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  • Windowed?

    checking this screenshot: http://moo3.quicksilver.com/cool/oct...relations.html

    it looks as if the game is in a windowed mode. is this just for development or are there plans to have it windowed? i loved civ2 for that
    "I've lived too long with pain. I won't know who I am without it. We have to leave this place, I am almost happy here."
    - Ender, from Ender's Game by Orson Scott Card

  • #2
    yeess, windowed would be nice..

    Just noticed something wrong with that pic, the Casus Belli slider is all the way to -190, but it say -10
    <Kassiopeia> you don't keep the virgins in your lair at a sodomising distance from your beasts or male prisoners. If you devirginised them yourself, though, that's another story. If they devirginised each other, then, I hope you had that webcam running.
    Play Bumps! No, wait, play Slings!

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    • #3
      During the development stage games are mostly in windows, so the code can be viewed and edited while the game is running.

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      • #4
        May I just ask what's the Casus Belli? I saw it, heard it... but don't remember or it's just never been in my mind... My latin is bad
        Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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        • #5
          I think its some form of diplomatic realtions meter
          "Dont move or ill shoot you full of... little yellow bolts of light!" -John Crichton, astronaut and scientist

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          • #6
            IIRC, it's an attempt to make the AI less quixotic. Rather than having a single relations bar that can go from "we love you, we're glad to have this allinace" to "grr, you were framed, war time!", you have the actual state of relations, and you have Casus Belli. Only Casus Belli is affected by diplomatic actions, spy actions, etc; each turn, Casus Belli pulls your actual relations closer toward its own state.

            This way, while it may (or may not; I'm not a beta tester, so I can't tell you) be easy to get really bad cassus belli all of a sudden, you'll still get a chance to make it up to close allies, and you'll have a while before relations with allies actually start to sour.

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            • #7
              I thought "casus belli" means loosely translated "reason for war", or "reason to declare war".
              Then a high casus belli rating with another empire would mean you could declare war, without taking a big reputation hit among the other empires, since you have a valid reason to declare war.
              <Kassiopeia> you don't keep the virgins in your lair at a sodomising distance from your beasts or male prisoners. If you devirginised them yourself, though, that's another story. If they devirginised each other, then, I hope you had that webcam running.
              Play Bumps! No, wait, play Slings!

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              • #8
                It's more like:

                Out people love you, or our our people hate you.

                While official diplom. relations are something dictated by leade, casus belli is more like people feeling about other empire.

                For example it would be bad to declare war on race which was very good to your people for centureies.


                P.S.
                Of course I'm just guessing.

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                • #9
                  I know "belli" is a word that's to fight: belli-gerant, "belliqueux" in French... so has to do with war.
                  Go GalCiv, go! Go Society, go!

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Lemmy
                    I thought "casus belli" means loosely translated "reason for war", or "reason to declare war".
                    Then a high casus belli rating with another empire would mean you could declare war, without taking a big reputation hit among the other empires, since you have a valid reason to declare war.
                    Exactly.

                    'Casus' is one of those multipurpose words.
                    While it could be loosely translated with 'case', actually in Latin it has indeed more the shade of 'reason', 'motive', ore more generally 'occasion', 'event'.

                    Indeed, the locution 'casus belli' *definitely* refers to a SINGLE event, the one which caused the war itself to break out, even if eventually a pretext.
                    Like the murder of Franz Ferdinand was for WWI, for instance (while the real motives were more widely and significantly rooted in the economic and political scenario in whole Europe, dating back and building up since sometimes and not related to the single accidental event).

                    'bellum' means plainly 'war' in Latin, where 'belli' is the genitive: 'of the war'.
                    See Caesar's "De bello gallico" or "About the Gaul war".

                    This is why the term 'Casus Belli', to someone who understands a minumum of Latin, really STRIDES with the concept of a *stance*, or of a "meter"...

                    Lemmy's interpretation makes sense, stressing the fact that a build up of tension and hostility motives is NOT a 'Casus Belli', where a single offending action is: "THIS means war!"


                    (EDIT: I had confused the name of the assassinated archduke with Franz Josef, his uncle the emperor...)
                    Last edited by MariOne; December 10, 2002, 07:28.
                    I don't exactly know what I mean by that, but I mean it (Holden Caulfield)

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