I've wondered this since I started reading threads, especially the REX stuff.
How far apart is 3 apart?
City-1-2-3-City? (Build AFTER 3rd tile)
or
City-1-2-City? (Build ON 3rd tile)
I normally build AFTER the 3rd tile, or even AFTER the 4th, and only ON the 3rd if cramped or if I've just got a few tiles I can't reach before the coast, especially if there's whales, fish, or a resource on land beyond current reach.
So, when you say build X tiles apart, does that mean ON X or AFTER X?
Thanks in advance!
How far apart is 3 apart?
City-1-2-3-City? (Build AFTER 3rd tile)
or
City-1-2-City? (Build ON 3rd tile)
I normally build AFTER the 3rd tile, or even AFTER the 4th, and only ON the 3rd if cramped or if I've just got a few tiles I can't reach before the coast, especially if there's whales, fish, or a resource on land beyond current reach.
So, when you say build X tiles apart, does that mean ON X or AFTER X?
Thanks in advance!
I guess you would say it's not apart from itself at all, but to me that sounds like 0 tiles apart. Then, in a logical progression, the tiles right next to a given tile are 1 tile apart from it, and so on. The "distance" given is from the center of one tile to another. OTOH, most people would probably say that the distance between Canada and the US is 0, the minimum distacne between their borders, not the distance between their geographic centers. In fact, when we talk about the distance between two things, we usually mean the minimum distance between a point on one and a point on the other. So I guess your understanding is more intuitive, after all. It's just that in Civ III, space is divided up into discrete units, so tiles are better conceptually represented as points with paths between them, which are represented graphically by contact with other tiles (come to think of it, I wonder how accurately that might desribe how the program actually stores map data. Nah, it's probably more of a matrix, without links to neighboring tiles stored as part of a tile's data).
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