Originally posted by angrybowen
All I can say is I am not frightened to have 40 cities or more.
All I can say is I am not frightened to have 40 cities or more.
Originally posted by angrybowen
In addition I found them far easier to manage than Civ 4. As you have pointed out hex, you can have more, many more cities in civ 4 anyway.
In addition I found them far easier to manage than Civ 4. As you have pointed out hex, you can have more, many more cities in civ 4 anyway.
Originally posted by angrybowen
Going for a science victory created an entirely new game feel for me, it was certainly tense as I had to make sacrifices to achieve it which could have led me to disaster. It had a certain "racing" feel about it.
Going for a science victory created an entirely new game feel for me, it was certainly tense as I had to make sacrifices to achieve it which could have led me to disaster. It had a certain "racing" feel about it.
Originally posted by angrybowen
For the life of me I cannot understand your obsession with small empire victories. Maybe if you could give me a historical example or 2 it would help.
For the life of me I cannot understand your obsession with small empire victories. Maybe if you could give me a historical example or 2 it would help.
There have been many historical large empires (...land control and population driving and determining economic, scientific, and military strength as compared to everyone else in the world...classic Bigger Is Better...TM) and they have ALL collasped to small size. (Egypt, Babylon, Persia, Greek, Rome, HRE, Mongols, Spain, British...) Many still have some impact in an indirect way, but their glory days are past. Ironically, most of their lifespan can be measured in decades and in rare cases, three or four hundred years at a huge empire size. Then they invaribly implode.
The same will happen to the US eventually.
The only empire that may be considered consistently large (population and territorial control) throughout history could be China...but it was so insular (they shut the door on outsiders, focused inwardly and did not really invade anyone on a continental stage) for so long that it is just now crawling out of third world status.
Now pay attention...here is my point.
Germany, 1930's...
Gutted by it's failure in WWI. Not large (landwise and population-wise compared to Allied Europe...)
It wasn't population size or land control that gave it early success in WWII, but it was efficient planning and useage of the resources it had, as well as a national mindset of war.
Without some costly military blunders, it was on the brink of controlling ALL of Europe and Russia too during WWII. This despite the fact that most of the countries it controlled hated them.
If it had held onto the land it took, most likely it would have imploded too... Tht's why the USSR collasped in the '80s.
Or take Germany today...
It doesnt have anywhere near the population and land area of Indonesia or Brazil, yet technologically, militarily, and standard of living-wise, it is vastly more powerful than either of them.
Or take the Netherlands in the 14-15th century. Very small, but because of it's trading networking, it was a major player during that time...comperable to England, Spain...
Point being that historically, large empires almost always fail...and size is rarely the determining factor for greatness.
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