The point:
A) My cities, conquered or not, revert to the AI too easily. The rate of reversion is, in light of my efforts, frustratingly high.
B) Actions to prevent reversion do *not* have any effect. Reversion seems to be pre-determined at a given turn, despite alleged 'anti-reversion' actions by the human player.
The case:
Game 1) - Emperor, Large.
I am second in the Histograph, the Russians surpass me by 40%. I engage in a massive war, destroying 4/5 of the Russian civ. The war is on 1 continent (mine) only. Between me and the remaining Russian cities, a wasteland is filled by small temple-bought cities of mine. Below that lies Moscow and Kiev (both have wonders).
I take these cities. Moscow is size 43, 20-odd resisters. I rush in 25 units. I starve the population, railroad is connected to my lands, I rush a settler to reduce the population. End of turn. I rush another settler, move in 10 more units. End of turn. City reverts.
I travel back in time and this time land a lenghty and painful barrage on Moscow to kill the offending population. I take the city at size 19. This time I manage to retain the city longer. I starve it down to size 4 (2 russian, 1 iroquois, 1 persian, LOL don't ask the AI did that) and built a rushed temple. I rush a library after about 7 turns. In the size 4 city, 12 troops are stationed. The city reverts.
Once more I travel back in time (only 5 years this time). I rush the library 1 turn earlier. I move in another 10 troops. The city reverts.
Note that at the same time, the lame persians and babylonians manage to retain 7 russian cities, while having a much lower culture than I have. Doh!
Game 2) - Deity, Large
I am in the earliest stages of the game, all my energies focused on building settlers as efficiently as possible so that I can colonize the land before the AI (Russians and Germans) do. I manage to push my cities out to the Germans, at the cost of Russian territorial success. The Germans have higher culture than I do, but that can't be avoided at this stage.
My building orders are simple at this stage: 2 warriors, settler, temple, settler, worker, library. What more can I do to gain culture and expansion? I can't go any faster. In the time I build a warrior, the AI founds 2 cities...
My city of Avignon borders on the German lands, but not closely -the distance between German cities and Avignon is 4 squares at minimum. Avignon is right below Orleans, which in turn is right below Paris (capitol doh). East and West of Avignon I have my own cities as well.
Avignon has a temple and 2 warriors stationed at size 4. It has 110+ culture.
It reverts to the Germans. !?! I carefully pronounce WTF? and undertake time travel once more.
I rush a library 5 turns before Day Zero. I move in 2 extra troops (4 troops total, size 4 city). I raise luxuries, making ALL citizens happy.
It reverts at Day Zero.
---
I think this is unreasonable. I can't even hold on to my own cities, and I'm *not* neglecting culture -beelining for temples and libraries and rushbuilding them.
I am keen to hear some word of advice, but until I see the Light, I'll whine about it.
A) My cities, conquered or not, revert to the AI too easily. The rate of reversion is, in light of my efforts, frustratingly high.
B) Actions to prevent reversion do *not* have any effect. Reversion seems to be pre-determined at a given turn, despite alleged 'anti-reversion' actions by the human player.
The case:
Game 1) - Emperor, Large.
I am second in the Histograph, the Russians surpass me by 40%. I engage in a massive war, destroying 4/5 of the Russian civ. The war is on 1 continent (mine) only. Between me and the remaining Russian cities, a wasteland is filled by small temple-bought cities of mine. Below that lies Moscow and Kiev (both have wonders).
I take these cities. Moscow is size 43, 20-odd resisters. I rush in 25 units. I starve the population, railroad is connected to my lands, I rush a settler to reduce the population. End of turn. I rush another settler, move in 10 more units. End of turn. City reverts.
I travel back in time and this time land a lenghty and painful barrage on Moscow to kill the offending population. I take the city at size 19. This time I manage to retain the city longer. I starve it down to size 4 (2 russian, 1 iroquois, 1 persian, LOL don't ask the AI did that) and built a rushed temple. I rush a library after about 7 turns. In the size 4 city, 12 troops are stationed. The city reverts.
Once more I travel back in time (only 5 years this time). I rush the library 1 turn earlier. I move in another 10 troops. The city reverts.
Note that at the same time, the lame persians and babylonians manage to retain 7 russian cities, while having a much lower culture than I have. Doh!
Game 2) - Deity, Large
I am in the earliest stages of the game, all my energies focused on building settlers as efficiently as possible so that I can colonize the land before the AI (Russians and Germans) do. I manage to push my cities out to the Germans, at the cost of Russian territorial success. The Germans have higher culture than I do, but that can't be avoided at this stage.
My building orders are simple at this stage: 2 warriors, settler, temple, settler, worker, library. What more can I do to gain culture and expansion? I can't go any faster. In the time I build a warrior, the AI founds 2 cities...
My city of Avignon borders on the German lands, but not closely -the distance between German cities and Avignon is 4 squares at minimum. Avignon is right below Orleans, which in turn is right below Paris (capitol doh). East and West of Avignon I have my own cities as well.
Avignon has a temple and 2 warriors stationed at size 4. It has 110+ culture.
It reverts to the Germans. !?! I carefully pronounce WTF? and undertake time travel once more.
I rush a library 5 turns before Day Zero. I move in 2 extra troops (4 troops total, size 4 city). I raise luxuries, making ALL citizens happy.
It reverts at Day Zero.
---
I think this is unreasonable. I can't even hold on to my own cities, and I'm *not* neglecting culture -beelining for temples and libraries and rushbuilding them.
I am keen to hear some word of advice, but until I see the Light, I'll whine about it.
Comment