Re: War and reality
There's a limit to how quickly an army can train draftees and have them be of much use. For that matter, just equipping half the population for a war all at once would be a serious problem. I think having a limit on how many troops can be drafted per turn is a good idea to reflect that. As for the different limits for different types of governments, democractic societies do tend to have more organized resistance to a draft unless the situation is pretty critical. Viewing the draft limit as an average (thereby avoiding the complexity of having the draft limit be higher under some circumstances than under others), the system doesn't seem clearly unreasonable.
Regarding the benefits of pop rushing, I suspect that morale has a higher effect on job performance for more highly skilled jobs than for grunt labor. Would you really want to drive a car built by people who were being "worked to death"?
Nathan
Originally posted by GePap
An interesting point is that the draft limits make little sense to me. The gov should be able to draft as many citizens as possible, though at the cost of them not creating tax revenue and production in their cities. Also, the number of shields gotten from working the population to death in despotic governments should go up with time (or at least get the bonuses from industry). working a thousand people to death in a factory will get me a lot more built than workin the same one thousand to death in old furnaces to equip my legions.
An interesting point is that the draft limits make little sense to me. The gov should be able to draft as many citizens as possible, though at the cost of them not creating tax revenue and production in their cities. Also, the number of shields gotten from working the population to death in despotic governments should go up with time (or at least get the bonuses from industry). working a thousand people to death in a factory will get me a lot more built than workin the same one thousand to death in old furnaces to equip my legions.
Regarding the benefits of pop rushing, I suspect that morale has a higher effect on job performance for more highly skilled jobs than for grunt labor. Would you really want to drive a car built by people who were being "worked to death"?
Nathan
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