I wonder how many of you play hardcore civ.
By that I mean that you only save when you actually have to leave the computer and play Civ from begining to end without ever going back to a previous save. All mistakes (in strategy, positioning of units in battle, choice of technology to search, foreign relations etc) count
I remember in the middle ages when I was much younger and I played CIV 1 a friend of mine amazed me by telling me he could repeteadly win in the emperor level and get 160% score. When I asked him how he did it he casually informed me that whenever he lost a battle he would simply reload
I never seemed to convince him that what he did was called cheating. He said he enjoyed the game nonetheless!!
I think they are a lot of levels of «cheating»:
1) You create a new map when you discover that the current one does not fit your strategy (for example you can't succesfully bottleneck other civs in a part of the map or the borderline with the russians is WAY to big etc)
2) You reload when you find out that your discussions with another civ had not gone the way you planned (for example you provoke a war with a powerful neighboor because you just couldn't help yourself and demmanded tribute)
3) You reload when the only unit defending a far away city is killed by barbarians or the AI and the city will be conquered the next turn
4) You reload when you hit the wrong keys (for example when accidentally throw your nuclear missile in an enemy submarine or city when all you wanted to do was have a look around)
5) You reload when you are defeated in battle and you think that this is just not right
6) You reload when you trigger a hut with the usual red effect
I think hardcore civing has nothing to do with the level of difficulty you are playing assuming you are in a challenging level for you.
It's just about going the whole distance with no saves on full alert and see what happens. Even persisting when you know it's futile. (sometimes the result can surprise you
[This message has been edited by paiktis22 (edited November 05, 2000).]
[This message has been edited by paiktis22 (edited November 05, 2000).]
By that I mean that you only save when you actually have to leave the computer and play Civ from begining to end without ever going back to a previous save. All mistakes (in strategy, positioning of units in battle, choice of technology to search, foreign relations etc) count
I remember in the middle ages when I was much younger and I played CIV 1 a friend of mine amazed me by telling me he could repeteadly win in the emperor level and get 160% score. When I asked him how he did it he casually informed me that whenever he lost a battle he would simply reload
I never seemed to convince him that what he did was called cheating. He said he enjoyed the game nonetheless!!
I think they are a lot of levels of «cheating»:
1) You create a new map when you discover that the current one does not fit your strategy (for example you can't succesfully bottleneck other civs in a part of the map or the borderline with the russians is WAY to big etc)
2) You reload when you find out that your discussions with another civ had not gone the way you planned (for example you provoke a war with a powerful neighboor because you just couldn't help yourself and demmanded tribute)
3) You reload when the only unit defending a far away city is killed by barbarians or the AI and the city will be conquered the next turn
4) You reload when you hit the wrong keys (for example when accidentally throw your nuclear missile in an enemy submarine or city when all you wanted to do was have a look around)
5) You reload when you are defeated in battle and you think that this is just not right
6) You reload when you trigger a hut with the usual red effect
I think hardcore civing has nothing to do with the level of difficulty you are playing assuming you are in a challenging level for you.
It's just about going the whole distance with no saves on full alert and see what happens. Even persisting when you know it's futile. (sometimes the result can surprise you
[This message has been edited by paiktis22 (edited November 05, 2000).]
[This message has been edited by paiktis22 (edited November 05, 2000).]
Comment