A while back, some people referred to the logs they keep on their games. I've realized that my scribbled notes aren't telling me enough. Anyone have a log format they would be willing to share?
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Civ Log Wanted
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Civ Log Wanted
Civ2 Demo Game #1 City-Planner, President, Historian
Civ2 Demo Game #2 Minister of War,President, Minister of Trade, Vice President, City-Planner
Civ2 Demo Game #3 President, Minister of War, President
Civ2 Demo Game #4 Despot, City-Planner, ConsulTags: None
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Strange, I seem to recall several people offerring their logs back many months. No one will save me from reinventing the wheel now?
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Proud participant in GameLeague...
Proud Warrior of the O.W.L. Alliance...Civ2 Demo Game #1 City-Planner, President, Historian
Civ2 Demo Game #2 Minister of War,President, Minister of Trade, Vice President, City-Planner
Civ2 Demo Game #3 President, Minister of War, President
Civ2 Demo Game #4 Despot, City-Planner, Consul
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I guess not!
CB...I'll be taking a vacation the last two weeks of August and need a replacement in my Diplo game...let me know (ICQ) if you're interested....
Good luck on the log.
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Bring it!
"Do not act as if you would live ten thousand years. Death hangs over you. While you live, while it is in your power, be good." Marcus Aurelius (Meditations)Life and death is a grave matter;
all things pass quickly away.
Each of you must be completely alert;
never neglectful, never indulgent.
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To my knowledge people simply use a spreadsheet with the demographics as a gamelog. If you do it consistenly every 5 turns or so (and keep at it) you can learn a lot about your own and other people's playing style.
What I would really want is a real log like they had in Civ1 (Civ1 didn't include demographics though, it was only a history log). But I still find it strange that they didn't include it in Civ2, programming wise it's quite simple.
Maybe it's time we launched a petition to release the source for Civ2?Skeptics should forego any thought of convincing the unconvinced that we hold the torch of truth illuminating the darkness. A more modest, realistic, and achievable goal is to encourage the idea that one may be mistaken. Doubt is humbling and constructive; it leads to rational thought in weighing alternatives and fully reexamining options, and it opens unlimited vistas.
Elie A. Shneour Skeptical Inquirer
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Cavebear - as in most things, different strokes for different folks. Here's how I do it:
http://apolyton.net/forums/Forum3/HTML/000748.html
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