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  • Culture and nationality !

    again from PCGamer
    quote:

    Each of these improvement[he talks about wonders] increases your "culture", which is a new and essential goal of Civ3...

    A high culture standing certainly has a vital in-game impact - it gives you a greater sphere of ifluence for your civilization (increasing the view radius by one critical square in each direction)....

    Workers can be captured by enemies but their national loyalty may undermine the attacking power's position - if you've captured a number of Britons, and then try to raise the German flag above them, you're likely to encounter resistance and possibly revolts. Also, if your civilization has a high culture rating and is defeated by a lower-culture, heavily military organization, it's going to be much harder to keep your people from revolting



  • #2
    The news here is about the workers being captured. I am not sure whether this refers to workers in cities or worker units.

    Either way, this inclusion of culture concept is excellent.
    Rome rules

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    • #3
      Most liklely the worker in the city. I think the magazine is talking about when you capture a city (raising the german flag)

      ------------------
      Its okay to smile; you're in America now
      "Everything for the State, nothing against the State, nothing outside the State" - Benito Mussolini

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      • #4
        quote:

        Originally posted by Lawrence of Arabia on 05-01-2001 06:46 PM
        Most liklely the worker in the city.


        I think so too.
        Rome rules

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        • #5
          no no, he talks about the workers units that do the terraforming

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          • #6
            How would the attacking power have his position undermined by that sort of worker? It sounds like city workers to me. Are you sure Markos?
            Long time member @ Apolyton
            Civilization player since the dawn of time

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            • #7
              If it is referring to workers in cities, then it also seems to imply that there's a difference between conquering a city and incorporating it into your civ completely (or attempting to do so). Or maybe I'm making a jump to conclusions

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              • #8
                Smells a little bit like the slavery concept of CtP. I didn't like that. Anyway, to produce a worker, you lose 1 or 2 citizens of the city you built it in. So, when a worker is captured, it is like the enemy stole one or two units from your city too.

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                • #9
                  I don't think that slavery or similar concepts is involved in this.

                  Usually when I bought an enemy city in Civ2 and often in SMAC I'd get a free worker/former because you also get every unit within one-square radius of the town. Captured workers makes sense from that idea because the workers are in the fields and suddenly their city is captured. Now as a worker, what would you do? Run away to rejoin your city or become part of the conquering civ? This is where the culture rating comes in.

                  I think revolting workers makes sense, its one of those little details that makes the game more interesting and involved.
                  [This message has been edited by SerapisIV (edited May 02, 2001).]

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                  • #10
                    you seem to have hit a point there serapis.

                    The worker unit might also be able to incite revolts of a kind... make gurrilas... or create disoreder in the city.
                    Without music life would be a mistake - Nietzsche
                    So you think you can tell heaven from hell?
                    rocking on everest

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                    • #11
                      I don't think that guerrilas play a role in this. I think its more of a choice of which Civ the worker wants to be a part of when a city is captured, remain loyal to its momma civ or become part of the conquerers. If it remains part of the momma civ, the unit would most likely make a bee-line for friendly territory. About the disorder in the captured city, well thats already happened after its capture in addition, the worker doesn't have to be based in the city that was taken over, just working nearby

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                      • #12
                        High culture, low culture and nationality Absolutely amazing!

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                        • #13
                          that article really had a lot of confusing and contradicting stuff in it.. but i think it mean workers in the city.

                          you know the little heads that represent your population in civ2? well i think thats what their refurring to.. technically they are workers since they make your units for you.. but im not sure.. does this make any sence at all to any of you?

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                          • #14
                            There is a worker unit which does all the conventioanl tasks of former settler except city founding. So I think the "worker" means the worker unit.

                            If that meant workers inside the city, Firaxis would have said that "you captured number of british cities,....... they will revolt".
                            [This message has been edited by Youngsun (edited May 03, 2001).]

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                            • #15
                              Perhaps this is like slavery, which would be cool,
                              like how the Japanese enslaved ordinary people from british colonies in Singapore etc (don't quote me on the history)
                              These 'slaves' could have to be imprisoned, or guarded maybe..

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