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  • Hullo fellas

    Hullo chaps

    First, thanks to all the people who made those guides and great threads in the "Must Read Threads" bit. Civ 3 is great for me because it doesn't go into all that silly science fiction nonsense. Trouble is my Civ3 scoreboard reads "Diplomatic - Lost", "Military - Lost", "Rank - Lost" and so on and so on, for ages, and Chieftain is so easy that it's dull. Anyway I put all this down to being completely stupid. It's not as if I'm new at this, I played Civ1 and 2, and Alpha Centauri (hated it, what a chore) and CTP1 was OK.

    Anyway just some quick questions;
    Is automating your workers ever a good idea?
    What about automating your citizens' moods?
    Can a leader be created from a defending unit, or does it have to be an attacking unit?

    Buhbye
    Ian
    Last edited by Twelvebottoms; November 21, 2003, 02:35.
    The Future of Sim Racing

  • #2
    Re: Hullo fellas

    Originally posted by Twelvebottoms

    Is automating your workers ever a good idea?
    What about automating your citizens' moods?
    If you use the governor to automate these things it can speed up the game, however the AI's idea of optimal resource allocation within city radius when adjusting citizen moods and AI's decision on best usage of workers may not match your own. I prefer to manage my moods and workers manually. One exception is during periods of anarchy I will allow gov. to manage moods until anarchy has ended.

    Can a leader be created from a defending unit, or does it have to be an attacking unit?
    I've seen the AI get a leader after I've attacked him. It hasnt happened for me yet.

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    • #3
      Thanks, the best thing about a city governer managing the moods seems to be that there is never civil disorder (as far as I can see on Regent) and whether there are scientist, taxmen or Elvis depends on the science and luxury sliders (still working out that mathematical gubbins).

      I guess I'd learn more if I manually controlled workers... just got to stop being lazy.

      Well I've played about 10 games of civ3 so far (won only 1) and never seen an elite produce a great leader while defending, which is either very unlucky or The Rule.

      Thanks
      Last edited by Twelvebottoms; November 21, 2003, 02:40.
      The Future of Sim Racing

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      • #4
        Automating workers is a terrible idea. They run around, backwards and forwards, and never do things in the right order. If you want it done right do it yourself.

        Governors are mostly OK for citizen moods but not anything else. I use this a lot and manage city growth by managing all my workers so that I can limit how much surplus food a city has.

        Yes you can get great leaders from defending units. The problem is that if the attacker has more units and keeps coming your GL can get killed before you can use him.

        Your golden age can also be triggered if your UU wins a defensive battle. Nice if you want it, not nice if you only have three cities and are still under a despotism government.
        Never give an AI an even break.

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        • #5


          Originally posted by CerberusIV
          Your golden age can also be triggered if your UU wins a defensive battle. Nice if you want it, not nice if you only have three cities and are still under a despotism government.

          That's happened to me often. I don't think I've had a timely golden age yet
          The Future of Sim Racing

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          • #6
            Originally posted by Twelvebottoms





            That's happened to me often. I don't think I've had a timely golden age yet
            Me neither. It's hard because even if you do everything you can to avoid war someone always picks a fight with you. If you have an ancient UU and he's defending a city and wins..........
            signature not visible until patch comes out.

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            • #7
              I end up with huge number of captured workers during a game, and this is after having built quite a few. There comes a certain point where I automate them in order not to have to deal with each one individually. That said, I don’t think I’ve automated a single worker before the end of the Ancient Age, and as often than not, much later.
              "Guess what? I got a fever! And the only prescription is ... more cow bell!"

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              • #8
                Re: Hullo fellas

                My 2 pence:

                Originally posted by Twelvebottoms
                Is automating your workers ever a good idea?
                In practice I never automate Workers, because:
                1) they can be tremendously useful when they develop what you need developed (i.e. specific instructions), and
                2) they can and do screw things up royally when automated

                I'd rather turn them into citizens (or even radar towers) than automate them and see my mines irrigated!

                Originally posted by Twelvebottoms
                What about automating your citizens' moods?
                Useful as a time-saver only. There are few times when the governor can do things more effectively than a player can, unless the player lacks the time or desire to micromanage.

                Originally posted by Twelvebottoms
                Can a leader be created from a defending unit, or does it have to be an attacking unit?
                Any victorious elite unit can generate a Great Leader. Defending ones are vulnerable to follow-on attacks though, so you may never see one that is generated in an earlier battle.
                There are a number of good threads on 'Poly that spell out the probabilities of generating a Great Leader... they can be quite rare if your Civ does not have a Military trait.

                A final thought: In a large-number-of-turns game like Civ one winning strategy is to gain some small advantage over your opponents every turn; this leads to a big cumulative advantage over many turns. One way to gain an incremental advantage every turn is to manually manage your towns to squeeze those extra few shields or gold out of your towns each turn - this leads to earlier improvements, troops, techs, etc. Thoughtful direct management should always add up to better production than a governor will give you.

                Best of luck, bvc

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                • #9
                  Thanks guys. I suppose I'm going to have to slog it out and make the mistakes until Knowing What To Do will become second nature, a bit like in my sim racing in Grand Prix Legends etc. Also I'll try a militaristic civ, At the moment I'm leaning towards religious / industrious.

                  The Future of Sim Racing

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                  • #10
                    Re: Hullo fellas

                    I'll add my $0.02 as well:

                    Originally posted by Twelvebottoms
                    Anyway just some quick questions;
                    Is automating your workers ever a good idea?
                    Generally no. I used to automate my workers at the time of RRs. Then I began automating workers after my RRs were all completed (i.e., for pollution control, mainly). Now I pretty much never automate at all -- before RRs I want to direct which tiles get improved when, and which forests get chopped at which times. With Steam Power, I want to lay rails according to my priorities. After RRs, I want to be able to change tile improvements as appropriate (i.e., mayvbe a city requires a little less food and I can mine over some current irrigation). Once the empire is up and stable, I just leave workers in various sized stacks to deal with pollution, in each case stacks of the right size to deal with pollution in one turn, regardless of the terrain hit.

                    Automating will do less harm the later in the game you do it -- and you should probably be sure to use SHFT-A automation which automates workers but orders them not to change existing improvements, otherwise the automation will send workers to irrigate over your mines, even in cities without any need for food.

                    What about automating your citizens' moods?
                    Much less harmful than automated workers. I did this pretty frequently in PTW, conscious that I was giving away a relatively small amount of gold or science beakers available to me if I managed each city but happily doing so for the ease of never worrying about moods. With C3C, I am finding that the greater power of the old specialists, and more importantly the power of the new specialists, means I am managing almost every city myself -- I just feel that the pendulum has swung far enough for me that I have more to lose by automating than I have to gain with ease of use / less micromanagement.

                    Can a leader be created from a defending unit, or does it have to be an attacking unit?
                    bvoncranium answered this, but I can add the exact probabilities. Leader-eligible units on the atack have a 1/16 chance of generating a leader, increased to a 1/12 chance if you've built the Heroic Epic small wonder. On defense the odds are halved: 1/32 and 1/24, repsectively. I presume those odds haven't changed with C3C. C3C introduced the concept of a scientific great leader which can be generated each time you are the first to "discover" a technology. Reportedly the chances for an SGL are 3% for most civs, 5% for scientific civs.

                    Catt

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                    • #11
                      I tend to do a bit of both, if i playing on a world with lots of jungle. i will atuo (clear jungle) some workers to handle that to reduce the chances of disease, AS i complete my road and then rail network . I will slowly automate more and more workers. Always leaving enough to work on new citys as they built . I only ever do SHIFT A auto as well so as not to change work already done.

                      Eventually everything will be either mined/Rail or irrigated/rail depending on needs.

                      I leave my workers the nauto to keep pollutino under control.

                      I usually end up with well over 100 workers by game end.
                      GM of MAFIA #40 ,#41, #43, #45,#47,#49-#51,#53-#58,#61,#68,#70, #71

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                      • #12
                        Oh, and even if you do automate, use Shift-A as Catt noted above. And take them out of automation before you go to war. While a good number flee to cities to avoid attack, some just don’t seem to understand that they are in harm’s way and get snatched up by fast movers. It is quite aggravating to end up yelling in vain at some idiot worker who is moving in an inexplicably dangerous path along a hostile border.
                        "Guess what? I got a fever! And the only prescription is ... more cow bell!"

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                        • #13
                          TB, you're original questions have been well answered. NOW, let's get to the core issue, making you a kick-butt Civer.

                          First off, post a save from around 1000BC, and perhaps another from 10AD.

                          Next, I'd like you to try a new game as the Egyptians. Some of the new civs in C3C may actually be better, but Egypt is the civ most of the posters here are most familiar with and feel is the best overall, especially for newer players.

                          Next, a couple of questions:

                          1. How far apart are you placing your cities?
                          2. How many Workers do you have per city, especially in the early game (say, before 8-10 cities)?
                          The greatest delight for man is to inflict defeat on his enemies, to drive them before him, to see those dear to them with their faces bathed in tears, to bestride their horses, to crush in his arms their daughters and wives.

                          Duas uncias in puncta mortalis est.

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                          • #14
                            Hey wait a minute, I thought China was the civ most were familar with?

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                            • #15
                              Blimey, I didn't know about shift-A, will only use that if I really need to automate after building road, rail, mines and essential irrigation, from now on.

                              Theseus thanks, I'll get round to posting a savegame with Egypt at those times. I've got standard Civ3 with latest patch, by the way.

                              Well, I can't see much difference with my placement of cities between myself and the AI, although they seem to be able to move a spearman with settler into every nook and cranny annoyingly quickly. Perhaps I am just not maximising as best I can in the very ancient stage of the game.

                              I've been having about 4-5 workers at the stage of 8-10 cities, on average I think.

                              At the very beginning of the game I leave my city exposed and send the knuckle-dragger off up mountains looking for goodie huts, I figure that it's worth the risk
                              The Future of Sim Racing

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