I gather from the msgs herein, that plonking down a base 3 squares from an established base is good since SMAC doesn't work quite the same way as CivII.
But what about outliers? I think that plonking down a base or two further out in the boonies, helps establish territorial perimeters and keeps a possible rival from getting too close.
Question is this: how far out in the boonies? I guess it boils down to: how many bases should you have?
I never subscribed to the tendency amongst some CivII players to Build! Build! Build! But I did tend to fill up my isolated piece of real estate if for no other reason than to prevent encroachment. The only off-continent cities I owned were either seized or established as forward bases for aircraft/ships.
SMAC treats base numbers somewhat differently and penalizes you if your base total gets too big.
So ... question #2: what's the magic base number?
But what about outliers? I think that plonking down a base or two further out in the boonies, helps establish territorial perimeters and keeps a possible rival from getting too close.
Question is this: how far out in the boonies? I guess it boils down to: how many bases should you have?
I never subscribed to the tendency amongst some CivII players to Build! Build! Build! But I did tend to fill up my isolated piece of real estate if for no other reason than to prevent encroachment. The only off-continent cities I owned were either seized or established as forward bases for aircraft/ships.
SMAC treats base numbers somewhat differently and penalizes you if your base total gets too big.
So ... question #2: what's the magic base number?
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