I have a question about an unusual situation that occured to me (for the first time in MANY games).
I was playing India and building the Oracle; the AI running the Sumerians was also building the Oracle. Somehow, the AI got a three turn headstart on it and that left me to play 'catch-up. Despite my best efforts to pass him, I couldn't 'beat the clock'.
Both the AI and I ended up with exactly one turn left to complete the wonder. (I know because I was using espionage to keep track of their progress; and try to speed up my production so I could 'win').
Both civs were going to build the same wonder one the same turn. I thought I was screwed; I figured the AI would build the wonder, and I would have a huge waste of shields. Luckily, I got the Oracle and the AI had a huge waste to deal with.
Question : Does anyone have a definite knowledge of how a situation like this arbitrated ? If two civs are both building the same wonder, and they are set to complete it on the same turn, how does the game determine which civ gets it ?
I was playing India and building the Oracle; the AI running the Sumerians was also building the Oracle. Somehow, the AI got a three turn headstart on it and that left me to play 'catch-up. Despite my best efforts to pass him, I couldn't 'beat the clock'.
Both the AI and I ended up with exactly one turn left to complete the wonder. (I know because I was using espionage to keep track of their progress; and try to speed up my production so I could 'win').
Both civs were going to build the same wonder one the same turn. I thought I was screwed; I figured the AI would build the wonder, and I would have a huge waste of shields. Luckily, I got the Oracle and the AI had a huge waste to deal with.
Question : Does anyone have a definite knowledge of how a situation like this arbitrated ? If two civs are both building the same wonder, and they are set to complete it on the same turn, how does the game determine which civ gets it ?
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