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Culture-Flipping Exposed

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  • #31
    Originally posted by Hurry
    How are population of destroyed civs counted? As your own pop or foreign? In other words, would a city of size 12, with 6 own, 5 destroyed and 1 actual foreign pop in fact count as it had 6 foreign population?
    I don't think killed population is counted. In your example, the city would have a population of 7.

    Someone else asked about civilizations coming back to life through a city defecting back to them - I don't think that's possible. There must be another city somewhere that you don't know about. If a city defects to a civ you thought was destroyed, then it couldn't have been destroyed. Either your foreign advisor tells you that a civ has been destroyed, or, if you miss that message, you can look for their leader on the diplomacy screen or the civ in the espionage/diplomacy windows.

    It would be neat if that could happen, though.


    As far as Specialists, Resisters, and any weighting differences between Happy, Content, and Unhappy laborers, I think Firaxis probably needs to clarify a bit more. The more I try to adjust the formula, the more I see problems crop up (such as negative numbers if there are a large number of resisters, etc.).

    This is the kind of stuff that should be found in a strategy guide, but there haven't been any good ones that I know of since the Emerich/Hughes guides for Master of Orion and that other game (Master of Magic?). Dan mentioned a civ fanatics forum - I'll venture over to see how they're digesting Dan's post.

    Duodecimal

    Edit: What a bunch of whining ninnies! It's a waste of time, but here's the thread:

    In response to the requests I received earlier this month with regards to how "culture-flipping" works, I sat down with Soren, the lead programmer on Civ III, and he explained which factors influence the probability of a city "flipping" and what the relative weight of each factor was. The...


    Couple tidbits: Looks like Foreign Palace does *not* have all the benefits of the Palace, as mongoose suggests above. Also - Dan (IIRC) says that 'shortest route in tiles' (as the crow flies) is the distance method, but he isn't sure. I'd forgotten about the coordinates given in-game - tonight I'll see if there's any significant differences in ratio whether you count tiles or use sqr root(x^2+y^2).

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    • #32
      This is what Dan said in the civfanatics thread:

      "I would assume this is measured in tiles, based on the pathfinding algorithm's determination of the shortest path from the city in question to the civ's capital city. It may be even simpler than that, I'm not sure."

      Well I would think its is *not* simply using the pathfinding algorithm... Lets say a city is 5 squares away from your capital, but there is an inland sea in between them, such that if you were to move a unit from one to the other you would go through 8 squares... I think the distance in the formula would rather be 5 than 8. And what if the city and capital are in different continents?

      But even if it were the shortest number of squares... I'm pretty sure that they use pythagoras for corruption calculations, so why wouldn't they use that for culture flipping too? My only question is, would the X and Y axes be the NE and NW diagonals, or would they be using the coordinate system you can see in the map editor? I made some calculations with the former and they seem to fit, I need to try the latter...
      ~Mengo

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      • #33
        I remember somebody posted that if you don't have a capital then you don't have corruption. Since corruption maybe based on distance to capital, that could mean that any city's distance to the capital is zero if you don't have one. Now come to the culture flipping thing, does that also drastically increase your chance of gaining a city? Or just the opposite? If the opposite is true then all you need to do is to destroy a civ's capital.

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        • #34
          re: civilization comeback via culture

          Hello,

          Yeah, DuoDecimal, I was the one who brought up the possible scenario of a Civ coming back through culture after they are wiped out. It didn't happen in my game, I was just curious if it has happened to anyone, or if it's even a possibility. My assumption is that once all of the cities of civ A are destroyed/claimed by another civ (lets call him B), that even if the culture of civ A greatly outweighed B's culture, there is no way for A to ever come back. It seems as though once a civ is destroyed, he is wiped from memory (other than the historical data), so it isn't possible for a comeback. Unfortunately, this makes me slightly sad, because I think it'd be a good idea, much like the idea in Civ 1 where attacking and taking over the capital gave the possibility of a revolution of the civ being attacked, such that it'd split into two civilizations - one civ, the rebels, would be supporting your war effort against the loyals. I'm 99% sure it's not in Civ 3, but it is a feature well missed.

          Anyway, perhaps those two items can come into play in the spring with the new add-on pack. We can only hope, anyways.

          -Rflagg.

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          • #35
            Once the advisors says the civ is gone for good, it has never come back in any of my games (more than 20 now). When I kill the last city in some games, it is not the end of the civ and I do not get the msg. I will soon find another city come out of nowhere.

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            • #36
              Originally posted by Aeson
              What I'm sure about distance...

              Distance is the number of tiles between point A and B, each tile counting either 1 or 2 depending on its alignment. I'm not sure exactly how this is calculated. (X2 - X1) + (Y2 - Y1) doesn't work because of how every 3rd diagonal is treated.

              Diagonals (1st,2nd,3rd..12th) = 2,2,1,2,2,1,2,2,1,2,2,1
              All Verticals and Horizontals = 1
              Nice work. Although I would guess that the 3rd diagonal being 1 based on corruption is because there is some benefit gained back for having your cities without overlapping city radii(did you go out that far on the horizontal? the 3rd diagonal is the first square where you have no overlap) . I would guess that it only counts moving along the vertical and horizontal, two movements in those directions would be equivalent to one on the diagonal, and that there may merely be static 'rings' where the diagonal is 1 from your capital, where your 'optimal' spacing would be.

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              • #37
                In my last game, I captured Beijing. After a few turns the resistance was stopped and I rush-built the Forbiden Palace in it.
                A few turns after that, it reverted back to China.. FP and all!

                It was moderately garrisoned, I thought the FP would would act like the Palace and secure it for me!
                "Old age and treachery will overcome youth and skill"

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                • #38
                  Yeah I thought that too. Fortunately I managed to stop myself breaking any peripherals after it happened..............just

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                  • #39
                    So, in order to gain advantage, I'll trade an AI civ a relatively big city (not too big since I don't want the city to starve when my other cities are pushing boarders against it), so my citizens will outnumber AI citizens. The city should have had temple, etc. for several turns so that my culture will outnumber AI culture. The city should be close to my capital and I have other cities close to it as well. I'll make sure the AI government type cannot sacrefice people for rush building. I'll pick an AI which has a lower culture than mine to make the deal. I'll remove all units from the city so the city is likely to go riot (since it's big). Now the city will flip back to me soon and I gain benefit from trading the city to the AI. Anything missing?

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                    • #40
                      Just ran a test...

                      Originally posted by Xin Yu
                      So, in order to gain advantage, I'll trade an AI civ a relatively big city (not too big since I don't want the city to starve when my other cities are pushing boarders against it), so my citizens will outnumber AI citizens. The city should have had temple, etc. for several turns so that my culture will outnumber AI culture. The city should be close to my capital and I have other cities close to it as well. I'll make sure the AI government type cannot sacrefice people for rush building. I'll pick an AI which has a lower culture than mine to make the deal. I'll remove all units from the city so the city is likely to go riot (since it's big). Now the city will flip back to me soon and I gain benefit from trading the city to the AI. Anything missing?
                      When you give a city away, all its population become citizens of the culture you give it to.

                      In the test I ran, I gave away my third city, which ranked #5 on the Top 5 Cities list (I had two other cities there - my capital and 2nd cities, Atlantis and Arbomare). The city I gave away, Antilla, had built Magellan's Voyage about twenty turns ago, and, since my culture is based on the Babylonians (no editing, just renamed everything), all other cultural improvements have been built - it's the year 1400 AD. Antilla restarts with a culture of 0. Two other cities, Aurora and Solaria, are pushing hard on it (9 tiles and the three remaining tiles are not in anyone's cultural influence), and my culture beats England's about two-to-one (where can I find the exact cultural value of other cultures?

                      I counted tiles, did the pythagoras thing, and figured that London is 23.6 tiles away, and my capital is 4.9 tiles away. Antilla is not in civil disorder nor WLTQD, and has 10 laborers (the non-laborers are getting starved off). I have never been at war with anyone, regent-level, and the english are my only neighbors on this upside-down "U" bent-barbell-shaped continent (excellent).

                      I went seven turns, and no reversion. So, let's look at the numbers:

                      ((Citizens+Tiles) * CultureRatio * DistanceRatio * StatusFactor * HistoryFactor ) - Troops

                      English Factor:
                      ((10+9) * 1/2 * 4.9/23.6 * 1 * .5 ) + 1 = 1.99

                      Atlantean Factor:
                      ((0+9) * 2/1 * 23.6/4.9 * 1 * 2) - 1 = 172.4

                      "Odds" of reversion: 98.9%

                      Obviously, the city should have reverted during those seven test turns, but it didn't. Is there a "breather" period of X turns when you hand a city over? Or is there a completely different formula for retaining a city (all I did was invert everything in the formula). Maybe 172.4 does mean something alone - which isn't unlikely since the factors in the formula are not going to lead to much different results whether it's 100 BC or 1920 AD. Is 172.4 a number in basis points (1/100th of a percent)? 1.72% doesn't sound like much. 17.2% would likely have led to even odds of a defection during the 7 turns (I guess - I'm not that good at statistics).

                      Anyhow... I'm getting into the late Industrial ages, and am yearning to start a new, clean game on a similar map - if only I can remember all the settings I used, and hopefully there'll be more than 3 coal tiles on the entire huge map. I'd disabled resource depletion in the game rules, but I guess I'll have to bump up odds-of-appearance a little - there seems to be almost enough iron, so I'll make coal almost equal to that.

                      Duodecimal

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                      • #41
                        What Happened to Courthouses?

                        What about Courthouses? How do they factor in flipping? The docs say they make a difference, but no mention in this explanation. So which is the truth? What's the deal?

                        - Sirian

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                        • #42
                          I think they help against propoganda based defections, but not reversions.

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                          • #43
                            Missing bits of info

                            Dan's post clarified a lot. For instance, it should be impossible for a city to defect if it has no foreign nationals and no foreign culture occupying its city radius. Anyone got an example to prove that assumption wrong?

                            However, there are still lots of info missing. Trying to construct a formula from what was said is probably a lost cause. First, remember that there are unknown weights attached to those factors that are applied multiplicatively. And though we know that relative distance to respective capitals is more important than culture ratio, we don't know just how much more important it is.

                            Second, even if we knew those weights, we don't know what to do with the number computed. Somehow it is to be transformed to the range [0, 1] and be treated as a probability of defection, but there's no indication of how.

                            Originally posted by duodecimal
                            "Odds" of reversion: 98.9%

                            Obviously, the city should have reverted during those seven test turns, but it didn't.
                            Yeah, this is a sure sign the probabilities aren't computed quite like that. A 1.1% chance of NOT defecting in one turn, means the chance of not defecting in seven turns is less than 2 x 10^-14.

                            Is 172.4 a number in basis points (1/100th of a percent)? 1.72% doesn't sound like much. 17.2% would likely have led to even odds of a defection during the 7 turns (I guess - I'm not that good at statistics).
                            With a 17.2% per turn chance of defection, the probability of defection within those seven turns would be
                            1 - (1 - 0.172)^7 = 0.733.

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                            • #44
                              ignore

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                              • #45
                                Small poll

                                Originally posted by Dan Magaha FIRAXIS

                                The base values used to determine the chance of city flipping are as follows:

                                A) The number of foreign nationals in the city in question (resisters are counted twice), and

                                B) The number of the 21-tile city-radius squares of the city in question that fall inside your cultural borders.


                                These numbers are then further modified by a variety of factors, applied multiplicatively. Here those are, in order of importance:

                                {snip}

                                6) Lastly, the number of land-based combat units (e.g., any unit with at least 1 point of offensive and defensive capability) in the city in question are subtracted. This factor is relatively low on the totem pole and this shows you why cities can flip even with huge militias garrisoned in them.


                                Hope this helps.


                                Dan
                                Has anybody ever had a city flip that had a garrison of offensive/defensive capable land units greater than the city pop? Or greater than the foreigners pop?

                                I haven't had any trouble w/ cities flipping since I began leaving at least as many off/def units as there are pop points in the captured city. And some the the cities involved have had as little as six squares that belonged to me and as many as 16 pop, all foreign nationals. That particular city was definately closer to the foreign capital than my own and the other factors were pretty much a wash, but after putting 16 units on garrison duty, it never did another flip.

                                Thanks,
                                "There's screws loose, bearings
                                loose --- aye, the whole dom thing is
                                loose, but that's no' the worst o' it."
                                -- "Mr. Glencannon" - Guy Gilpatrick

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