Originally posted by Heraclitus
The myriad of civs provide pockets of stable resistance to the expansionist civ, these stable pockets are bigger or smaller according to how large the civ was. (did you look at the link?)
The myriad of civs provide pockets of stable resistance to the expansionist civ, these stable pockets are bigger or smaller according to how large the civ was. (did you look at the link?)
Originally posted by Heraclitus
The other realms of expansion are the ones that you mentioned the Hive civ might find, I said maybe their civ, the not so expansionist civ found them and got all the resources it needed to make sure their long term self-preservation measures in this galaxy remained in effect.
The other realms of expansion are the ones that you mentioned the Hive civ might find, I said maybe their civ, the not so expansionist civ found them and got all the resources it needed to make sure their long term self-preservation measures in this galaxy remained in effect.
Originally posted by Heraclitus
You said a self-destructing civ leaving no evidence behind. Who said that they wouldn't?
You said a self-destructing civ leaving no evidence behind. Who said that they wouldn't?
Originally posted by Heraclitus
Plus you said equally many expansionist civs, what about the isolationist non-expanding cics? If anything I would imagine that it is more likely for a civ that has survived several centuries stuck on its home world to be much more focused on vertical growth. Thus there would be a majority of non-expanding civs many of them interested in other systems and could recognize virulent civs perhaps with the aid of other non-expansionist civs.
Plus you said equally many expansionist civs, what about the isolationist non-expanding cics? If anything I would imagine that it is more likely for a civ that has survived several centuries stuck on its home world to be much more focused on vertical growth. Thus there would be a majority of non-expanding civs many of them interested in other systems and could recognize virulent civs perhaps with the aid of other non-expansionist civs.
Originally posted by Heraclitus
I don't see why you find FLT changes the dynamics that much. Maybe its important to us who only live for a century max a very old civ would see a hundred thousand years as we see a decade.
I don't see why you find FLT changes the dynamics that much. Maybe its important to us who only live for a century max a very old civ would see a hundred thousand years as we see a decade.
Originally posted by Heraclitus
Plus you are forgetting the cost of expansion, you are assuming it is cheap (for a system wide civ), I assume it is at least sufficiently expensive so that it is not necessarily the best investment.
Plus you are forgetting the cost of expansion, you are assuming it is cheap (for a system wide civ), I assume it is at least sufficiently expensive so that it is not necessarily the best investment.
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