might be put off that mighty industrial is not so overwhelmingly great now.
Btw, I loved the Ind/Com of Carthage and France. France IMO was quite good in SP game because it's UU was triggered at a very good time in the Medieval era contrary to the Numidian.A true ally stabs you in the front.
Secretary General of the U.N. & IV Emperor of the Glory of War PTWDG | VIII Consul of Apolyton PTW ISDG | GoWman in Stormia CIVDG | Lurker Troll Extraordinaire C3C ISDG Final | V Gran Huevote Team Latin Lover | Webmaster Master Zen Online | CivELO (3°)
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On pangea maps where you have access to the coast, seafaring civs can stick explorers in a boat or boats and voila, speedened contact with neighbors.
Seafaring has a use on Pangea if you want to attack behind enemy lines (4 movement for Galley is faster than anything else).
Can't wait to see the look on your face once you get to play with a seafaring civ and realize it's an awsome trait
Seriously, seafaring, religious and agricultural now really give industrious a run for its money as the most powerful trait.Quod Me Nutrit Me Destruit
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Originally posted by Saint Marcus
Seriously. Can someone give me any real reason for why Seafaring is so kick ass? Nearly all it's benefits you can just as easily get from wonders, and are therefor hardly unique. Furthermore, if you don't start near the coast, your trait is essentially useless.A true ally stabs you in the front.
Secretary General of the U.N. & IV Emperor of the Glory of War PTWDG | VIII Consul of Apolyton PTW ISDG | GoWman in Stormia CIVDG | Lurker Troll Extraordinaire C3C ISDG Final | V Gran Huevote Team Latin Lover | Webmaster Master Zen Online | CivELO (3°)
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Originally posted by Saint Marcus
Hardly important. One could easily do that with regular galleys. And if not: build the Lighthouse, for all the same benefits.
DominaeAnd her eyes have all the seeming of a demon's that is dreaming...
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I don't build the Lighthouse often, because I don't care for it's benifits.
But in the rare cases where I do want to build it, I usually get it. GL from early wars often do the trick, or just starting to build the Pyramids and switch the the Lighthouse when you get the tech.
And other than the Lighthouse bonusses, seafaring has little to offer. Some extra commerce in coastal cities, but this is just a Commercial-lite bonus (since Commercial civs get the bonus in all cities).
In other words, play as a commercial civ, build the lighthouse, and you're better off than the seafaring civ.
I didn't say the trait was completely worthless, since it does bring some benifits. I'm just saying that playing as a commercial civ (or whatever other civ) and building the Lighthouse just gives you that seafaring trait for free! So a commercial-agricultural civ with the Lighthouse now has the benefits of (in effect) 3 traits (com-agr-sea).
I'd rather build a wonder to give me that, than to give up my religious or industrious trait. I just want it all.
However, if the Seafaring civs are the only ones to build a curragh (like exp civs are the only ones to build scouts), as they at first wanted, then seafaring would be immensely powerful. But alas, it's not the case. All civs now get the Curragh.
And again, if you don't start near the coast, seafaring is absolutely pointless.Quod Me Nutrit Me Destruit
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Originally posted by Master Zen
Actually now that you mention it, commercial also gets a huge boost in C3C thanks to the elimination of RCP. For the last months those of us who had used RCP for our city placements had pretty much overruled the benefits of Comercial civs. Now that RCP is no longer feasable, commercial will rank among the best too.
the 40-turn polytheism/mathematics gambit may be an expoit too, but it has been slightly improved thanks to the AU mod.
Overall my impression of C3C was that the traits are now more evenly balanced. Back then it was mostly a question of "Industrial and what else?". Now you really have to think about it and that is very good even though some players might be put off that mighty industrial is not so overwhelmingly great now.
i'm just worried that chosing gets even harder. because until now i said "ok, i can live without A and B for this game so i'll take C"... now you've got to choose from 8 traits of which 2 are only really useful on certain maps (exp useless on smaller sizes, sea a lot weaker on medium and smaller sized pangea maps).
Btw, I loved the Ind/Com of Carthage and France. France IMO was quite good in SP game because it's UU was triggered at a very good time in the Medieval era contrary to the Numidian.
if the price of the musketmen/musketeers get's reduced a bit (some thread in the strategy-forum recommends this), then even the french UU may be usful- Artificial Intelligence usually beats real stupidity
- Atheism is a nonprophet organization.
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Originally posted by Saint Marcus
But in the rare cases where I do want to build it, I usually get it. GL from early wars often do the trick, or just starting to build the Pyramids and switch the the Lighthouse when you get the tech.
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Saint Marcus, instead of complaining on why seafaring is so bad, what would you have done to make it ideal?A true ally stabs you in the front.
Secretary General of the U.N. & IV Emperor of the Glory of War PTWDG | VIII Consul of Apolyton PTW ISDG | GoWman in Stormia CIVDG | Lurker Troll Extraordinaire C3C ISDG Final | V Gran Huevote Team Latin Lover | Webmaster Master Zen Online | CivELO (3°)
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Originally posted by Master Zen
Saint Marcus, instead of complaining on why seafaring is so bad, what would you have done to make it ideal?
And maybe something with amphibious assaults w/o it being too powerful.Are we having fun yet?
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Let's judge it once the game actualy comes out.
We don't know what mysterious "other advantages" seafaring civs get, so we cannot judge properly.
Style of play matters as much as anything else, too. I still don't really like the Expansionist trait. Because of that, I don't play it much. Because of that, I'm not as good with it as I could be (though I have gotten better with it). Other players (Aeson springs to mind) who like it and have spent time perfecting their use of it, will get more out of it. Such things skew these debates.
-Arriangrog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!
The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.
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Saint Marcus, instead of complaining on why seafaring is so bad, what would you have done to make it ideal?
possibly, give the amphibious assault bonus to seafaring civs, and not others.
possibly, ship repairs (like it works with ground units).
esp the curraghs seem perfect. just like exp civs can build scouts, they can build curraghs for early exploration. and since this benefit could be rather powerful, you could drop the extra commerce bonus.
Just a suggestion. It also might not work. but would make seafaring better than it's now. of course, I haven't played C3C yet, while you apparantly have, so you have insight information I do not have. However, all the benefits that have been listed (extra commerce in coastal cities, extra ship movement, reduced chance of sinking in seas and oceans) could be implemented in regular vanilla civ3 mods.
To test it, make a mod with all civs starting with one city. Each civ gets 2 traits, one civ gets one trait, but starts with a free new modded wonder (which grants: extra ship movement, reduced chance of sinking, no culture). that civ will essentially start out with the seafaring trait (minus the extra commerce, but you can make its second trait commercial to counter this). Then see how much better it is playing that civ instead of others (on a pangea map). It's not ENTIRELY the same as a seafaring trait, but it comes pretty close to it. And in this mod, other civs can still build the "real" Lighthouse to get those exact same bonusses.
I find it fairly useless the way it is. Seafaring-only Curraghs would make it a LOT more powerful. Maybe too powerful even, but that's something I shall have to test further.
So unless seafaring has some bonusses we do not yet know of, besides the extra movement, extra commerce, reduced chance of sinking and increased chance of coastal starts (plus cheaper harbors and ports), I find it a fairly weak trait on pangea maps, and to a lesser degree on continental maps. But granted, it's a killer trait for archipelago maps (just as the exp trait is great for pangea and crappy for archipelago).Quod Me Nutrit Me Destruit
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