wow , either you guys got civ 2 very late or you had very uptodate computers, my first experince on civ 2 was on a 486 machine, civ 2 had already been out a while then, but pentiums werent available till that year, but i couldnt afford latest computer, so bought a 486 ... now i have a pent III but wish i had a PIV ...
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What was your first civ2 computer
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I'm surprised to see a 386 on the list because the CIV II manual says a 486 is required. Not only that but a few people voted for the 386. I guess the manual is wrong?"Cease fire! Please! Cease fire. What a dreadful waste of ammunition!" -- General Horatio Herbert Kitchener
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Civ I on an 8086 with external HD (10 megs). Civ II on a 386/16 with small HD (1.2 gig?). Had to buy a cd-rom for that rig just to play. Both were below minimum manual-stated requirements; both handled their version of Civ quite well, although Savegames had to be handled to keep disk-space open. Sid has always been a very friendly designer in terms of machine capability. It's not the graphics that matter, its the game! Note: the 386 would not handle diplomacy screens and Wonder movies, but both can be turned off.No matter where you go, there you are. - Buckaroo Banzai
"I played it [Civilization] for three months and then realised I hadn't done any work. In the end, I had to delete all the saved files and smash the CD." Iain Banks, author
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P166 for Civ2
386sx (no 387 FPP, 20MHz, 4MB RAM, 80MB FDD) for Civ1
Civ2 came in March 1996, and Pentiums had been out for some time then. I got my P166 in october that year, and it was a pretty top-of-the-line machine at that time (32MB RAM, 1,2 GB disk). Everybody laughed at me, said that my memory purchase was overkill. Then just a few month later, P-MMX came, and I felt like I was cheated.
These days, my handheld outperforms my Civ1 computer, and both my laptops can run in wide rings around the Civ2 PC.
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