Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

We Love the ***** Days

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • #31
    When you raise the luxury rate, the people get happy. After they begin celebrating, you can lower the luxury rate a bit - Basically, the celebration causes more arrows to be produced; It is against this new total arrows that the lowered luxury rate is calculated. So, to make up some numbers for an example,

    City A produces 5 arrows with 5 citizens. At 10% luxury, this gives zero goblets. Nobody is cheered by this. You raise the luxury to 80% - 4 goblets result, making 3 citizens happy (with temple, etc). They celebrate!

    As a result of celebration, those 5 citizens grow to 6 and produce 12 arrows. You only need to keep 4 happy to prolong the celebration, which you can do by setting luxuries to 50%. At size 7, they produce 14 arrows - you can lower to luxury rate to 40% to keep the celebration going.

    The numbers are fishy in this example, but that is how it works.
    The first President of the first Apolyton Democracy Game (CivII, that is)

    The gift of speech is given to many,
    intelligence to few.

    Comment


    • #32
      Thanks, I understand now.

      I never realized the underlying mechanism, although I do fiddle with the luxury rate when I'm doing WL days. I tend to err on the side of too high though, because it's a waste to put luxury to (for example) 40% and have cities drop in and out of celebration. I'd rather go to 50% and keep them in it.

      Of course it's also a shame to have it higher than needed.

      Comment


      • #33
        Originally posted by Campo
        Of course it's also a shame to have it higher than needed.
        I try to keep it at 20% or so (in republic celebrate your cities then turn down the lux so the cities don't revolt).

        Comment


        • #34
          Your cities are celebrating at 20% luxury? I've never gotten widespread celebration at less than 30%, and it's more often 40% or 50%. And that's with HG plus Mich's and/or JSB. I wonder why the difference. I usually have temple, marketplace, and 3 trade routes per city by then.

          Comment


          • #35
            Nah, I celebrate at 30-40% but turn back down to 20 or 10 to keep citizens happy.

            Comment


            • #36
              Hello,

              It took me a while to finish the game I started following Scouse Gits' post about fundamentalist celebrations, but I must say that I am extremely impressed with the results.

              Playing on Emperor level, I was ready to start celebrating in 640 AD when the Statue of Liberty was finished. By that time I had secured my continent and filled it with 14 cities (minimum overlap). Infrastructure was limited to temples and marketplaces as I had concentrated on settlers, guards and caravans for the Great Library and Leonardo's Workshop.

              As soon as the Statue was finished, I sponsored a revolution in favour of Fundamentalism and set the luxury rate to 80 %. This was enough to throw almost all cities into party mood; in three minor cities I had to create entertainers to get them celebrating.

              There was one minor irritation at this point: Although the trade bonus had kicked in and the luxury rate was still at 80 % there was no additional happiness in my cities. I know that happy citizens beyond those needed for the celebration are important for scoring purposes only, but as a benevolent High Priest of my empire I want to see as many happy faces as possible!

              The good news was that my happy citizens stayed happy after I had reduced the luxury rate to 50 %, so I had created the self-sustaining celebration that I was looking for. After rushing marketplaces and banks in all my cities, I was able to lower the rate to 30 % and later (with stock exchanges) even to 20 %. In the end, the celebration created a net benefit of 60% more trade available for taxes and research.

              I know I could have improved things even further by sending out more caravans, but instead I decided to use the main advantage of Fundamentalism and went to war. In doing so I gave priority to well-developed areas, where cities immediately joined the party - after I had rebuilt the marketplace or bank, if my troops were careless enough to damage it.

              I believe the crucial mistake I made in my earlier post was to put all the "lesser" forms of government into one basket. (Can you say that in English?) The lack of unhappiness and corruption under Fundamentalism makes celebrations very worthwhile, and it's easy to imagine that under Communism's enhanced police powers, celebrations are only a little more difficult and (without the research penalty) certainly more profitable. I am still unsure about Monarchy. The Pyramids may overcome the size-3-limit for celebrations, but not the problem of corruption and lack of roads at the fringes of an expanding kingdom.

              Regards,
              Verrucosus

              Comment


              • #37
                Add one more convert!

                Did you get the happy wonders?

                Mike's provides 3g / city in tithe -- a wonder indeed.

                Glad you enjoyed it ..........

                SG[1]
                "Our words are backed by empty wine bottles! - SG(2)
                "One of our Scouse Gits is missing." - -Jrabbit

                Comment


                • #38
                  Slightly surprised you went for the Library - I think the consensus on these boards is that it hinders your research more than it helps -- any comment?

                  SG[1]
                  "Our words are backed by empty wine bottles! - SG(2)
                  "One of our Scouse Gits is missing." - -Jrabbit

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    There is one place where the Library is OK...
                    Namely Alexandria in the Rome scenario
                    Aux bords mystérieux du monde occidental

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Being only an infrequent visitor here, I have not taken notice of the forums' consensus on this respect. I suspect the notion of the Great Library hindering research is explained in one of those threads about research costs I have not studied yet.

                      My decision to build the Great Library was made when I realised that I was alone on my continent. My overall objective was to get Democracy, the Statue of Liberty and, as a result, access to Fundamentalism as soon as possible. Democracy requires Banking and Invention, two lines of research which do not have too much in common. My first plan was to go for Banking first and trade the researches acquired along the way for those on the Wheel-Invention-line. However, by 2000 BC it was clear that there were no continental neighbours to trade with. At that time, I considered waiting for Trade and building Marco Polo's Embassy, but Literacy came up earlier so I went for the Great Library instead. It saved me from researching the early part of the technological line of research towards Invention and it gave me quick access to religious and naval advances which I had neglected completely.

                      Being able to build the Statue of Liberty in the 600s was a record for me, so I considered myself rather lucky in that game as far as research is concerned. Of course, I shall be glad to stand corrected (because that would allow me to build it even faster in my next game).

                      Verrucosus

                      P.S.: I didn't build them, but I made a point of capturing both Michelangelo and Bach very soon. Afterwards my empire was a tax-free zone for quite some time.

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        If you don't know why, ask DaveV
                        Aux bords mystérieux du monde occidental

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          More seriously, Verrucosus
                          Have you read the 2 threads started by samson, named 'the cost of research explained' and 'the key to tech gifting'?
                          Someone has bumped them recently and you can find them easily, close to the top of this forum.
                          THOSE THREADS ARE WORTH READING AND REREADING for anyone willing to master research in civ2.
                          To make it short:
                          1)The more techs you own, the more costly the next one will be to research (and the GL often gives you unneeded techs that hinder your own research).
                          2) You can find out exactly how many beakers you need to next tech (very helpful if you use one time trade bonuses for research).
                          3) If you gift techs to your 'keyciv' (purple if you are supreme), you may minimize the cost of your research).
                          Aux bords mystérieux du monde occidental

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            :quote: Although the trade bonus had kicked in and the luxury rate was still at 80 % there was no additional happiness in my cities. :unquote:

                            Nothing in the manual or Civilopedia will tell you this, but any luxuries beyond two per citizen have no effect. This is important because it can make it difficult for cities with an odd number of citizens to celebrate; they'll need a happy-making Wonder (not a content-making Wonder), a courthouse under democracy, or those lovely outraged citizens.

                            :quote: In the end, the celebration created a net benefit of 60% more trade available for taxes and research.:unquote:

                            I don't see how this could be. Let's assume that celebration increases trade under fundy or commie by about 80% (one-trade squares increase by 100%, while multi-trade squares increase by 50% or less). Then even if you can maintain celebration with as little as 20% devoted to luxuries, your non-luxury trade is still only 180% x 80%, or 144%. So it seems to me that the greatest increase you could possible hope for is about 44%. If you need 50% luxuries, then you'd actually be reducing your non-luxury trade (180% x 50% = 90%). It's not that I don't think celebration under fundy/commie would be useful, but I think it must be far less valuable than this thread seems to indicate.

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Verrucosus
                              ... Afterwards my empire was a tax-free zone for quite some time.
                              [IMHO]

                              AAAAAaaaaaaargh!
                              Don't forget that in Fundy not only is the Science rate capped at 50% effective (you can push the slider further, but it does not contribute anything), but you only get 50% of the Science you research. this makes the maximum research rate under Fundy 25%!!! With this in mind, my strategy is to set the Science rate never above 10% (normally 0% with a couple of Eins in one of my larger cities). This has a number of side effects.
                              1. All research is performed by Caravans and Diplomats
                              2. Marco's is a very desirable Wonder
                              3. Absolutely no Science improvements need ever be built - and those captured can be instantly turned into Gold
                              You do not need to be ahead in technology if you can field ten identical units for each one of theirs. The AI cannot mount a convincing attack in Democracy (?at all?) and any civ not in Demo can be bought....
                              Fundamentalism - even celebrating Fundamentalism - does not think about AC -- only Total Conversion to The Faith!
                              * Peals of mad cackles of laughter to a background of Bach Toccatas *

                              [/IMHO]

                              SG[1]
                              "Our words are backed by empty wine bottles! - SG(2)
                              "One of our Scouse Gits is missing." - -Jrabbit

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                Originally posted by debeest
                                I don't see how this could be. Let's assume that celebration increases trade under fundy or commie by about 80% (one-trade squares increase by 100%, while multi-trade squares increase by 50% or less). Then even if you can maintain celebration with as little as 20% devoted to luxuries, your non-luxury trade is still only 180% x 80%, or 144%. So it seems to me that the greatest increase you could possible hope for is about 44%. If you need 50% luxuries, then you'd actually be reducing your non-luxury trade (180% x 50% = 90%). It's not that I don't think celebration under fundy/commie would be useful, but I think it must be far less valuable than this thread seems to indicate.
                                Your calculations omit the enhancement of the value of trade routes to and from the celebrating cities. I would say that 60% was close to a theoretical maximum - I would normally reckon on no more than a 50% increase, but I tend to play fairly ICSish and verrucosus seems to have adopted a more perfectionist style which might have allowed even more advantage ... I can't say for sure.

                                SG[1]
                                "Our words are backed by empty wine bottles! - SG(2)
                                "One of our Scouse Gits is missing." - -Jrabbit

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X