I think this ought to be the final word on the subject, since Soren was the one that wrote the AI....
Originally posted by Soren Johnson Firaxis
The way corruption works is one of the biggest changes from Civ2, so I am not surprised that people are having difficulties adjusting. Under this new system, you _cannot_ control ever city in the world and expect them to still function. Thus, it takes a slightly different approach than Civ2 (or Civ1 or SMAC) required. Simply put, more cities is not always better.
There are two factors affecting corruption levels: distance from capitol (like Civ2) and number of cities (unlike Civ2).
You can fight the distance factor by:
- moving your capitol to a more optimal location
- building a Courthouse in the city
- building a Forbidden Palace near your corrupt cities
- switching to a less-corrupt government type
- being connected to your capitol via road/harbor/airport
- putting your city in "We Love the King Day" (works for shields only...)
You can fight the number of cities factor by:
- lowering the difficulty level
- building a Courthouse in the city
- building a Forbidden Palace in any city
- playing a civilization with the Commercial bonus
- switching to a less-corrupt government type
- putting your city in "We Love the King Day" (works for shields only...)
and finally...
- emphasize building a few great cities instead of a bunch of puny ones
and also...
- think about razing cities when you capture them (although be careful... you might create an enemy for the rest of the game...)
Hope that helps.
The way corruption works is one of the biggest changes from Civ2, so I am not surprised that people are having difficulties adjusting. Under this new system, you _cannot_ control ever city in the world and expect them to still function. Thus, it takes a slightly different approach than Civ2 (or Civ1 or SMAC) required. Simply put, more cities is not always better.
There are two factors affecting corruption levels: distance from capitol (like Civ2) and number of cities (unlike Civ2).
You can fight the distance factor by:
- moving your capitol to a more optimal location
- building a Courthouse in the city
- building a Forbidden Palace near your corrupt cities
- switching to a less-corrupt government type
- being connected to your capitol via road/harbor/airport
- putting your city in "We Love the King Day" (works for shields only...)
You can fight the number of cities factor by:
- lowering the difficulty level
- building a Courthouse in the city
- building a Forbidden Palace in any city
- playing a civilization with the Commercial bonus
- switching to a less-corrupt government type
- putting your city in "We Love the King Day" (works for shields only...)
and finally...
- emphasize building a few great cities instead of a bunch of puny ones
and also...
- think about razing cities when you capture them (although be careful... you might create an enemy for the rest of the game...)
Hope that helps.
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