Gentlemen-
It often happens that the best practical approach to a given Civ situation is at odds with esthetic values. I'm writing to see if others have run into this conundrum, and what approach they've taken.
For instance, when playing England I feel compelled to build lots of boats and explore around. If I run into India or Iroquois I *have* to colonize them; it's like a spinal reflex. I pay much more attention to trade matters with England. Of course, no capturing of foreign workers; "Slaves cannot breathe in England; if their lungs receive our air, that moment they are free".
My favorite is France, but when I play them I feel compelled to act with honor; no slave-raids, no razing of cities, however tempting. Above all, no Republic until the 18th century! Monarchy all the way. And Knights. Lots of Knights. Must figure out how to rename them Chevaliers. And of course, eternal, bitter rivalry with England, Germany, Russia, and Babylon (standing in for the Moors).
When I'm feeling mean I'll play the Romans. "Hi, we're your neighbors, the Romans. We invented the word 'decimate'. We raze cities and take slaves. It's fun!" Every so often I'll have a revolution for no reason, because that's the kind of guys they were.
When playing the Aztecs ... well their whole society was based on taking captives and killing them. So after I hit a certain size of empire, some 8-10 cities, I'll eschew further city conquest and go on massive slave-raids ("flower war", we call it), and add them to my own cities. On higher levels this often causes the whole world to dogpile on my civilization and destroy it. Oops.
Do others play with self-imposed restraints based on notions of how a civilization should "behave"?
-- J
It often happens that the best practical approach to a given Civ situation is at odds with esthetic values. I'm writing to see if others have run into this conundrum, and what approach they've taken.
For instance, when playing England I feel compelled to build lots of boats and explore around. If I run into India or Iroquois I *have* to colonize them; it's like a spinal reflex. I pay much more attention to trade matters with England. Of course, no capturing of foreign workers; "Slaves cannot breathe in England; if their lungs receive our air, that moment they are free".
My favorite is France, but when I play them I feel compelled to act with honor; no slave-raids, no razing of cities, however tempting. Above all, no Republic until the 18th century! Monarchy all the way. And Knights. Lots of Knights. Must figure out how to rename them Chevaliers. And of course, eternal, bitter rivalry with England, Germany, Russia, and Babylon (standing in for the Moors).
When I'm feeling mean I'll play the Romans. "Hi, we're your neighbors, the Romans. We invented the word 'decimate'. We raze cities and take slaves. It's fun!" Every so often I'll have a revolution for no reason, because that's the kind of guys they were.
When playing the Aztecs ... well their whole society was based on taking captives and killing them. So after I hit a certain size of empire, some 8-10 cities, I'll eschew further city conquest and go on massive slave-raids ("flower war", we call it), and add them to my own cities. On higher levels this often causes the whole world to dogpile on my civilization and destroy it. Oops.
Do others play with self-imposed restraints based on notions of how a civilization should "behave"?
-- J
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