When I first got my (LE edition of Civ3 I was expecting something a little different from what I received, just as everyone was. I wasn't dissapointed, I was just.. bored by the game. It felt like the gameplay was dragging, and the time in between the turns was intolerable. Last week after multiple months of not playing with my investment I took it back out and started my first actual game.
I'm getting lit up in various ways, shapes, and forms by my computer opponents. I refuse to lower my level, I'm playing on a huge map, with eleven opponents, on Emperor. I originally played the Persians (because traditionally in TBS games, 'scientific' races always have a massive advantage, take MOO2/Psilons for example, but they seem to have equalized the advantages very well in Civ3) but now play the Iroquois. Throughout the game, those damned annoying animated advisors (more annoying than the bouncing paper clip in MS Word, however you can disable the paperclip!) are telling me how much I suck. I stopped expanding at 15 cities because of a chain-reaction war I got involved in (by not acceding to paying tribute after having payed some to a different race). Luckily, my special unit the mounted warrior became available and my race entered it's Golden Age simultaneously. To the north, I fought the Indians taking three cities, to the south I fought a more painful war with the Chinese. I had to succumb to some rather dishonorable tribute (12G/Turn + Lump) to avoid war with the Babylonians - the largest and most powerful civ.
Both my wars ended well, and my civilization's Golden Age ended around the same point. I began to concentrate on culture but was soon distracted when, again, the Babylonians came after me for some cash. I briefly weighed what I thought the consequences would be versus what I thought my ability to sustain a one front war would be and decided to stick it back in there faces. They declared war and my impending doom is, in the game, about to arrive.
After successfully taking two of their cities, the Babylonians have struck back and quite fiercely. Their stacks of 10+ units are far from a match from my stacks of two mounted warriors. They have knights, I'm just getting feudalism. I've been behind in technology the entire length of the game simply because the computer refuses to trade with me. The only way I've became competive was through the sole advantage of having a scout at the beginning and being able to get techs from huts. I'm three technologies behind everyone, and four-five of their knights killed my ENTIRE expenditionary army. My swordsmen which I'm using for defense (can't build pikemen, most cities are still resisting - because they are Indian ones I took over, or I don't have enough gold, etc, etc) can't keep up. I've lost the one of the two Babylonian cities I captured to their culture, and the other I gave away for a technology because I knew it was going to be captured the next turn. In that (I gave it to a neutral nation) I've slowed the Babylonian advance on one front. The war evolved into two fronts based on the two cities I took. Both eventually lead to Babylon which was, now laughably, going to be my ultimate goal and way to get out of the war - or at least to use as a bargaining tool. On the other front (the cultural takeover front), I'm about to lose my first city (I consider it my first, cause I built it, not that I'm not pissed about losing the other two).
The Babylonians refuse to talk to me. I was lucky enough that the Indians, forgetting about our little skirmish offered me an alliance against the Chinese, I used their want for that as a bargaining tool to also get an alliance against the Babylonians (though I'm now paying the Indians 20G/turn). I have chivalry, but I can't cheat like the computer and pump out twenty knights. There is, essentially, nothing I can do.
Why am I sucking so hard? Why is the computer so good? I can't trick them, I can't fight them. I'm really not doing anything wrong and I simply can't compete, I never was really in a position to be able to. The only reason I won my war against the Chinese was terrain, city walls, my special unit, and my golden age. Now I have none of those four advantages against the most powerful civ who controls half the damned board. I don't want to restart either - though I fear I might need too.
The only thing about my inevitable defeat I'm happy about is that it has revitalized my interest in Civ.
If I restart I'll played on a large map with 7 civs so they can't trade as much. Also on continents as opposed to Pangaea. But I really can't get a game going unless I have that scout in the beginning of the game. There is simply NO WAY you can play without it. What am I missing? I haven't played in so long that I've missed all the 'general' strategy that people have posted and don't want to look it up. I can't rush for monarchy, rushing for tech's only hurts you more in this game. I can't bargain and exchange techs because I'm almost always, except in the very very beginning after a few lucky huts, behind in technology. What do you do? I know my key mistake was stopping my expansion, but I was fighting a two front war - North and South on opposite sides of my land, an ocean to my west and a desert and the Babylonians as well as some of the enemy to my East.
I'm getting lit up in various ways, shapes, and forms by my computer opponents. I refuse to lower my level, I'm playing on a huge map, with eleven opponents, on Emperor. I originally played the Persians (because traditionally in TBS games, 'scientific' races always have a massive advantage, take MOO2/Psilons for example, but they seem to have equalized the advantages very well in Civ3) but now play the Iroquois. Throughout the game, those damned annoying animated advisors (more annoying than the bouncing paper clip in MS Word, however you can disable the paperclip!) are telling me how much I suck. I stopped expanding at 15 cities because of a chain-reaction war I got involved in (by not acceding to paying tribute after having payed some to a different race). Luckily, my special unit the mounted warrior became available and my race entered it's Golden Age simultaneously. To the north, I fought the Indians taking three cities, to the south I fought a more painful war with the Chinese. I had to succumb to some rather dishonorable tribute (12G/Turn + Lump) to avoid war with the Babylonians - the largest and most powerful civ.
Both my wars ended well, and my civilization's Golden Age ended around the same point. I began to concentrate on culture but was soon distracted when, again, the Babylonians came after me for some cash. I briefly weighed what I thought the consequences would be versus what I thought my ability to sustain a one front war would be and decided to stick it back in there faces. They declared war and my impending doom is, in the game, about to arrive.
After successfully taking two of their cities, the Babylonians have struck back and quite fiercely. Their stacks of 10+ units are far from a match from my stacks of two mounted warriors. They have knights, I'm just getting feudalism. I've been behind in technology the entire length of the game simply because the computer refuses to trade with me. The only way I've became competive was through the sole advantage of having a scout at the beginning and being able to get techs from huts. I'm three technologies behind everyone, and four-five of their knights killed my ENTIRE expenditionary army. My swordsmen which I'm using for defense (can't build pikemen, most cities are still resisting - because they are Indian ones I took over, or I don't have enough gold, etc, etc) can't keep up. I've lost the one of the two Babylonian cities I captured to their culture, and the other I gave away for a technology because I knew it was going to be captured the next turn. In that (I gave it to a neutral nation) I've slowed the Babylonian advance on one front. The war evolved into two fronts based on the two cities I took. Both eventually lead to Babylon which was, now laughably, going to be my ultimate goal and way to get out of the war - or at least to use as a bargaining tool. On the other front (the cultural takeover front), I'm about to lose my first city (I consider it my first, cause I built it, not that I'm not pissed about losing the other two).
The Babylonians refuse to talk to me. I was lucky enough that the Indians, forgetting about our little skirmish offered me an alliance against the Chinese, I used their want for that as a bargaining tool to also get an alliance against the Babylonians (though I'm now paying the Indians 20G/turn). I have chivalry, but I can't cheat like the computer and pump out twenty knights. There is, essentially, nothing I can do.
Why am I sucking so hard? Why is the computer so good? I can't trick them, I can't fight them. I'm really not doing anything wrong and I simply can't compete, I never was really in a position to be able to. The only reason I won my war against the Chinese was terrain, city walls, my special unit, and my golden age. Now I have none of those four advantages against the most powerful civ who controls half the damned board. I don't want to restart either - though I fear I might need too.
The only thing about my inevitable defeat I'm happy about is that it has revitalized my interest in Civ.
If I restart I'll played on a large map with 7 civs so they can't trade as much. Also on continents as opposed to Pangaea. But I really can't get a game going unless I have that scout in the beginning of the game. There is simply NO WAY you can play without it. What am I missing? I haven't played in so long that I've missed all the 'general' strategy that people have posted and don't want to look it up. I can't rush for monarchy, rushing for tech's only hurts you more in this game. I can't bargain and exchange techs because I'm almost always, except in the very very beginning after a few lucky huts, behind in technology. What do you do? I know my key mistake was stopping my expansion, but I was fighting a two front war - North and South on opposite sides of my land, an ocean to my west and a desert and the Babylonians as well as some of the enemy to my East.
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