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  • #31
    Originally posted by DrSpike

    I'm not sure why they changed it though. Perhaps they would consider moving it closer to the way it was before, but tbh as I've said several times here not that many people seem to mind it as it is now.
    I don't have a link handy, but they acknowledged here or at CFC that it was a bug relating to the introduction of either volcanoes or the new bonus resources (sugar, et. al.) They haven't confirmed, to my knowlege, that they would restore the original distribution levels, but given (i) it was not intentional, and (ii) the lack of threads along the lines of "New Resource Scarcity is Fantastic!" my bet is that they'll restore PTW or near-PTW scarcity levels. Just a bet; nothing certain of course.

    Catt

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    • #32
      Thanks for that info; since I had not seen such a post here I assumed it was intentional.

      It seems they do lots of things without meaning to.

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      • #33
        ... and (ii) the lack of threads along the lines of "New Resource Scarcity is Fantastic!"

        But, but ... there have been frequent POSTS indicating the approval of such scarcity!

        I hadn't read the non-intentional part, and have been upset about the help documentation not being changed to the "new" appearance ratios. In 2-3 weeks (with the new patch) I may have to get used to the old "abundance" again. Who knows, perhaps at that time I will reduce them in the editor.

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        • #34
          Originally posted by Jaybe
          ... and (ii) the lack of threads along the lines of "New Resource Scarcity is Fantastic!"

          But, but ... there have been frequent POSTS indicating the approval of such scarcity!
          Yes, there have been some posts in favor, but usually such posts are at best tepid support for the change -- I haven't seen a whole lot of gung-ho support for it, myself (some, but not much). And too frequently those posts appear in threads with titles like "What the F*** is Up with Resources?????"

          Catt

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          • #35
            I just played a short game of PtW. Man, after weeks of C3C I was almost weeping with joy when I netted four luxuries for myself, three sources of iron, and convinced the Romans to stop squatting on my next two luxuries.

            Six luxuries in two screens of space. Normal zoom!

            Between marketplaces, a rushed in pyramids (rng love for once!), and lots of flood plains my little citizens didn't mind being ground down into swordsmen en masse. There was just no denting their intense happiness levels. At worst I managed to create a merely content citizen. This dissenter off course got tossed into the meat grinder the very next round.

            Probably the first time ever I've held off on a switch to republic because pop rushing was too much fun!

            Give me back the old scarcity please!

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Catt
              @ErikM: there are hundreds and hundreds more examples of where civ departs from a realistic historic simulation -- remember that it is a stratey game, not a historical simulation. The designers weren't trying to model history, they were trying to create an engaging game.
              Why bother with Civilopedia entries and so such then? Let Americans build orcs and Spanish - goblins. That will no doubt enhance gameplay experience as it will solve the problem of useless unique units and balance things better.

              And if we also get rid of tanks and spearmen, we will also get rid of countless "spearmen beat tanks" threads. Just think of a benefit to Apolyton community

              More seriously, I think you underestimate the allure of Civ being "about history". After all, how is it marketed? "Recreate history" this and "build an empire to stand the test of time" that. So many new players, especially Civ II/SMAC veterans, buy the game in expectations of doing exactly that - building an empire, engaging in complicated diplomacy, trade, etc. What they get instead is a linear game where the winning strategy is hitting any guy you've just met with a club (thankfully, clubs do not require any strategic resources).

              There is no doubt that Civ III is much more of a wargame then its predecessors. C3C even more so due to resource scarcity. But just as Sir Ralph observed, Civ was/is a very lousy wargame. 10 year old Panzer General for DOS was much better as a pure wargame.

              Originally posted by DrSpike
              And anyone that posts another will be glared at quite severely.
              Glaring I can take
              It is only totalitarian governments that suppress facts. In this country we simply take a democratic decision not to publish them. - Sir Humphrey in Yes Minister

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              • #37
                Ok, glare coming your way.

                Seriously, it is very hard to talk about realism in Civ. It is just a coincidence.

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                • #38
                  Most of my recent efforts have been at Sid level and the lack of resources adds another level of difficulty to an already daunting task. If the developers are listening, I vote for a return to PTW resource levels as a first step. Beyond that, I wonder if it would be all that difficult to enable players to choose the level of resources just as we can choose the level of AI aggression. That would add strategic variation and make the game more appealing to players on both sides of the issue.
                  The law, in its majestic equality, forbids the rich as well as the poor to sleep under bridges, to beg in the streets, and to steal bread.

                  Anatole France

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                  • #39
                    Originally posted by vmxa1
                    Seriously, it is very hard to talk about realism in Civ. It is just a coincidence.
                    Too bad.
                    It is only totalitarian governments that suppress facts. In this country we simply take a democratic decision not to publish them. - Sir Humphrey in Yes Minister

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Originally posted by ErikM

                      More seriously, I think you underestimate the allure of Civ being "about history". After all, how is it marketed? "Recreate history" this and "build an empire to stand the test of time" that. So many new players, especially Civ II/SMAC veterans, buy the game in expectations of doing exactly that - building an empire, engaging in complicated diplomacy, trade, etc.
                      I don't think I underestimate the allure of Civ being "about history" and that's not what I argued. All the historical references of Civ III form the very soul of the game -- my point was that the historical references and touches are directed at the immersive aspects of the game, i.e., drawing the player into the fantasy world of managing one's own empire, rather than an attempt at faithfully recreating history.

                      My prior post might be put another way: Civ's realtionship to our own historical reality is an extremely powerful aspect of the game's allure, but the designers freely departed from realism when to do so made the game more alluring -- i.e., when faced with a choice between realism and interesting strategic choices, interesting strategic choices won out just about every time. Your post, the one I commented on, highlighted a bunch of aspects of Civ that don't mimic history or depart from current reality; rather than address each in turn I simply fell back to the point that the designers deliberately deviated from history / reality and did so for gameplay reasons. The only alternative explanation, it would seem to me, is that the designers actually tried to model reality but failed because they believed (rather improbably?), to use some of your examples, that cavalry are more mobile than tanks, aircraft carriers appeared in history before human flight, there are only a few dozen rivers on the entire globe, resources such as iron, coal, and rubber are not only rare, but they appear in very specific and limited locations only and when they do appear are of unlimited use until a sudden and unexplained depletion event occurs, etc. In other words, my point was, and is, that the fundamental design of Civ III was not about modeling history, it was about making and interesting and immersive strategy game. All the points in your post seemed to focus on the game's departures from historical fact but didn't at all address why such departures might have been made.

                      What they get instead is a linear game where the winning strategy is hitting any guy you've just met with a club (thankfully, clubs do not require any strategic resources).
                      That's a bigger discussion than I'm willing to go into here. Suffice it to say that I disagree, but I'm just not going to enter that fray.

                      There is no doubt that Civ III is much more of a wargame then its predecessors. C3C even more so due to resource scarcity. But just as Sir Ralph observed, Civ was/is a very lousy wargame. 10 year old Panzer General for DOS was much better as a pure wargame.
                      I never played Civ I or Civ II, so can't comment. But I'll repeat my view that I remain unconvinced that C3C's resource scarcity makes warfare significantly more necessary than prior versions of Civ III, and would vigorously contest the view that C3C's resource scarcity requires warfare.

                      Catt

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                      • #41
                        It doesn't require warfare. If you are an exceptional good player, you can do without railroads and factories and will do well defending yourself with spearmen vs cavalry, because the AI tactics sucks. But a game like this is hardly fun. In fact, it sucks.

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                        • #42
                          First and foremost - I agree with SR, just not as passionately. The resource scarcity in PtW was pretty good, IMO, and if there was just one change to make C3C the best consistent playing experience it could be, it would be the return to this scarcity model. However I see that they were trying, with the introduction of more scarcity and the new resource-less units, to encourage builder strategies as being better than just difficult. Unfortunately, although I do not play MP beyond a PBEM or two (some of us live in countries where it is almost impossible to find a time for play that would suit almost any other player ), I can see that the extra scarcity makes war the best and often ONLY way of winning an MP game. Can we think of some other changes they could make to encourage the feasibility of builder-style games in both SP AND MP games? Perhaps by introducing resource-less unit equivalents for many of the key resource-dependent units the balance could be redressed. To make resources still valuable perhaps the resource-less units could be made a little inferior to the resource-dependent ones.

                          Originally posted by Catt

                          I don't have a link handy, but they acknowledged here or at CFC that it was a bug relating to the introduction of either volcanoes or the new bonus resources (sugar, et. al.) They haven't confirmed, to my knowlege, that they would restore the original distribution levels, but given (i) it was not intentional, and (ii) the lack of threads along the lines of "New Resource Scarcity is Fantastic!" my bet is that they'll restore PTW or near-PTW scarcity levels. Just a bet; nothing certain of course.

                          Catt
                          I don't know how this would be the case, as you CAN increase the appearance probability in the editor and come up with something approaching PtW levels, so either they didn't take this into account or there is another reason... Perhaps the effort to encourage less war-driven strategies was the impetus for the extra scarcity, as I mentioned above....

                          And Catt - I imagine the reason you are not seeing so many strong defenses of the current scarcity levels is because there is little need to defend it to those people - they have what they want right now. People will let you know if you do something wrong, but if it ain't broke there won't be any reason to talk about it!
                          Consul.

                          Back to the ROOTS of addiction. My first missed poll!

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                          • #43
                            I am also confused as to why they haven't altered it if the change was a mistake. However, the distinction between bug and feature these last few months has often been which side of bed Soren got out of.

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                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Jaybe
                              But, but ... there have been frequent POSTS indicating the approval of such scarcity!
                              As one of the people you are likely referring to (since I did post a defense of the current system here), let me reiterate that I remain of two minds on this issue.

                              YES, I do think that strategic resources SHOULD be somewhat rare. I don't think that a player should ALWAYS be able to count on easily getting or trading for a strategic resource. If it's always easy to get, it's NOT particularly strategic.

                              On the other hand, I don't want to get to a point where warfare is the only option for getting a resource. Some believe we have reached that point. I strongly disagree.

                              Originally posted by Catt
                              Yes, there have been some posts in favor, but usually such posts are at best tepid support for the change -- I haven't seen a whole lot of gung-ho support for it, myself (some, but not much). And too frequently those posts appear in threads with titles like "What the F*** is Up with Resources?????"

                              Catt
                              Exactly. "Tepid" is a good descriptor. I think we're all looking for the right balance. I think making them somewhat more rare than PTW is probably an overall good thing. Whether it needs to be as scarce as it currently is, I honestly don't know.

                              I am intrigued by the idea of allowing at least some units/improvements to be built without the "required" resource. Maybe a 30-40% increase in shield cost/ turns to railroad?
                              They don't get no stranger.
                              Do not taunt Happy Fun Ball.
                              "We will not tire, we will not falter, and we will not fail." George W. Bush

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                              • #45
                                I've read the editor help files, and they seem to imply that the resource change is a mistake. IT says a value of 160 will give 2 of a resource per player in a 8 player game.

                                Off course, this was _never_ true. In Vanilla/PtW it meant that there would be 1.6 resources per player. (Which in an 8p game gets rounded down to 12.)

                                In C3C an appearance ratio of 160 with 8p will net 9 of that resource. Presumably the formula was R*N/100 in PtW R being Ratio and N number of players. And presumably it's R*N/133 in C3C.

                                All hard work done at Civfanatics.

                                Now, the real question is, what is the design intent? Is the help file actually correct and there should be two iron per player? (Then, did some mathematically challenged intern change the denominator in the wrong direction?)

                                Just for fun I'll attach two scenarios. One is with PtW level resources. One is with the "land of plenty" resources that 2 iron per player would provide.

                                Fun nugget: Both maps I genned to see that it did provide the right number of resources had a starting position that was Iron Works capable. I drool at the though of an Iron Works capital.
                                Attached Files

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