I have followed many threads on Apolyton complaining about this or that flaw in CIV III, and to be honest, many have some (or a lot of ) merit...
That being said, however:
There are still moments in the game that transcend the various difficulties: the "I wish Firaxis would have included...", the "why isn't the (insert appropriate issue here) more like it was in CIV II?", or the ever popular "I hope the next patch includes a fix for..."
I would like to propose that to leaven the negative comments, that we should also talk about the times when playing CIV III that we find GLORY!!! What has happened in your recent games that reminds you of why you love to play Civilization in the first place?
I'll start:
Last night, while playing an early (Ancient Age) game with the Greeks, I had one of those moments....
I have eight cities, the newest being on a sub-continent that I intend to expand into. I have two swordsmen in the area; one is near the new city (Pharsalos), one is exploring the dark depths of this new unknown lands...
My military advisor gives me news of a massive barbarian uprising near Delphi, which is my newest city on the old continent. After making preparations (adjusting the locations of my many phalanxes from Athens and other nearby cities towards Delphi), I take the precautionary measure of moving my exploring swordsman away from the barbarian encampment he was about to attack, retreating in the direction of Pharsalos.
Lucky me! Boiling out of the formerly benign encampment comes a horde of sixteen barb horsemen. The terrain is hills and mountains between the swordsman and P-town, so the barbs cannot make up my one-move lead. The other swordsman (in the new lands) retreats to P-town and fortifies. I change production from temple and rush-build walls, sacrificing a citizen (who was siphoning off the productive efforts of his fellow citizens anyways... )
One turn before the retreating unit reached the safety of the walls of P-town, a new barb threat appeared from the West (the other horde was following the swordsman from the East.)
These barb horsemen (12-16 ) came pouring out of the Western mountains and attacked the sword fortified in P-town...
It was a close thing, but my swordsman (Vet to begin,
Elite after...) was victorious. The swordsman from the East moved into P-town the next turn and fortified. Between the two, they barely managed to hold off the Eastern horde (both deep in the yellow at the end.)
I was proud. I was elated. It is moments like these that made me fall in love with the Civ series in the first place.
Despite all of its warts, if CIV III can provide me with experiences like this, then I feel my money was well spent... YMMV
What about you...?
Bob
That being said, however:
There are still moments in the game that transcend the various difficulties: the "I wish Firaxis would have included...", the "why isn't the (insert appropriate issue here) more like it was in CIV II?", or the ever popular "I hope the next patch includes a fix for..."
I would like to propose that to leaven the negative comments, that we should also talk about the times when playing CIV III that we find GLORY!!! What has happened in your recent games that reminds you of why you love to play Civilization in the first place?
I'll start:
Last night, while playing an early (Ancient Age) game with the Greeks, I had one of those moments....
I have eight cities, the newest being on a sub-continent that I intend to expand into. I have two swordsmen in the area; one is near the new city (Pharsalos), one is exploring the dark depths of this new unknown lands...
My military advisor gives me news of a massive barbarian uprising near Delphi, which is my newest city on the old continent. After making preparations (adjusting the locations of my many phalanxes from Athens and other nearby cities towards Delphi), I take the precautionary measure of moving my exploring swordsman away from the barbarian encampment he was about to attack, retreating in the direction of Pharsalos.
Lucky me! Boiling out of the formerly benign encampment comes a horde of sixteen barb horsemen. The terrain is hills and mountains between the swordsman and P-town, so the barbs cannot make up my one-move lead. The other swordsman (in the new lands) retreats to P-town and fortifies. I change production from temple and rush-build walls, sacrificing a citizen (who was siphoning off the productive efforts of his fellow citizens anyways... )
One turn before the retreating unit reached the safety of the walls of P-town, a new barb threat appeared from the West (the other horde was following the swordsman from the East.)
These barb horsemen (12-16 ) came pouring out of the Western mountains and attacked the sword fortified in P-town...
It was a close thing, but my swordsman (Vet to begin,
Elite after...) was victorious. The swordsman from the East moved into P-town the next turn and fortified. Between the two, they barely managed to hold off the Eastern horde (both deep in the yellow at the end.)
I was proud. I was elated. It is moments like these that made me fall in love with the Civ series in the first place.
Despite all of its warts, if CIV III can provide me with experiences like this, then I feel my money was well spent... YMMV
What about you...?
Bob
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