Thread Tools
Old May 29, 2002, 08:08   #1
MarkG
Apolytoners Hall of FameApolyCon 06 Participants
Apolyton CS Co-Founder
 
MarkG's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Aug 1998
Location: Macedonia, Greece
Posts: 24,480
c#205 CIV3`S NOT SO GREAT LEAP FORWARD
CIV3`S NOT SO GREAT LEAP FORWARD
By Dr Nemo
May 29th, 2002
http://apolyton.net/misc/column/205_civ3leap.shtml
__________________
Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog

Last edited by MarkG; May 29, 2002 at 08:21.
MarkG is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 10:47   #2
keithsed
Settler
 
Local Time: 01:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Sep 2000
Posts: 4
I agree with you 100% I could never recover from the crowding and border assults that the AI came up with even before I had built a core area.

I've gone back to playing Civ 2 and enjoying it much more.

Keith
keithsed is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 11:54   #3
Mark_Everson
 
Mark_Everson's Avatar
 
Local Time: 21:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Dec 1969
Location: Canton, MI
Posts: 3,442
The article seems well-thought-out and fairly balanced overall.

But...

Quote:
There are aspects at the end of turns that the next turn seems pre-ordained. If I go into a hut, it's the same old thing (in Civ 2 I would find a new city; in Civ 3 it would be deserted or three barbarians--and no matter how many times I reload). If I reload a .sav game at the same point, any battle seems to come to the same conclusion with the winning unit having the same amount of damage. 10 out of 10 times; in Civ 2 you might repeat, but it didn't duplicate.
Let me get this straight, you're complaining that it won't let you blatantly cheat !?! If you don't like the negative consequences, don't enter... It seems so simple I can't count the number of times a strategy post came up for Civ2 where part of the strategy we were being illuminated about was just plain reloading.

I guess as a marketing tool Firaxis could, in a patch, allow cheating thru reloads. The customer is always right and all that.

Anyway, best of luck in getting the game you want!
__________________
Project Lead for The Clash of Civilizations
A Unique civ-like game that will feature low micromanagement, great AI, and a Detailed Government model including internal power struggles. Demo 8 available Now! (go to D8 thread at top of forum).
Check it out at the Clash Web Site and Forum right here at Apolyton!
Mark_Everson is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 12:08   #4
Keeper of Hell
Chieftain
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Mar 2002
Posts: 79
Quote:
Originally posted by Mark_Everson

I guess as a marketing tool Firaxis could, in a patch, allow cheating thru reloads. The customer is always right and all that.
They already have- the option to turn off the "Preserve Random Seed" rule in 1.21.
__________________
KoH
"There are no stupid questions, but there are a LOT of inquistive idiots."
Keeper of Hell is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 13:26   #5
GodKing
Civilization III Democracy GamePtWDG RoleplayInterSite Democracy Game: Apolyton TeamPtWDG2 TabemonoC3C IDG: Apolyton TeamApolyton UniversityC3CDG The Lost BoysCiv4 SP Democracy GameC4DG SarantiumC4WDG CalysiumC4BtSDG Templars
Emperor
 
GodKing's Avatar
 
Local Time: 21:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Detroit
Posts: 4,551
For the most part, I do agree with all that was said. Good job.
__________________
Try peace first. If that does not work, then killing them is often a good solution. :evil:

As long as I could figure a way to hump myself, I would be OK with that
--Con
GodKing is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 13:59   #6
Oerdin
Deity
 
Oerdin's Avatar
 
Local Time: 18:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: In a bamboo forest hiding from Dale.
Posts: 17,436
I believe he did a good job of summing up the majority opinion of Civ3.
__________________
Christianity is the belief in a cosmic Jewish zombie who can give us eternal life if we symbolically eat his flesh and blood and telepathically tell him that we accept him as our lord and master so he can remove an evil force present in all humanity because a woman was convinced by a talking snake to eat from an apple tree.
Oerdin is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 15:15   #7
notyoueither
Civilization III MultiplayerCivilization III PBEMInterSite Democracy Game: Apolyton TeamC3C IDG: Apolyton TeamApolytoners Hall of FameCiv4 InterSite DG: Apolyton TeamPolyCast TeamPtWDG Gathering StormC4DG Gathering Storm
Deity
 
notyoueither's Avatar
 
Local Time: 19:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Aug 2001
Location: of naught
Posts: 21,300
"There are aspects at the end of turns that the next turn seems pre-ordained. ... If I reload a .sav game at the same point, any battle seems to come to the same conclusion with the winning unit having the same amount of damage. 10 out of 10 times; in Civ 2 you might repeat, but it didn't duplicate"

When was this written? New random seed on reload is an option in 1.21


"and for the workers, I would like to automate on one function--clean pollution... automation usually means 'build road, then mine', even on irrigated land"

You can have them clean just pollution. You can automate them to improve without changing previous improvements.
__________________
(\__/)
(='.'=)
(")_(") This is Bunny. Copy and paste bunny into your signature to help him gain world domination.
notyoueither is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 15:20   #8
Auslander
Chieftain
 
Auslander's Avatar
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Oct 2001
Location: Cincinnati, OH, USA
Posts: 52
Someone needs history 101
Quote:
....in the previous Civs I never shifted
my Capital; other than Brazil and West Germany, has it happened in the
real world?)....
-----------------------------------------------------------------


Yes. The US had Philadelphia, New York and now Washington, DC.
Auslander is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 15:54   #9
TCO
Apolytoners Hall of Fame
Emperor
 
TCO's Avatar
 
Local Time: 15:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: Richmond, VA
Posts: 8,057
Nice article.

It did seem to have a sense of "I don't like Civ3 cause it's too hard" though.
TCO is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 17:46   #10
DeepO
PtWDG Gathering StormInterSite Democracy Game: Apolyton TeamApolyton UniversityC4DG Gathering Storm
Emperor
 
DeepO's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: supporting Candle'Bre
Posts: 8,773
I don't get it. Why do so many people think this is a great article? Is it because Dr Nemo tries to impress us with his three degrees, holding a job, while inventing his version of ICS? Hell, at this moment I'm going for my fourth degree, I am also working, and ICS is a natural choice once you see the amount of settlers the AIs are churning out. I don't gloat about it (or at least I don't want to).

I agree that Civ III might not be the great leap forward many would have hoped for, and certain aspects could be improved. What I don't agree with are the reasons Dr Nemo gives:

Spies were IMHO overpowered in CivII and SMAC. And historically speaking it wasn't very realistic either. Sure, with enough cash it would be cool to buy an extra settler or worker, but bribing a complete city isn't very realistic, is it? While now, on the trading table you can get a city, provided you have enough cash and/or other goodies to pay for it.

negotiations are somewhat of a poker game, and AIs indeed try to get insane deals. But, with the right tactics, you can do the same to them. The whole question is whether the AI thinks he is superior to you or not. If you are far more powerful than an AI, he will give flight for your territory map, and he'll be thankful. You don't see that very often, though, as normally if you are more powerful, you also are amongst the first to discover these key techs. True, the AIs seem to know when you discovered something new, and ask for it immediately, but in an intense game I know that too. Just do a trade every turn with everyone, checking if there is something new, offering 1 gold each time and you get this information without having to spend money on spies.

Catapults and cannons are not worthless, they are simply not that overpowered as they used to be. True, in many cases they will kill citizens in stead of damaging elite units, and while this is historically true, it is a great game mechanic as well. Military there's an advantage as smaller cities do not get defense bonuses, there's fewer resistance after the war, and if you don't win the fight you leave a crippled city behind. Plus, you should be punished to use these 'cheap' tactics, the real warrior spirit is to have either superior force (cavalry against spearman) or superior numbers in order to win. Or you can have both, using an army of cavalry against a single (elite) spearman.

Blitzkrieg tactics are still very possible. True, you cannot only take the capital for its wonders and leave all border villages as is, but I feel this is a very good thing. If you really want a blitzkrieg, make sure you have 100 modern armors when your enemy has just produced its first mechanized infantry, you'll take his territory in 2 or 3 turns. If that's not blitz enough for you, I don't know what is.

Further, I feel like you didn't read the manual properly. Nearly all of my pollution is being automatically cleaned, and this I feel is one of the great improvements of the AI (I know many will not agree with the worker AI being any good, but if you have enough of these automated workers running around it works like a charm). On a related note, not mining plains can hardly be described as a good tactic, once you get to population 22 shields are what nets you most, not food. I agree you still can do a better job than the worker AI, but only marginably so.

Corruption is tough, but with the latest patches it is doable. After all, there has to be a constraint on expansion, just to counter the tedious build-as-many-cities-as-you-can tactic of Civ II. If you need more forbidden palaces, there's a big chance you didn't plan the position of your first right.
Palaces identical: If you want to use the Culture bomb tactic, you can, if you want to keep it at its original place, you can too. The cost of one is depending on the size of your empire, and I don't get your complaint that it costs more then the average (ancient-industrial) wonder. This should be a good thing, as you can stockpile shields, and have some reserve if an AI builds a wonder 3 turns before you'd finish yours.

All in all, it seems as you haven't grown accustomed to the Civ III style yet, as it may not be a pure continuation of Civ II, but it definately is a fine game. Of course there are some aspects that could have been improved, and certain decisions are questionnable (I too loved the wonder movies), but you should congratulate Firaxis for making yet another memorable Civ, not write columns on why it is no good.

DeepO

PS: the one thing that made me appreciate Civ III the most is that it saved the random seed: no more unnecesary cheating! I'm sorry you feel this is a disadvantage, but it is in line with the rest of your column.
DeepO is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 18:53   #11
Jaybe
Mac
Emperor
 
Jaybe's Avatar
 
Local Time: 18:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: Henderson, NV USA
Posts: 4,168
Great Leap Forwards seem to take a heavy toll, referencing PRC under Mao. Despite all the 'glass-is-half-empty' people, I think Firaxis is doing a great job 'evolving' Civilization III.

To sum up my opinion of Dr Nemo, I think he should go back to Civ2! He is used to it and gives him a nice, mindless experience where there is nothing new to learn or get used to. How is THAT for being 'glass is half empty!'

JB
__________________
JB
I play BtS (3.19) -- Noble or Prince, Rome, marathon speed, huge hemispheres (2 of them), aggressive AI, no tech brokering. I enjoy the Hephmod Beyond mod. For all non-civ computer uses, including internet, I use a Mac.
Jaybe is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 19:34   #12
Allemand
Warlord
 
Local Time: 01:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2000
Location: Olympia
Posts: 229
It's an excellent review, even if everyone doesn't agree with everything.

Civ II has better game management tools, while Civ III improved several aspects of the game. I'd like to see more things improved.
Allemand is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 20:33   #13
Coracle
Prince
 
Coracle's Avatar
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 915
"But thus far it has been a disappointment".

It has been a disappointment as a game; it has been a BIG disappointment compared to Civ 2. It is also less historic and realistic that Civ 2.

Civ 3 is NOT a succesor to Civ 2. This game is really "Soren Johnson's Culture". I await a real Civ 3.

Culture Flipping is garbage.

Settler Diarrhea is braindead - no sane ruler would ever waste his shields throwing out towns anywhere that can never be productive and can't be defended in war.

The AI cheats.

The unit and resource values that came with the game are braindead.

Trade and Espionage have become tediuos abstractions.

Bombardment units' strengths can be Edited up, but they are still an exercise in tedium, and the idea that a frigate firing solid cannonballs just 500 yards beyond the coast can destroy improvements is stupid even for Civ 3.

Lots more.

But what cannot be disputed is that Firaxis is expert at MARKETING. Just read their self-congratulatory posts. They are now less skilled at game development. Too bad.
Coracle is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 20:46   #14
MarkG
Apolytoners Hall of FameApolyCon 06 Participants
Apolyton CS Co-Founder
 
MarkG's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Aug 1998
Location: Macedonia, Greece
Posts: 24,480
my god, dont you get tired of posting such unpleasant posts coracle?
__________________
Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog
MarkG is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 21:21   #15
Coracle
Prince
 
Coracle's Avatar
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 915
ROADS
I want to add that the article's author was dead on with his criticism of the non-historical baloney about an invading army NOT being able to use roads in enemy territory.

What happened to the roads? They disappear into thin air like those millions of people "razed" in that nearby metropolis?? Like that huge garrison that vanished in that Flipped city??

UNLESS PILLAGED, roads (not railroads) should definitely be usable to an invading army. To prevent that is to make the game even more unrealistic and non-historical.

This could be easily fixed by Firaxis. But they don't care.
Coracle is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 21:30   #16
MarkG
Apolytoners Hall of FameApolyCon 06 Participants
Apolyton CS Co-Founder
 
MarkG's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Aug 1998
Location: Macedonia, Greece
Posts: 24,480
Quote:
This could be easily fixed by Firaxis. But they don't care
whats more possible: to not care if your creation is as good as it could be or to consider that a certain part of your creation is best if it is the way it is?
__________________
Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog
MarkG is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 22:46   #17
lorddread
Warlord
 
lorddread's Avatar
 
Local Time: 19:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Indianapolis, the Speed Capital of the World
Posts: 190
Great Leap Forward?
Dr. Nemo had some good points. Some things needed to be thought out better.

1. Workers need a menu to tell them what to do. It does get tedious to have 30+ workers having to tell them what you want to do.

2. The AI needs to be forced to upgrade its units. How many times have you been fighting with armor or Mech Inf and run into towns with spearmen, pikemen or immortals? Even "Third World" nations use AK-47's, M-16's and other modern weapons even if they don't have hundreds of tanks.

3. The game should allow you to keep obsolete units out of the list. I don't like having to scroll through spearmen, calvary etc to get to a tank or mass transit.

4. I like the spying with an embassy or spy, but the it is too costly. I shouldn't have to pay 8500 gold for a tech the AI is willing to sell me for 2500.

5. We shouldn't have to pay for Civ III part 2 when it should have been included.

6. Some of the wonders should have been thought out better. WHy does the Pyramids give you a granary? I know you can change it, but still. Hoover Dam should be sooner (after all it was built in the 40's and 50's).

7. Pentagon should be able to be built without a winning army.

8. Governments should be redone. Democracy is the best we got in this game? Heck I was a big fan of the Corp Republic.

Well that's it for now.

I applaud Dr. Nemo for speaking his mind, even if everyone doesn't agree with him.
__________________
KATN
lorddread is offline  
Old May 29, 2002, 23:31   #18
DeepO
PtWDG Gathering StormInterSite Democracy Game: Apolyton TeamApolyton UniversityC4DG Gathering Storm
Emperor
 
DeepO's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Jan 2002
Location: supporting Candle'Bre
Posts: 8,773
Lorddread, everybody is entitled to his opinion, and everybody who gives well-thought arguments should indeed be applauded to. But, you should also expect someone to react to it, otherwise this wouldn't be a discussion forum.

Some of the points you make are very valid, others I'm not that sure about. For instance, why should the AI be forced to upgrade it's units? I don't do that either, it's much more efficient to simply build the newer units, and keep the old running around as police. If you can use them to get a few easy victories, you win a lot out of them. Plus, it fools the opponents in thinking your army is huge... I do agree completely that the AI could be more reflective on how to use them, but to take Dr Nemo's example: 48 legions are a considerable nuisance, even if you have tanks to counter them.

Spying is another debatable thing: If you have to pay 8500 for stealing a tech (possibly undetected), it makes sense over buying it from someone for 2500. After all, you don't steal something if you don't really need it and nobody wants to share it with you. Trading is always a lot better, but if you don't want to give all that money to your enemy, you have to pay the price... If you steal something, the money you spend is 'lost', nobody else benefits from it. This is a big advantage, and worth the extra cost, I think.

Regarding the wonders: If you plan for the Pyramids, you don't build all those settlers you could have. Getting free granaries in return is a just reward, I feel. It makes it all a lot more real if you just didn't get it, it is a big risk you're taking.
Plus, the Hoover dam is also as close to the real world as it could be: atomic theory in reality was developed in the first decades of last century, electronics was about the same time as the Hoover dam. Where is the problem with that one?

Of course, sending a space ship to Alpha Centauri in 1650 isn't really like it happened in the real world, but you need a certain amount of abstraction and fantasy in any game to make it work.

Governments are, IMHO, quite all right. They are balanced, they are more or less historically correct, and each one has it's uses. Maybe some additional tweaking could have been done, maybe some special governments could have been added, but as it is now it works. And once you know how to use them, you can have loads of fun, which is the most important thing, no?

DeepO
DeepO is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 01:27   #19
Ben Williams
Chieftain
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Apr 2002
Location: Ithaca, NY
Posts: 84
This artical made me remember something I can't believe I forgot, civ was never about pure realism, it was about fun. While it should be realistic, it should never sacrifice its major appeal to do so-that is the pure rush you get from a great game-to attain this. Maybe spies were overpowered, but they were fun, it gave you a feeling of strenth. The interface was sometimes silly, but yet functional and simple, no mucking around with a bunch of graphics and mouse-clicking. There is nothing like building that grand socity from scrach (I liked to play America and take the entire western world for myself). Now everything is weighed down, it seems, and the whole game feels less like a grand socity and more like a grand pain in the ass. Thanks for bringing me back to basics.

I'd also like to add one irritating thing about civ3, that's the things the AI says. None of your advisors or advisaries talk like they might in the real world, they talk like little kid versions of leaders. Maybe I'm just gulliable, but I usually felt some emotion in civ2 when they would declare war and a sense of victory as they prayed for mercy, the diolouge in civ3 is just silly by comparison.
Ben Williams is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 01:31   #20
King of Rasslin
Prince
 
King of Rasslin's Avatar
 
Local Time: 01:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Nov 2001
Location: GA
Posts: 343
If you want to play a builder game, play Sim City or Roller Coaster Tycoon or whatever. Buy out the competition. Right. Civ 3 is about civilization, and civilization is a very, very bloody concept. Having a huge city with discontent next to an opposing city with luxuries is going to mean a lot of people are going to die.

War is what the game is about. The AI is much better than in Civ 2. The game is more balanced in many ways. And bombard units are only weak to the people that crank science up to 80% and wonder why they become obsolete so quickly, jeez.

Hey, catapults and cannons are balanced. They can be upgraded, they cannot be destroyed. You can capture them, but they don't explode. If anything, it's a game balance issue when someone makes a ton of cannons. Artillery is just a little bit stronger, but newbs like that extra range. Wow, I save one turn! Come on, is it really that fun to buy out your enemy's cities? It's more fun to start on a desert penensula yet still make #3 on the power graph in end. I bet most of the people that like Civ 2 more restart until they start on a river with cattle. Pathetic.

Civ 2 had scenarios. That's it. But Civ 2 had an expansion pack too, so you can't judge Civ 3 just yet. The editor was cheap, but the game had to be released. It isn't like the editor is a big deal to me, the random maps are much better than in Civ 2.

Ok, air is too weak in Civ 3. Bombers are great, but fighters need more bombard strength. Radar artillery is a little too weak. For the most part, Civ 3 is better than Civ 2. It even approaches Alpha Centauri, but the lack of government options and more unique civs (2 traits and a UU, big deal) prevent it from taking the throne.

Just wait until PTW comes out, you haven't seen half of how great Civ 3 is going to be thought of.
__________________
Wrestling is real!
King of Rasslin is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 01:41   #21
Centaur
Settler
 
Local Time: 17:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: May 2002
Location: San Jose, CA
Posts: 3
Civ III has many intriguing enhancements, but it's also the most tedious game I've ever played.

1) The AI is rightfully regarded as improved. However, it doesn't play by the same rules we do. This removes fundamental elements of strategy in the name of marketing.

2) Warfare now involves massive numbers of units on both sides. This adds time without adding strategy.

3) If you try to win peacefully, you'll need to run a democracy style government. This encourages your neighbors to attack you to promote war weariness. This means you're constantly at war, and in CIV III, war is tedious.

4) If you try to win militarily, brace yourself for repetitive gameplay with meager strategic depth and almost no tactical considerations. In addition you'll face the dreaded corruption model. Capturing distant cities does not speed up the game, because these cities contribute very little while complicating your empire.

5) The "city revolt" algorithm is complex enough that one never really knows how many troops to install. The answer is either to overgarrison or to obliterate the city. In the second case, the AI will build a replacement city before you can blink. The only real way to prevent this is to found your own cities, thereby adding to your micromanagement nightmare.

6) Automating workers and enabling city governors is a great idea on paper but you'll get much more out of them with micromanagement. At higher difficulty levels, using automation is a good way to lose the game.

7) Ineffective units like bombers are still barely worth using, but their 10% success rate means they have to be used in ridiculous numbers. Again, that takes time while adding only a little strategy.

Generally, I think these changes were made in the name of "play balance". Unfortunately they created a game of "shovel the fleas across the barn".

And that's why I went back to Alpha Centauri.
Centaur is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 05:51   #22
tuckson
Warlord
 
tuckson's Avatar
 
Local Time: 02:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Jul 2001
Location: home
Posts: 170
Hi,

Personnally I think firaxis did a great Job on Civ3. However, There are 2 things that really disappoint me. They've been mentioned in the article. Those are the bombing units and the lack of spies.

The bombing units should not be as poweful as in civ2, but a bit more than what it's now would not harm the game. It does not make sense that a battleship misses a city for 75 % of the bombardments. It also makes no sense that mostly civilians were killed, because that's a decision a commander takes. And mostly militairy targets will be bombed a a city in real life.

The spy system in Civ3 is like taking a chance in a lottery. Of course this was also the point in civ2, but with use of the spies it was at least a bit more personal. No in civ3, the use of spies would be fun because on different continents this could lead to different possibilities in enemy cities due to the presence or absence of resources.

But furthermore, I don't think the sometimes overwhelming criticism on Civ3 is correct. The guys did a great job, though it might not be the job you wanted. With one exception. The upcoming release of Multiplayer in an add-on we need to pay for. That's an absolute shame.

Kind regards,
__________________
-------------------------------><------------------------------
History should be known for learning from the past...
Nah... it only shows stupidity of mankind.
-------------------------------><------------------------------
tuckson is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 07:08   #23
Blackadar1
Chieftain
 
Local Time: 01:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Nov 2001
Posts: 69
Hell, I'm suprised the fanboy moderators around here even published the article. Usually opinions other than "Civ III is or will be great" are quickly driven away, edited or deleted. Good article.
Blackadar1 is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 07:35   #24
MarkG
Apolytoners Hall of FameApolyCon 06 Participants
Apolyton CS Co-Founder
 
MarkG's Avatar
 
Local Time: 03:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Aug 1998
Location: Macedonia, Greece
Posts: 24,480
Blackadar1, you should be paying more attention both on what articles we publish in the column as well as which exact types of threads are closed....

Beyond that, it's simply amazing that at the same time that you recognize as a positive action the posting of the article, you also insult us based on your assumptions....
__________________
Co-Founder, Apolyton Civilization Site
Co-Owner/Webmaster, Top40-Charts.com | CTO, Apogee Information Systems
giannopoulos.info: my non-mobile non-photo news & articles blog
MarkG is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 11:16   #25
lorddread
Warlord
 
lorddread's Avatar
 
Local Time: 19:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Indianapolis, the Speed Capital of the World
Posts: 190
From Olympus
MarkG has spoken!
__________________
KATN
lorddread is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 13:22   #26
Timtopia
Settler
 
Local Time: 01:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: Dec 1969
Location: Story City, Iowa, USA
Posts: 9
Back to the articule, I wish Firaxis included "state capitals" Sure that forbidden palace is great but really huge empires suck with all that waste. Think how big the US is with 50 state capitals. All I am saying is we need more then one Forbidden Palace. Im Sure there is a way to balance it out if it might radically effect gameplay.
Timtopia is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 13:26   #27
punkbass2000
Civilization III MultiplayerCivilization III Democracy GameApolyton UniversityCivilization III PBEM
King
 
punkbass2000's Avatar
 
Local Time: 21:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Waterloo, ON, Canada
Posts: 1,500
A palace and FP would easily cover the US, and the is US far from corruption-free.
__________________
"I used to be a Scotialist, and spent a brief period as a Royalist, but now I'm PC"
-me, discussing my banking history.
punkbass2000 is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 17:03   #28
rhenric557
Chieftain
 
Local Time: 19:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: May 2002
Location: Los Fresnos, TX
Posts: 34
Overall I believe CIV 3 is a great game. There will be something in every game for everyone to complain about, but What you dislike others may like.
The only way to fix this is to give the game better editing tools, such as with civ 2, which was quite easy to manipulate into what ever version of the game you wanted it to be.
There will always be things I don't like but the point is you learn to work around them. things that I miss from CIV 2 are air strips, e ability to easily add new units to the game, and the neccesity of having a diverse navy, if everyone can remember, in CIV 2 you had to pretty much stack naval units for protection battleships, aegis, and carriers just to get them out into the ocean safely, now you can send battleships, transports, and carriers out with relative safety since aircraft are no threat to an invasion force. Especially since all you have to do is wound an enemy ship to scare it off. I wish aircraft control went back to the way it was, you had more control. Besides there is no reason a fight can't search for a target and attack in the same turn.
rhenric557 is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 18:46   #29
MaS
Settler
 
Local Time: 02:35
Local Date: November 1, 2010
Join Date: May 2002
Posts: 3
Hi all,

as I read today in this thread, i am not the only one who is thinking about getting back to SMACX.

I bought CivIII 1 Month ago and was very happy that a got it... until first game....

My biggest reason is the function of GUI (besides others - see my table below).

In comparison to SMACX where nearly everything goes using 1 Click and you see what you want to see (stacked units on square or in the city, big buttons which are sensitive and near each other, units with their flags showing what they are doing right now, messages on end of turn that you can click and navigat to the place where it cames from,...),

in CivIII yopu have to double click the base, you do not see stocked units, on the base screen your have to target those little 'x'/'o' buttons which are placed so stupid, that you have to move your mouse almoust over the whole screen!
Advisors which are poping-up asking for work for a city without having the possibility to see what's going-on in the city,...

Shortly: the GUI is not so intuitive like in SMACX.

Guestion to Firaxis:
- will you write some sequel of SMACX? Because as i see CivIII, an Sequel to SMAC (integrating the only better thing from CivIII against SMACX - better negotiating possibilities) is my only hope...

here are all points which makes me angry/unhappy :-)



Item // SMAC // CIVIII
------------------------------------------------------------
Base Open // Click // Doubleclick!!!!!

Messages on end of each Turn // in Window (+ possibility to navigate) // disappered text on map!!!

Units in base // other garison seen from main map // have to open base

terain info incl. units // seen on click on terain //have to use right mouse menu (not all info at all)

worker/Unit // unit's order seen on the map (Construct road, mine,...) // have to be right-clicked


construction of spec. units // O.K. // none

battle resolving // O.K. // the same in all cases!

movies on Wonder // ! // nothing

airforce, bombardment // O.K. // weak

terain UP/DOWN // O.K. // no way

Attitude of AI // Color // text/diff. picture

work with prod. queue // O.K. // very complicated!



Firaxis, again, i hope that one of your 'unpublished' projects is a new Version of SMACX.

yours,
MaS.


MaS is offline  
Old May 30, 2002, 19:14   #30
Coracle
Prince
 
Coracle's Avatar
 
Local Time: 20:35
Local Date: October 31, 2010
Join Date: Feb 2002
Posts: 915
Quote:
Originally posted by MaS
Hi all,

as I read today in this thread, i am not the only one who is thinking about getting back to SMACX.

I bought CivIII 1 Month ago and was very happy that a got it... until first game....

My biggest reason is the function of GUI (besides others - see my table below).

In comparison to SMACX where nearly everything goes using 1 Click and you see what you want to see (stacked units on square or in the city, big buttons which are sensitive and near each other, units with their flags showing what they are doing right now, messages on end of turn that you can click and navigat to the place where it cames from,...),

in CivIII yopu have to double click the base, you do not see stocked units, on the base screen your have to target those little 'x'/'o' buttons which are placed so stupid, that you have to move your mouse almoust over the whole screen!
Advisors which are poping-up asking for work for a city without having the possibility to see what's going-on in the city,...

Shortly: the GUI is not so intuitive like in SMACX. . .

In otherwords, besides all its other problems and historical lack of realism, Civ 3's game system is laborious and TEDIOUS dragging out an already slow game.
Coracle is offline  
 

Bookmarks

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is On

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -4. The time now is 21:35.


Design by Vjacheslav Trushkin, color scheme by ColorizeIt!.
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.2
Copyright ©2000 - 2010, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Apolyton Civilization Site | Copyright © The Apolyton Team