Originally posted by Ribannah
The way to count how much you're behind (better: how much you have invested) is not by food or cities, but by the number of turns. Let's say the first Settler you build is completed 8 turns later than without the granary, then the second one arrives 4 turns later, and on average you have caught up in empire size when your capital produces its 5th Settler 8 turns ahead, unless your second city is also a Settler factory. In that case there is a new decision tree where you might choose to invest further, and there is the (then usually better) option of building one Settler before the Granary, too.
The way to count how much you're behind (better: how much you have invested) is not by food or cities, but by the number of turns. Let's say the first Settler you build is completed 8 turns later than without the granary, then the second one arrives 4 turns later, and on average you have caught up in empire size when your capital produces its 5th Settler 8 turns ahead, unless your second city is also a Settler factory. In that case there is a new decision tree where you might choose to invest further, and there is the (then usually better) option of building one Settler before the Granary, too.
Actually, it occurs to me that I should have factored the need for workers into my analysis. Since both settlers and workers use up population points, the need for workers would tend to bring down the number of cities before the granary starts to pay off by a little bit.
Nathan


I even took advantage of the AI's dislike for tight city spacing to build a couple more cities beside and beyond the original blockade location. On the Russian side, I got lucky in that Rome somehow crossed the bottom of the continent (there's a thin strip of land connecting the two sides of an inverted upside-down Y, for those who haven't seen the map) and captured Russia's cities coming up the Russian leg. Had that (or some other military interference) not happened, Russia would almost certainly have settled at least a little farther north before my settlers got in place to put a cultural border in the way. Incidentally, I eventually reached a point where I was averaging better than a settler every two turns empire-wide, so it didn't take long to fill in the gaps behind my original blockading settlers.
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