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  • If you have comments about the AI, please read this before posting how bad is...

    Just to do a nice a girl a favor, okay?

    Try *for once* to play the game in a different way. I think there is about 95% chance that you are mad at the AI because you can win so easy in a war.

    Well, consider this for a while. Should you ever look in your manual, you will notice there are several ways of winning in Call to Power. With this post I hope to focus you on a different way of winning.

    I am talking about the Diplomatic Victory. This requires you to become friends with every nation on the planet. Okay, this immediatly shows another problem. I bet you have already managed to win this way. I also bet you have destroyed many an empire before getting this victory.

    Now, here comes my point. The AI is weak in battle. But there is also a way of winning without battle. So try to keep them apart. Go soft, become an UN kind of nation. Lots of talk and declaring war, but no action. Do not build an army, and above all, do not move it into enemy territory.

    The strongest side of the AI lies in diplomatic relationships. Again, many people disagree, and say that the AI is bad in diplomacy. Well, it is, in certain kinds of diplomacy. Notably, the war like diplomacy (helping you, withdrawing, asking to stop war against someone etc. etc.)

    What many people do not notice is the position the AI takes in diplomacy. From the start of the game, their opinion about you lies lower then neutral. They do not like you. Now, take in account that the only way of winning is by making friends, and not by attacking people. What you have to do, is make friends. Well, believe me, that will take some time. It is actually quite a challenge to get everyone on your side. But it is possible. Also, when your military is weaker, their military will become relativly stronger. So you might indeed lose a city to invaders sometimes, and have a struggle to reclaim it. You will not have such a struggle when you use 6 units to defend each base. Limit yourself to a maximum of two defending units.

    To make things more difficult, you can set your own goals. Create the civilasation *YOU* would like to life in. Browse through the governments, and look for the ones you agree with, and not for the ones that are the strongest.

    Try to find the strenghts that lie in a game, not the weaknesses. If you find a strategy that the AI just cant counter, abandon it, and try something else.

    Also, I would like to tell you something. How hard do you think it is to create an AI that can play a civ-game? You all talk like it is something simple. Well, take my word on it, it is not. I have studied Artificial Intelligence, and create them for a living. There are many things that seem simple enough, but are really hard to create. Just take a simple game, four in a row. When you look at the game, it is easy for you to decide what move to make. But for a computer that is already difficult. A computer cannot 'see' the entire situation. All it can do is 'look at a square', then see what is on it, and perhaps look around the square, to see what is there.

    In a shooter-game, all the computer has to do is follow certain path's, and when it sees an enemy, aim + fire. That is easy to create. It is safe to say the hardest part with creating such AI's, is to make sure that they dont outclass the player. They do not have to think. Once they see you, the can kill you with 100% accuracy. Remember, whenever you play UT or Quake or Half-Life: the AI is just letting you win. It is a hundred times stronger then you are. Sorry...

    In a civ-game, it is different. A civ-game is about logic. In a shooter it is about reflexes. The greatest part of the game you are thinking about what move to make next. Logic is simple for you, but not for a computer. An AI simply cant see the 'big picture'. That is not entirely true, it is possible of advanced reasonong, but then all the AI's would each take the same time as you do to make one turn. And people dont like that. So Activision had to things another way. This AI just looks at avereges and such, and then decides by pre-programmed tables what to do. And yes, those tables are easy to remember, and once you do, you can easily defeat the AI. But you dont want to wait 15 minutes for one nation to make a move, then wait another 6*15 minutes for the *other* AI nations to make *their* moves??? That is what would be the result of a too strong but slow AI.

    In conclusion: it is almost impossible to create a fast AI that is capable of playing excellent Civ. It would simply require to much speed from your computer. So try to find the strenghts of the AI. These strenghts lie in diplomacy. In diplomacy, they do not have to check an entire world-map. All they have to do is pick their anwsers from a list, and give you a hard time to get that allience. And they are good at that...

    Please, try to overcome your anger, and play the game in a different way...

    Alisia

    ----------------------------------------------------

    In conclusion: a 'short' description of the way I play the game. Read it if you wany, but it is not a real part of my rant...

    I placed myself as a benevolent, peacefull leader. The good of my people is the most important thing for me. I also care about the enviroment. In my game, it is therefor impossible to build the sacrificing wonder. True, it gives you -20% crime, but Human Sacrifice is against my nature. Some wonders are impertative to me, mostly the ones that give you happiness. I care for polution reduction, and spend most of my time building polution-reducing measure's. Drawback is that I dont build mills, factories, or refineries. This cuts back on my production. But I invest a lot in farms, and growing my cities. To keep polution low, I assign many workers as scientists and entertainers. The government of my choice is, off course, the Ecotopian.

  • #2
    the point is to WIN the game but to PLAY the game!

    what u have not understood is that we want to play with someone in front of us: the AI never attacks!
    see: http://apolyton.net/forums/Forum35/HTML/000852.html?14
    and http://apolyton.net/forums/Forum35/HTML/000871.html?3
    and u'll understand our point of vu

    i am like u, i never win my game with the bloodlust victory, since civ1 i played all civs an i prefer winning with the alpha centaury, gaian and others alien victory BUT we need a challenge!
    why when i am at war with a nation it does nothing to me and let me take all her cities? why in impossibl mode the game is so easy?
    when i remember the difficulty i had in civ 1 to win an impossible game(we had to change an octet in the save game from 6 to 7 héhé, t'was the good time) i am asking myself if the AI developpers have'nt take vacation for years??

    after that u talk about the difficulty to make a good AI but the Ai of civ 1 and civ2 where better on that point: they attacked me and i played it on a 80286 machine with 640ko of memory so dont say me it require important cpu to make a GOOD AI
    that AI is bad and bad developped sorry, watch the other civ and other game, a AI which never attack isen't challenging

    another thing: we have seen on this forum the thing to changes in the files of ctp2 to increase the intelligence of the AI! why the activision developper haven't tested enough the game to see that the AI never attacked and change themself these settiong before selling the game?

    the AI might be good if the settings on the txt files are good, that's my point of vue

    i pray for a 1.2 patch that could correct this

    ps> excuse my bad english, i whish u understand all my sentences

    Comment


    • #3
      First, work on your english

      Second, CtP is far more complicated then Civ 1. But I allready see that you would not understand that. The tweaks you guys make to the AI system are more or less "random". Yes, you may actually improve something, but I would rather call that good fortune then skill...

      Comment


      • #4
        This isn't a flame, by any means, just wanted to say that first.

        If I wanted to play a game based totally on diplomacy, well, I would have bought "Diplomacy". Instead I bought a game that is supposed to take different elements and blend them into a cohesive product with different outcomes possible. A very large part of the game is a war-based game. There are more military units than anything else in the game. If they are part of the game, they should be used. The AI doesn't... it has in the past.

        I've been playing the civ games since Civ-1 on my 286, just as Bed23 has. I'm not a rookie to the genre and can appreciate what has to be done to create a challenging product. In all the Civ games, I've been attacked offensively, sometimes even with great fury, by the AI. On less 'advanced' machines, in more or less the same games decent offenses have been formed. Not a lot behind the scenes has changed from Civ1/Civ2 to SMAC to CTP2 besides graphics/interface/names of units/names of technologies. Yes, they've become a little more advanced, but not as advanced as the technology has gotten. There is no excuse for the AI to sit there like a dead fish.

        CTP2 is a game that is supposed to be an all-around package. It isn't just "Diplomacy", it isn't just "Command and Conquer" it isn't just "Railroad Tycoon". It's a blended game of politics/war/trade. Somewhere along the lines one or two of these didn't get worked on as well as the others.

        Comment


        • #5
          Don't defend the standard AI in CTP2, the AI players in CTP-2 lack one thing that an AI player always need to do and that is to challange the player this can be done by cheating or programming a better AI. But the big issue with ctp2 is that they didn't play test this game enough and they didn't balance the game enough. By trying editing this game I have found alot of unfinished stuff and poorly balanced areas.

          The standard out of the box game stinks rushed product long way. A game as complicated as this one need to be playtested and balanced/tweaked for maybe a year atleast. Activision simple rushed it to get the money. No gameplay quality assurance. The standard is fun the first few times you play it, but a game like this should be fun more than the first few times. Compare it to CIV 2. The AI in CIV2 atleast try to attack you. Which makes the games you play more fun and replay value high.

          I have not given up hope though, for with some tweaking and a patch fixing some stuff with diplomacy and AIs attacking alot more and fixing the issues with Air units /Sea units. Until then I Play Europa Universallis great strategy game and great support.

          One more thing BIG credit to the mod makers of CTP2 without them there is no hope. :-) The team of CTP2 needs credit aswell they are not to blame they got rushed by the money hungry executives.

          I am just a sad Civer that see the potential of this rushed game get wasted because money is king.
          The game creators had legendary status in their hands and they had to let it slip through their fingers.

          Hope SID can do CIV 3 right out of the box.

          /Mathias

          Comment


          • #6
            A lot of things didn't get worked on, IMO.

            I understand what Alisia is saying, but still she must admit theres something unfun about a strategy game when you can steamroll over your opponents so easily.

            I'm a little put off by this. I haven't played for a week or so. In my current game I'm at about 2270 and I'm building lots of monoliths and satellites and stuff. Rather haphazardly because the exact requirements for that kind of victory weren't in the manual. The only way activision can get back into the lowest rankings of my good graces is to at least come up with a patch to make the AI more aggressive. I've attacked civs in this game out of sheer boredom.

            D4
            "I know nobody likes me...why do we have to have Valentines Day to emphasize it?"- Charlie Brown

            Comment


            • #7
              Actually, I abandoned offensive playing a long time ago, starting with SMAC. I played so much of these civ games, it was nearly impossible for the AI to get to me. Once you create your own AI's, you will see the limits an AI has on 'slow' computers.

              Comment


              • #8
                Alisia, I appreciate your POV and doubtless so do most of the other members in the CTP2 forum.

                But aren't you forgetting something? Sure, it's good to have several ways of winning. Sure, it is good to have some kind of diversity to make all the games different and challenging. But us boys, well, we like a good war. And to be frank, diplomacy is for girls. Kidding.

                Actually, my point is that although there are several different ways to win, winning through war is one of the most fun and should be viable. Activision didn't do a good job with the AI. The fact that war is not fun because the AI is a wimp is a sign of some sloppy design. People are right to complain because a crucial element of the game doesn't work as well as it should. If you look through history, war has played a very important part in the establishing and downfall of civilizations.

                So if you don't mind, we'd like to see some more action. Don't worry, we know there are other ways to win, thanks for alerting us to this fact. As it stands, however, a critical element of the game is in serious need of fixing.

                Comment


                • #9
                  To add to what Murray said, I have no problem with winning a game through trade or diplomacy or technology. Hell, in history, I'm far more interested in the Phonicians and Carthaginians, since they built an empire through trading, whereas the Romans just marched over everyone.

                  Having said that, its no fun in a game like this to have in the back of my mind, the thought : "Well, if things start to go south, at least I can cream them militarily."

                  On, to quote popular culture, "Yes, but droids don't pull your arm off when they lose."

                  YouknowwhatImean?



                  ------------------
                  Bluevoss-
                  Bluevoss-

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    OK. I'll say it. None of you politically correct pansies were willing to say it, but I'm from South Georgia, so I've got to say it! Say what???? Say this:

                    Leave it up to a female to want to play some woosy "can't we all get along" diplomatic version of CTP2.



                    "The media don't understand the kind of problems and pressures 54 million come wit'!"

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I take ALOT of offense to the remark that we are only making random changes. I've spent alot of time looking at the various text files. I see how they relate to each other and identify weaknesses. I make changes, test them, and move on to the next tweak. As a result, I have improved AI performance to the point that I've lowered the starting advantages for the AI on impossible and its 1000ad and 2 civs are ahead of me both militarily and technically. their defenses have reason behind them, and have effectively held off many of my armies. The barbarians now have some logic behind their madness and will actually produce things when they capture cities. Both AI civs and the barbarians will stack when threatened and unstack otherwise. And both have launched successful offenses against not only each other but also against me.

                      As far as the changes that others have made. Most suggestions have explanations behind them as to why that person thinks that change would have an effect. Thats not a random change, but a thought out change.

                      There's nothing wrong with playing any of the possible winning strategies. But when you have NO military threat at all, it gives the human a large advantage because they are concentrating on science and diplomacy whereas the AI supposedly is playing a more balanced game. Before I started making changes, my interior cities would be guarded by a single warrior (if any at all) and most of my outer cities contained a warrior and an archer. I'd have one or 2 stacks out attacking. My military expediture was around 5% whereas the AI civs are around 20% or more. So even playing a non military strategy, the human's economy has a large advantage of not supporting an army to defend against the large but useless AI armies.

                      Try making some of these 'random' changes and see how it affects your play when you must play an active defense.

                      ------------------
                      History is written by the victor.

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I can see Alisia's point. But she must keep in mind that all through out history there has always been at least one nation that's caused a problem. Whether it was the Hittites, Egyptians, Greeks, Romans, Spanish, German, Iraq, Israel or Palestine. You name any period of history and there will be a nation or two that's wanted war. That is just not present in CTP2. CivI and CivII presented this. Gee, in civII I used to have nightmares about mongolian and zulu hoards streaming into my empire. Even CTP1 had this to an extent. But quite simply, CTP2 doesn't. Even if you want a diplomatic win (which I think is easy too BTW) then don't you think there should be at least one nation that would want to take advantage of your lesser military state?

                        BTW Alisia, I believe I've come up with a working model of an AI that will think on a tri-level basis using simple yes/no comparisons. EG. Does player X have more attack value than me? Is this area more defensible than this area? And so on. My model can come up with three sets of objectives. Level 3 objectives are controlled by the city mayors and based on orders from objective 2. Objective 2 is split into the five national areas of military, economics, science, domestic and foreign. These objectives determine national-level indicators and non-city troop placement. Objective 2 is influenced by objective 1 and influences objective 3. Objective 1 is the overall "AI overlord's" stance for the entire nation. For instance, using simple yes/no questions, the AI overlord can determine that nation X is weaker militarily, economically and productive wise. Therefore it determines it can take it over. Objective 1: take over nation X. The five objective 2 areas look at this order and with simple yes/no questions can determine that more attack units are needed, more units on that flank are needed, that trade routes with other nations are needed to compensate loss of nation X's routes, and foreign needs to declare war. Individual mayors look at their cities using all the objective 2's and determine that cities in the war border area build attack units (based on a simply distance_from_border rule), and other cities build caravans. I'm in the process of drawing all this into a Visio flowchart, and will set one up in C++ to see how it goes. I might just simply feed CTP2's values into it and see what it gives as Obj 1, 2 & 3.

                        ------------------
                        Rommell to a sub-commander outside Tobruk: "Those Australians are in there somewhere. But where? Let's advance and wait till they shoot, then shoot back."
                        [This message has been edited by Dale (edited January 04, 2001).]

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          quote:

                          Originally posted by Alpha Wolf on 01-04-2001 05:27 PM
                          As a result, I have improved AI performance to the point that I've lowered the starting advantages for the AI on impossible and its 1000ad and 2 civs are ahead of me both militarily and technically. their defenses have reason behind them, and have effectively held off many of my armies. The barbarians now have some logic behind their madness and will actually produce things when they capture cities. Both AI civs and the barbarians will stack when threatened and unstack otherwise. And both have launched successful offenses against not only each other but also against me.




                          Alphawolf,

                          I can understand both of the major point of views in this thread - being a nasty girlie :-) I would like both - ie to be free in the decision which way I want to play. I keep on reading about AI changes in the Textfiles, however I am pretty confused about all of the changes which are proposed by a lot of people. I would like to start playing a game with the AI modified in your way, so could you please let me know what exactly you did ? Is there any way you could either make the Textfiles you changed public or send it to me ?

                          Thanks a lot for reading this,
                          Martina

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            yes me too (isep4@hotmail.com)

                            i think we are not the only interested, i suggest u send a mail to MarkG or u post on this forum and propose him to put it on his site, that's not a big work for you and will helps hundreds, thousand and maybe someday millions of CTP2 fans who will prostern behind u ... ok i stop there

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              I dont really know how to set up a mod, and since nearly every major file has some change in it, I'm not sure what the best way to do it is. Lately I've been marking my changes so I can find them, but my earliest changes arent marked so if I post the files, people would have to go thru and compare. i had hoped to have a mod later in the mod after I figure out how to get natural disasters, but I just got loaded on at work so my free time will be minimal for awhile. I upload files at night so I can look at them at work during lunch, but these are working copies so one day might work and the next they wont. I'll put my "website" on my apolyton profile so people can d/l at their own risk.

                              OOOPS, apparently you can only get to my site via aol. I find out where I can put them so others can read them.
                              ------------------
                              History is written by the victor.
                              [This message has been edited by Alpha Wolf (edited January 04, 2001).]

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