First, I should mention I play the second highest difficulty (specialist?).
I've come to enjoy playing a "nice guy" in SMAC, claiming victory via either transcendence or economic victory. My strategy is a balancing act, attempting to keep everyone at relatively the same power, with a few of them being allies, often submissive ones with a pact to serve. Generally speaking, one or two factions are eliminated (by others, usually Miriam or Santiago) prior to my establishing global hegemony. Sometimes I'm forced to eliminate Miriam or Yang (they just won't play along). The result of everybody being roughly the same power-wise is generally world peace; there's no clear leader to gang up on, there's no clear loser to pick off, so I find it's easy to keep them all at peace (little one-turn wars aside).
I have two questions.
First off, has anybody ever managed to be elected supreme leader without first acquiring the necessary votes by conquest?
Second, is it just me, or is Alien Crossfire inherently more violent? The alien factions seem to be so overpowered at the start of the game that all the human factions line up behind their war. Between them and Dawn's non-stop aggression, the game seems to be nonstop warfare.
I have to admit, I haven't actually played all the way through a game of Crossfire in years. The post-apocalyptic flavor just doesn't interest me quite as much as the ideological story behind plain vanilla SMAC.
I've come to enjoy playing a "nice guy" in SMAC, claiming victory via either transcendence or economic victory. My strategy is a balancing act, attempting to keep everyone at relatively the same power, with a few of them being allies, often submissive ones with a pact to serve. Generally speaking, one or two factions are eliminated (by others, usually Miriam or Santiago) prior to my establishing global hegemony. Sometimes I'm forced to eliminate Miriam or Yang (they just won't play along). The result of everybody being roughly the same power-wise is generally world peace; there's no clear leader to gang up on, there's no clear loser to pick off, so I find it's easy to keep them all at peace (little one-turn wars aside).
I have two questions.
First off, has anybody ever managed to be elected supreme leader without first acquiring the necessary votes by conquest?
Second, is it just me, or is Alien Crossfire inherently more violent? The alien factions seem to be so overpowered at the start of the game that all the human factions line up behind their war. Between them and Dawn's non-stop aggression, the game seems to be nonstop warfare.
I have to admit, I haven't actually played all the way through a game of Crossfire in years. The post-apocalyptic flavor just doesn't interest me quite as much as the ideological story behind plain vanilla SMAC.
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