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If you haven't discovered this, you're missing out on some serious gold.

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  • If you haven't discovered this, you're missing out on some serious gold.

    You probably know about the 4-turn minimum for tech research, and hopefully you're tweaking their tech spending to hit four turns exactly. Of course, some techs are more expensive than others, so if you just leave your tech spending at the same level all game, you're really wasting resources. (But again, you probably knew that.)

    Here's the new part:

    I discovered that the last turn of research for a tech usually doesn't require the same level of spending as the previous turns. Sometimes, there's a huge difference. In fact, I've often spent only 0%-10% on the last turn. This can translate to piles of gold if used consistently.

    So, to summarize:

    1. Pick your desired tech.
    2. Adjust the tech spending slider to the minimum value that will earn you the tech in the fewest turns. (Accounting for other monetary issues, of course). In this step, I've often found that two different percentages will yield the tech in the same amount of time, even taking into acount the four turn minimum. (For example, 6 turns for Chivalry at 30% and 6 turns for Chivalry at 20%.)
    3. When your on the last turn of research for a particular tech, hit F1 and experiment with the tech spending slider until it's at the minimum level which will still grant the tech in one turn. This is the most important step. I've often found I can drop tech spending 20%-30% on this last turn.

  • #2
    On the last turn of research -- NOT!
    Usually, it is better to ALSO try adjusting it earlier than on the last turn, especially if each gold coin is valuable to you at that phase of the game.

    Rough guide: say when you are 1/2, 2/3 and 3/4 complete with research.

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    • #3
      Sometimes adjusting the slider only on the last turn will yield more gold than adjusting it every turn the tech is being researched, you just have to look at the different values and make a decision as to which will be more profitable in each situation.
      Civilization3
      This program has performed an illegal operation and will be shut down.
      If the problem persists, please contact the program vendor.
      Blah!

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      • #4
        Adjusting on the last turn only is risky: if the AI gets the tech while you're researching it, it can be that you have accumulated too many beakers in the 3 previous turns already, thus totally wasting even the 10% you have alocated. In this case, you can set one scientist on the tech, but even then you can waste beakers: maybe you could have tweaked the rate at the 3rd turn already. My advice: Allways tweak it on the second last turn and last turn, possibly even every single turn...

        DeepO

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        • #5
          Though I have been well aware of this feature of the game for a lng while, I find that the constent fiddling required is far too much micro-management for me.
          "Giving money and power to government is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenage boys."
          --P.J. O'Rourke

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          • #6
            This seems to me to be the minorest of all micromanagement. Click F1, and two or three mouse clicks tell you what you need to know.

            I check this almost every turn.
            The first President of the first Apolyton Democracy Game (CivII, that is)

            The gift of speech is given to many,
            intelligence to few.

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            • #7
              Hmm, thus far I've been pretty lazy about this - I usually only check on the last turn. I wonder how much of a difference it would make if I checked more often.

              -Arrian
              grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!

              The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.

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              • #8
                I also check it almost every turn, since the micromanagement can be well worth it in the long run. I will also run a limited deficit per turn if I can get the tech quicker so I tend to keep a higher gold balance for this gambit.

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                • #9
                  Originally posted by Arrian
                  Hmm, thus far I've been pretty lazy about this - I usually only check on the last turn. I wonder how much of a difference it would make if I checked more often.
                  Arrian, if all the AIs are close to you what research is concerned, it can mean a relatively big difference. It is no exception to win a few hundred gold because you did it at the 3rd turn already, instead of waiting to the last. Certainly in the modern ages, the difference can be big... but it depends on too many variables to give you an excact idea (# of AIs, mapsize, difficulty, banks/university ratio, specific tech, etc.)

                  I too don't like it that we have to do this micromanagement ourselfs, but I really have found it to be one of the more rewarding one; it really gives you something in return for a small price. And, I think that it would not be easily solvable to let the game eninge do it correctly, as there would be a few exploitable things when the abundance of beakers is put into gold (One thing being that you'd never to build more then 5 banks, but had to focus on research buildings exclusively)

                  DeepO

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                  • #10
                    As I normally do minimal (10% or 1 scientist) research in the ancient age and then shift over to maximum research in the middle ages and gain a tech lead, I don't spend a lot of time at tech parity. I'm either way behind or speeding ahead. But I'm sure I'm losing money by only checking at the end. I'll try and pay some more attention to it.

                    -Arrian
                    grog want tank...Grog Want Tank... GROG WANT TANK!

                    The trick isn't to break some eggs to make an omelette, it's convincing the eggs to break themselves in order to aspire to omelettehood.

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                    • #11
                      if you are speeding ahead, there is less problem with losing money because you only checked the final turn. I found that in some cases I was able to slide it back for 40%, where you anticipate a 30% down at most, but I think this has to do with the number of universities built in those 4 turns, or the general growth of my cities (meaning more commerce, meaning more beakers).

                      Just a comment that people are not making: it is not always ideal to have the slider set to the lowest possible setting, certainly not in times of war weariness. I experienced quite a few times that, as I was tweaking it to the lowest possible setting, I was given an extra turn because too many of my citizens revolted in between the turns. It is very annoying to do 5 turns of research on a tech, when the last 2 turns of it you have a big money abundance. So, when I fear that I will be hit with WW (you can generally predict it, as it is at times of extreme aggresiveness), I will put it 10% higher then strictly needed (last turn only, of course). It loses a bit of money, but you're sure it doesn't cost you any time.

                      DeepO

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                      • #12
                        Yes, when your beaker output is significantly increasing, the initial turn estimate can be off.

                        So there are some cases, mainly when trying to go through the tech tree as fast as possible but still not at the 4-turn minimum, where it's best to wait until the last turn before lowering your research.

                        If your population is growing fast, or if you are in the process of building several libraries, universities, or research labs, or nearly completed Newton's University, Copernicus' Observatory, or the Seti, or if you expect a golden age, then you will get a research boost that might make you complete the research one turn sooner than the initial turn estimate. If you lower your reasearch slider too soon, you might miss out on the opportunity to discover the tech one turn sooner.

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                        • #13
                          I can't swear the following happened, but I seem to remember it:

                          At one point in a game, after I was prompted to select a new tech to research, the number of turns to get the tech I selecected decreased by one after I clicked on it. Now, if that really happened, it means that research, unlike shields, "spills over" into the next thing you use it for. That means that there's no point in reducing your research to save money, unless you hit the cap.

                          But maybe I just imagined it.
                          "God is dead." - Nietzsche
                          "Nietzsche is dead." - God

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                          • #14
                            JohnM, I think its well established that the beakers don't spill over. Regoarrarr had an awesome tech thread that covered all the details.

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                            • #15
                              JohnM2433, do you use the governor to manage moods? When adjusting the tech slider, the governor is sometimes given other priorities. When he 'feels' that you need more science, he will put more specialists to scientists, when he feels you need more cash, he will put taxmen instead. I think this changing of specialists is done after you leave the F1 screen... I've seen it affecting the beaker output several times already, but it is rare that it changes the turns a tech takes, you need large cities with a lot of specialists for that.

                              I agree with most that the governor is not the most efficient way you have of playing, but managing all moods myself is something I find too tedious... I generally look out for where it goes wrong, and do those cities myself. The others, I can't be bothered with.

                              DeepO

                              [Edited for clarity, I seem to had forgotten a (quite important) sentence ]

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