There have been some questions and debates about the productivity of workers that are captured by industrious civs. If the Chinese capture an Indian worker, does he work like an Indian or like a Chinese? Likewise, if the French capture a Chinese worker, does he work like the French?
I just completed a battery of tests. The results? A very simple rule: all captured workers, no matter whether their civ was industrious or not, produce at exactly half as much as your own industrious workers.
Thus, to build a railroad after discovering Steam Power, you need any one of the following combinations to complete the railroad in one turn:
That can be pretty helpful since, for example, if you have two foreign workers on a tile, and it shows that they will complete the railroad next turn, you'll know that another foreign worker won't help: you'll need to add either one national or two foreigns to get it done on the current turn. But if the tile has three foreign workers already, then you need only one more foreign.
Hope this helps some people.
Lib
I just completed a battery of tests. The results? A very simple rule: all captured workers, no matter whether their civ was industrious or not, produce at exactly half as much as your own industrious workers.
Thus, to build a railroad after discovering Steam Power, you need any one of the following combinations to complete the railroad in one turn:
- 2 national workers
- 1 national worker and 2 foreign workers
- 4 foreign workers
That can be pretty helpful since, for example, if you have two foreign workers on a tile, and it shows that they will complete the railroad next turn, you'll know that another foreign worker won't help: you'll need to add either one national or two foreigns to get it done on the current turn. But if the tile has three foreign workers already, then you need only one more foreign.
Hope this helps some people.
Lib
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