You will still virtually keep up with the second place civ by virtue of the free techs you receive, and when the GL effect expires, you have a huge treasure chest of gold in the bank. If you get it, you can literally quit funding science and bank what you would otherwise contribute. It can be a huge boost in the early game. I always make a bee line for The Great Library when playing against a lot of opponents. Conversely, if you have only two or three opponents, you might want to keep your advances to yourself and make them work for theirs. The exception would be trading a military tech to an advanced aggressive rival. Otherwise they will just acquire the techs and resources from each other and you have no more bargaining power. If your game has a lot of active civs, they will trade among themselves anyway, so I suggest that you trade as often as you can and just accept the best deal regardless of the fairness of it. Adjust your strategy according to the number of active opponents and their tendencies. Also, different civilizations will make/accept widely varying offers, so shop around and see who will give the most in return. Perryĭon't expect *reasonable* trades with the AI (especially on harder levels). But when I arrange peace with an enemy, there is no way to include my ally in a 3-way negotiation. Also, they reply to some of my offers that I treated another nation unfairly. Sometimes I offer reasonable trades that would benefit us both (compared to other rivals) and get turned down. Originally posted by Perry:Last game, I traded successfully to keep up on techs.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |