Large map, 2nd level difficulty, lots of barbarian activity, normal map settings, 8 civs, I chose the French.
Got into an early war with the Germans, found the AI to be quite resourceful at waging war although peace demands were a tad outrageous when he was down to just 3 cities. Taking cities is much harder than in previous Civ games -- even though I was technologically advanced and ended up kicking their butt with swordmen since I had iron and he didn't, I couldn't locate a horse resource to build up chariots and horsemen. It is now 1000 AD and I've got about 15 cities (10 of which are 6+ pop), I still have no contact with the other 6 civs and am fearful that they have been trading tech and will kick my arse soon. Explored the rest of the map and found a horse resource so I'm happy that at least I'll be able to build knights real soon. Terrain on my island is VERY mountainous which even with fast workers (industrious) makes building roads to resources quite difficult. I made the mistake of shooting towards Republic in the tech tree and doing all the 4 optional ancient era techs (horseback riding, literature, monarchy, and republic). I have temples and libraries in most of my cities in addition to the pyramids and Oracle so at this point am probably looking for a cultural or diplomatic victory until I can assess my tech situation.
Love how the barbarians really keep after you, the game interface is great and easy to jump into. AI waging war is not as predictable as you have grown accustomed to and doesn't always make a beeline for the least defended city realitivily close by. Altogether I'm impressed especially at this difficulty. Governors manage civil unrest for you (which is great!) but get accustomed to alot more of it (especially if you are in a Republic!)
needless to say-- I'm VERY tired at work today....
Got into an early war with the Germans, found the AI to be quite resourceful at waging war although peace demands were a tad outrageous when he was down to just 3 cities. Taking cities is much harder than in previous Civ games -- even though I was technologically advanced and ended up kicking their butt with swordmen since I had iron and he didn't, I couldn't locate a horse resource to build up chariots and horsemen. It is now 1000 AD and I've got about 15 cities (10 of which are 6+ pop), I still have no contact with the other 6 civs and am fearful that they have been trading tech and will kick my arse soon. Explored the rest of the map and found a horse resource so I'm happy that at least I'll be able to build knights real soon. Terrain on my island is VERY mountainous which even with fast workers (industrious) makes building roads to resources quite difficult. I made the mistake of shooting towards Republic in the tech tree and doing all the 4 optional ancient era techs (horseback riding, literature, monarchy, and republic). I have temples and libraries in most of my cities in addition to the pyramids and Oracle so at this point am probably looking for a cultural or diplomatic victory until I can assess my tech situation.
Love how the barbarians really keep after you, the game interface is great and easy to jump into. AI waging war is not as predictable as you have grown accustomed to and doesn't always make a beeline for the least defended city realitivily close by. Altogether I'm impressed especially at this difficulty. Governors manage civil unrest for you (which is great!) but get accustomed to alot more of it (especially if you are in a Republic!)
needless to say-- I'm VERY tired at work today....
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