Originally posted by Grumbold
EU is realtime, which blurs the boundaries a bit, but you only get one big chunk of cash per year to do most of your tasks with. It becomes second nature to think of it in terms of two or three small provincial upgrades per year, some more troops for the army or saving for 3 years to build one big improvement. With nothing going on in 80 percent of your territory you don't have to examine it all to see if it needs tweaking!
EU is realtime, which blurs the boundaries a bit, but you only get one big chunk of cash per year to do most of your tasks with. It becomes second nature to think of it in terms of two or three small provincial upgrades per year, some more troops for the army or saving for 3 years to build one big improvement. With nothing going on in 80 percent of your territory you don't have to examine it all to see if it needs tweaking!
-Scope: I´d prefer civ scope instead of just one period, if possible.
-EU Improvements are a bit limited. There are relatively few things you can do to improve your country. In that respect, ImperialismII was a tad better.
-Inflation model is wrong. To explain why would get very technical, but if you really want to know it, I will.
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