you know those cities that make 1 shield and 1 commerce?
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what to do with the nonproducers
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I basically actually do a little of everything except the last one. I basically try to achieve WLtKD and while I do that I forest clear forest clear. until I get a temple and an aqueduct then I just switch em to wealth and if they start producing and get the corruption under control then they are regular cities. I guess another option would be to send antiquated units and either A disband or B garrisson them there.
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It totally depends. Even with huge empires I can usually get just about any city up from total corruption (95%). I look at it like a late-game challenge to get my empire as efficient as I can.
So I pump money into far-flung cities, buying courthouses, marketplaces, aqueducts, policestations, factories, etc. You might be surprised at how much you can get out of those cities if you put in enough work (gold). It's not technically "worth it" in the sense that you will not recoup the money you spend, so it something to do while playing out a game you're clearly going to win.
-Arriangrog 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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I would have to agree with Arrian. A little socialism, just like in the real world, can work wonders. Sink a little money in and that city will at least produce defensive units for newly conquered cities later.
Of course, if you're assured of victory and you don't want to waste the time defending or micromanaging said city... BURN, BABY, BURN!
(I mean, of course, raze the city)
Also... as many workers as possible! Why not?You can't fight in here! This is the WAR room!
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If you have the luxuries for WLKD, wait for them to grow to size 6 and see what happens. Since it's always worth buying luxuries if you can, there are few strategic choices with this. Unless you have to rush a temple to do that, that is.
Very early on, I would try to build warriors and pop-rush settlers. For example, playing AU207 I got an advanced tribe close to the capital of the 3rd closest civ on a huge map. Minsk built 2 warriors, pop-rushed 19 shields on a spearman, immeadiately switched to a settler and was given to another civ when that was completed. This caused the 2 warriors and the settler to teleport to Moscow where they were actually useful. That's reasonable for 31 turns in a distant city.
Mid-game, I would make them a worker factory. They only need 1 square with 2 food to produce a worker every 10 turns. Even when you have enough workers to improve all the worked tiles and the military roads are all in place, you can still add workers to productive cities still under 6/12/20 pop.
Later I'd use whatever means necessary to get an adueduct, marketplace and even granaries and happiness improvements to draft as many conscripts as possible out of them. If there are no suicide missions available and you don't want to pay the upkeep, you're going to get at least 20 shields from disbanding them. Disbanding multiple conscripts railroaded in from hopeless cities for marketplaces, courthouses, etc. in recoverably corrupt cities can pay off.
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I do the Arrian thing, disband units in them to create Courthouses, Police Stations, etc."The great rule of conduct for us in regard to foreign nations is to have with them as little political connection as possible... It is our true policy to steer clear of permanent alliances with any portion of the foreign world, so far as we are now at liberty to do it." George Washington- September 19, 1796
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Aeson, badams52, and Dominae beat me to it -- irrigation and specialists. I will rush a culture-building if I want the border expansion (and thus live with the 1 gpt upkeep for the building).
But I found this a good bit of advice:
Originally posted by Nor Me
If you have the luxuries for WLKD, wait for them to grow to size 6 and see what happens. Since it's always worth buying luxuries if you can, there are few strategic choices with this.
A rudimentary understanding of the detailed corruption formula - or extended play experience - will eventually guide you to the answer to the question "Will a couthouse make this city worthwhile as a producer?"
Catt
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Another thing you can do is use the corruption caltulator to see if the city in question is at that 95% or not:
And Alexman, the resident corruption guru's original post about corruption can be found here:
badams
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