Does anyone know how resources will work exactly? I saw some info that if you only have one resource square of say horses and you decide to trade it, then you won't have that resource. So is it that if you have one square you have unlimited amounts of that you do acquire like 1 horse per turn per horse squares you have and you can stockpile or trade set amounts or certain units require certain amounts?
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What I think has been said is that every city connected to a resource under your control can build units that need said resource. If you trade said resource then it is in effect the persons who you trade it to until you stop the trade.You will not be able to build units needing said resource unless you have another square of said resource. I dont think there are any amounts produced just the connection.The eagle soars and flies in peace and casts its shadow wide Across the land, across the seas, across the far-flung skies. The foolish think the eagle weak, and easy to bring to heel. The eagle's wings are silken, but its claws are made of steel. So be warned, you would-be hunters, attack it and you die, For the eagle stands for freedom, and that will always fly.
Darkness makes the sunlight so bright that our eyes blur with tears. Challenges remind us that we are capable of great things. Misery sharpens the edges of our joy. Life is hard. It is supposed to be.
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I think there are 24 resoucres (some sources say 30).
8 tile improvement resources (eg, wheat, +2 food)
8 luxury resources (elephants (ivory), dye, incense, silk)
8 strategic resources (iron, coal, horses, uranium)
1 strategic resource is enough to provide your civilization the ability to make as many units, improvements, and wonders in your civilization as you want - so long as there is an unbroken road/port/airport connection from that resource to your city. But you can exhaust resources, and the load on that resouce plays a part in the chance of exhaustion. But you can also find additional resources by working nearby squares - this is why some screenshots have 2 silk or 3 elephants near each other.
Further, these resources also have tile improvment abilities. 2 of the new screenshots at civ3.com (17, lower left of page 3, 20, upper right of page 4) have horses and silk being worked. Horses are +1 shield, +1 commerce, and silk seems to be +3 commerce.
Multiple sources of resources allows you to keep a strategic reserve. If you lose access to one source, you have another source. It also allows you to trade your surplus resources with other civilizations for their surplus resources, assuming the resouces are linked to the capitol. Horses for Iron? Dye for Incense?
Hmm... Paris, the capitol in these screenshots, has 6 commerce. +1 for road, +1 for river, +1 for republic... I'd hazard a guess that Commercial civs double commerce in their city squares, in addition to lower corruption.
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so, that means if you only have 1 iron, and you trade that for silk, you won't be able to make units that requires iron? and to be able to trade it, that resource needs to be connected by road to the capital of your empire?==========================
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Originally posted by Dida
so, that means if you only have 1 iron, and you trade that for silk, you won't be able to make units that requires iron? and to be able to trade it, that resource needs to be connected by road to the capital of your empire?The eagle soars and flies in peace and casts its shadow wide Across the land, across the seas, across the far-flung skies. The foolish think the eagle weak, and easy to bring to heel. The eagle's wings are silken, but its claws are made of steel. So be warned, you would-be hunters, attack it and you die, For the eagle stands for freedom, and that will always fly.
Darkness makes the sunlight so bright that our eyes blur with tears. Challenges remind us that we are capable of great things. Misery sharpens the edges of our joy. Life is hard. It is supposed to be.
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Originally posted by Shiva
Yep.==========================
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Originally posted by Dida
that means no other city might serve as trading port except the capital? that's so inaccurate, because New York is not the US capital, but I'm sure there is more trading going on in NY than the DC.
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Originally posted by Dida
that means no other city might serve as trading port except the capital? that's so inaccurate, because New York is not the US capital, but I'm sure there is more trading going on in NY than the DC.
This might be unrealistic at 2001 A.D., but remember that you'll start playing at 4000 B.C.. Makes sense to have it this way.
But more important, nobody's talking about "more trading" or less. This isn't about quantity, these are strategic resources. Due to their importance, the capital government gets involved. It's symbolically correct, strategically interesting and fun.
In modern times, I believe that improvements like airports and harbours will diminish the economic dependence towards the empire's capital.
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So if your capital is not connected to the resource, you cannot trade it. And if there is no possible route from your capital to another civilisations capital it can't be traded. It adds tactics and slows down ICS considerably considering that instead of settlers having to be built, you need workers to connect resources to your capital and other cities, and if the resource is outside of your cultural borders, you need the worker to build a colony on it. If the route is broken, you lose the resource.
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