Dominae, you only think you ruined War Chariots' ability to be effective. I'll wait until later to post screenshots, but as of 330 AD, Babylon is gone and Germany and the Zulus are down to a single city each. (Edit: Germany also has a couple island cities I didn't know about at the time of the peace talks.) Next up: a ROP with Japan to get in good striking range of America's heartland. After all, I still have 17 swordsmen, 20 horsemen, and 82 war chariots to use. (I'd have a lot more if impi weren't so good at killing WCs and horsemen.)
The down side is that I haven't done any serious research in centuries, so even after extorting the Germans and Zulus, I'm behind everyone but America in tech. (The reason America is my next target is that they're the only other civ on the continent that doesn't have Feudalism yet.) I also don't have a single library, aqueduct, marketplace, or harbor, although I've recently started on some.
This game is completely backward from how I normally play, focusing so heavily on the military and so little on economics. But it's been interesting.
The down side is that I haven't done any serious research in centuries, so even after extorting the Germans and Zulus, I'm behind everyone but America in tech. (The reason America is my next target is that they're the only other civ on the continent that doesn't have Feudalism yet.) I also don't have a single library, aqueduct, marketplace, or harbor, although I've recently started on some.
This game is completely backward from how I normally play, focusing so heavily on the military and so little on economics. But it's been interesting.
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