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AI in MOO3

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  • #16
    mmm, i donno. The Civ3 ai was sort of a one trick pony IMO -> tech trade with all the other AIs, ignore the player. End of strategy.

    But I agree. AI is always ****, its why I have trouble bringing myself to play a SP game. :/

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    • #17
      CivIII AI did cheat horribly...ie: you're pounding the hell out of them in war, you're taking city after city...yet you offer peace, your population is upset about war -- and the computer demands stuff from you for peace. LoL

      Hopefully MOOIII AI isn't like that.
      Veni, vidi, vici.
      [I came, I saw, I conquered].
      -- Gaius Julius Caesar

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      • #18
        Actually in civ3, if you pounded the AI and took a couple cities, they would be willing to give you tech or stuff for peace IF you had a good reputation (i.e. didnt sneak attack/break peace treaties before the set time.)
        Go read the strat articles in the forum on this site....

        moo3 should be a bit like that....not like moo2/1, where when you were killing them they would hate you forever and never talk to you again. no matter how overpowered they were...
        in moo3 they should beg for mercy I think, which is good, and realistic.

        Yes the AI "strat" of swapping all techs amongst itself, ignoring the human was dumb, and pissed me off. Especially at higher difficulties when it was impossible to gain a tech lead.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Todd Hawks
          In fact, the Civ3 AI is the best I've ever seen. ...
          It's far from perfect but show me an AI that performs half as well as that of Civ3 (in a game as complex as Civ3 of course).
          Civ3 was pretty good, IMO, except for being very unfair in deals with player, while swapping stuff like crazy amongst itself.

          I expect moo3 to be at least as good, and cheat less. This is based on what the betatesters have said. I expect it to be fairly good at managing your colonies and thus reducing micromanagement in the mid and late game. Why? Because you can give it a lot of help in terms of what to build by creating priorities for different colony types, and then assigning each colony one of thsoe colony types. So you can specify a build priority for a "research world" and then tell it to make colonies x and y research worlds. And specify something else for a "shipyard world" and specify something else to be that....
          it can therefore do good because you give it some general guidelines, and it is capable of following them.

          in previous games, autobuild always sucked because you couldnt give it guidelines.

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          • #20
            I did not like the way the Civ III AI cheated or conspired against the player to make up for its inability to control a mixed force army, but I've beaten that to death on the appropriate forum.

            That Planetary AI and Finance AI can be pretty much left to get on with it is a good sign.
            To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
            H.Poincaré

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            • #21
              Originally posted by Alexfrog


              Civ3 was pretty good, IMO, except for being very unfair in deals with player, while swapping stuff like crazy amongst itself.
              It only "swaps" if the other AI's can afford what it's offering to sell. In this aspect the AI treats every other player in the game, human and AI, the same. If your version of Civ3 AI doesn't work this way then you haven't played with the latest patch.

              I expect moo3 to be at least as good, and cheat less. This is based on what the betatesters have said. I expect it to be fairly good at managing your colonies and thus reducing micromanagement in the mid and late game. Why? Because you can give it a lot of help in terms of what to build by creating priorities for different colony types, and then assigning each colony one of thsoe colony types. So you can specify a build priority for a "research world" and then tell it to make colonies x and y research worlds. And specify something else for a "shipyard world" and specify something else to be that....
              it can therefore do good because you give it some general guidelines, and it is capable of following them.

              in previous games, autobuild always sucked because you couldnt give it guidelines.
              I am worried about the MOO3 AI because it will seem to have the SOSDD "strategy" of "if the human player is winning then EVERYONE dogpile on them ,regardless of past treaties, etc". I had thought this strategy was being discarded as companies finally put some real "I" in their AI, but from what some of the beta testers have said this is not true.

              Let's all hope the AI in Moo3 handles war declarations, honoring treaties, etc, as well as the Civ3 AI does. I like having repurcussions to back-stabbing the AI (invading without declaring war) and having relations with other races actually reflected in your general diplomacy.

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Grumbold
                I did not like the way the Civ III AI cheated or conspired against the player to make up for its inability to control a mixed force army, but I've beaten that to death on the appropriate forum.

                That Planetary AI and Finance AI can be pretty much left to get on with it is a good sign.
                Ah, obviously you haven't played the newest version of Civ3 because the AI handles war better than any other 4X game on the market, IMHO.

                The only way the AI "cheats" is to know where resources are before they appear, unless you count on the AI "bonuses" when you play at higher difficulty levels.

                Compared to Moo1 & 2 and Civ 1 & 2, where the AI's main strategy was "dogpile on the human player" the AI in Civ3 is top notch.

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                • #23
                  Like I said, done and dusted imho. I demonstrated to my own satisfaction that the AI knew where my units were well outside of its legal view range and reacted to that knowledge. I'm basing my observations on the base game up to and including 1.29f and not including Pay More Money or wahtever it was called. You can search for the full exposition on Civ III General if you are remotely interested. Having uninstalled Civ III months ago and not looked back I'm done. MoO1 still holds my attention because the AI's can attack you in different ways (and I rarely have a problem with dogpiling either.)
                  To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                  H.Poincaré

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                  • #24
                    Odd, I've never minded when the computer cheated by having some extra info that the player did not have. It bothered me more when he got major bonuses over the player and always had 2-3 times more units then you did (for reasons having nothing to do with fast expansions). Two of my favorite AIs were Civ 3 and HoMM I, both of them recieved extra info, but I never minded so much. Especialy since I don't believe in HOMM I they got any extra bonuses at all aside from the extra info.

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                    • #25
                      Its always best if the player doesn't KNOW the AI is cheating. As long as the player isn't sure, as far as he knows, the computer could be just playing well. But when its cheating becomes overt, anger ensues. Flagrant rule breaking (like triremes in civ) will constantly piss off a human.

                      But if you don't know that the AI knows the whole map in starcraft, you might think he just scouted your position before he rushes you.
                      By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may get to be a boss and work twelve hours a day.

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                      • #26
                        I definetely agree there. I think that's why it doesn't bother me when the computer just has more info then you do, it's hard to tell that the computer is cheating unless you really study his moves. It's only really bad when the extra info he gets makes certain strategies or options useless. Like if cloaking is useless because the enemy knows where you are anyway. I remember Master of Magic had a spell which disguised your unit as another unit, but they say in the very description of the spell that it didn't work against the computer. Given that there was no multiplayer, and the computer never used this spell, what was the point of it anyway? Of course a later patch fixed this by changing the spell into something else.

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                        • #27
                          One bit of AI cheating I hope moo3 avoids is what happened in IG2. Playing that game on easy was a total breeze. The computer practically flipped over and played dead when you met him. When I attempted to up the difficulty, I got my rear handed to me. Repeatedly.

                          The final straw came when I was playing as the Kra'hen. The damn humans were busting me up with this single fleet of 16 massive battleships. This fleet wandered through my territory, shotting up planetary defenses, but not really invading. When I finnally smashed them with a fleet, most of which died in the battle, I was yelling in victory. it had been a terrible challenge, and a fantastic fight. But I was victorious. After the battle I looked at the map, and saw three fleets heading for my territory. Three fleets of 16 massive battleships. I watched as they smashed everything I had left, and invaded most of my planets. I then quit the game and unistalled it.

                          Its bad enough to get your butt handed to you, but its simply unacceptable to find out the computer was toying with you the whole time.
                          By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may get to be a boss and work twelve hours a day.

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                          • #28
                            kc7, that doesn't sound like cheating - that sounds like the AI finally getting back at you for taking advantage of various exploits throughout the ages.

                            That sounds kinda cool, actually. Why didn't I pick up that game?

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                            • #29
                              That sounds kinda cool, actually. Why didn't I pick up that game?
                              The problem was that no matter how many times I tried, (and I reinsatlled by the way) I could never beat that damn AI on normal. I tried everything I could think of, I was even reloading to deal with enemy fleets. He always had more ships than me, better tech, more spies, and better planets.

                              I could hold them off for a while, especially if I researched the best defensive buildings and built them ALL over the place, but eventually a horde (and I do mean a horde) of extremely advanced tanks would drop out of the sky and annilate me.

                              Going back to easy did nothing for me. I could smash the AI there without even paying attention.

                              Its like if its the first time you play civ, and you have the option of playing on chietain or deity.
                              By working faithfully eight hours a day, you may get to be a boss and work twelve hours a day.

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                              • #30
                                I dunno why Kc. I won the game on normal as all 3 races without huge difficulties both times I played through after an initial learning game. All I did was expand as fast as possible both in size and in technological development.

                                If it has the jump on you just keep it capturing the same planets over and over by recapturing them once the enemy megafleet has moved elsewhere. Once you can build 3 of the best fortresses on your main planets you're pretty safe even if his fleets are overwhelming.
                                To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                                H.Poincaré

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