Rome entered the modern era in AD 1325 with a lead of six mandatory technologies: Electronics, and Refining and its descendent technologies. However, Persia had Fascism and some of the others had Espionage, neither of which Rome had bothered to acquire. Rome had very briefly gotten its technological pace down to four turns per technology, but Computers would take six. The discovery of Motorized Transportation had brought a scientific great leader, Rome's first of the game, who was waiting to be put to work - probably to build the SETI program in a city with relatively high income potential but relatively low production.
In the war Rome had started to provide a military distraction for its rivals, Persia captured the five Carthaginian cities previously held by the Germans. The Celts were making major inroads in northern Germany, having captured three of Germany's eight core cities.
At that point, Caesar saw the light: in vino veritas. Rome couuld build a city next to Berlin, see to it that Germany fell (or at least that its capital did), and take over Germany's role as the world's leading supplier of wines. Rome arranged a Right of Passage agreement with the Celts and dispatched a settler with a heavy escort of infantry and guerillas and, in 1330, founded the city of Treveri. Rome's culture was gaining ground rapidly, so Caesar hoped his new town could fend off foreign cultural influences
[At that point, I ran into a quirk of game mechanics that I've never seen before. Note how Berlin's cultural radius creates an isolated two-tile pocket of German culture southeast of Treveri even though the pocket is surrounded by Roman and Celtic territory. I've always wondered whether that could happen.]
In the war Rome had started to provide a military distraction for its rivals, Persia captured the five Carthaginian cities previously held by the Germans. The Celts were making major inroads in northern Germany, having captured three of Germany's eight core cities.
At that point, Caesar saw the light: in vino veritas. Rome couuld build a city next to Berlin, see to it that Germany fell (or at least that its capital did), and take over Germany's role as the world's leading supplier of wines. Rome arranged a Right of Passage agreement with the Celts and dispatched a settler with a heavy escort of infantry and guerillas and, in 1330, founded the city of Treveri. Rome's culture was gaining ground rapidly, so Caesar hoped his new town could fend off foreign cultural influences
[At that point, I ran into a quirk of game mechanics that I've never seen before. Note how Berlin's cultural radius creates an isolated two-tile pocket of German culture southeast of Treveri even though the pocket is surrounded by Roman and Celtic territory. I've always wondered whether that could happen.]
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