View Full Version : God i can't stop cheating


henyo10
Jun 30, 2008, 05:42 AM
ever since i knew how to use WB i can't stop myself from cheating when i get pissed at the game. is there any remedy for such?

killmeplease
Jun 30, 2008, 05:44 AM
ask someone to control you )

Stoney the I
Jun 30, 2008, 05:50 AM
think there is a way to shut down WB before you start the game
somewhere in the custom game options i think, not sure.

DanF5771
Jun 30, 2008, 06:20 AM
"Lock Modified Assets" in Custom Game Options -- Ctrl-W won't work.

Pir Lan Tota
Jun 30, 2008, 06:25 AM
just - dont - cheat

troytheface
Jun 30, 2008, 06:26 AM
since you cannot win without the world builder i would continiue to use it that way you won't be a loser and your self esteem will be higher. Self esteem is worth more than game time in the long run and then you can confess to alleviate self-doubt.

Pir Lan Tota
Jun 30, 2008, 06:39 AM
since you cannot win without the world builder i would continiue to use it that way you won't be a loser and your self esteem will be higher. Self esteem is worth more than game time in the long run and then you can confess to alleviate self-doubt.

This isnt bloody christianity...there is no After-Lan party when he snuffs it, this is hardcore gaming.

Stop using the world builder, trust me. Stuff will go wrong, stuff will annoy you, but defeating the odds will give you a massive rush and will make you enjoy the game a lot more then just deleting enemy stacks....At one point I lost 7 of my 12 cities to the Inca's but me and my budy managed to turn the war and get a victory, best game ever imho

It wasnt easy, but it was good fun :D

Stoney the I
Jun 30, 2008, 06:48 AM
yup that was the best game ever for sure. never seen that kind of massive war which could have gone either way in any other game so far.

yes you will get bad rolls with fights "you should have won"
yes you are going to miss wonders by 1 turn.
yes the enemy will send a stack if yr not rdy for it
yes the game will piss you off sometimes

but getting a victory even when this happends is so much more fun.

i myself use worldbuilder only if i dont take the game seriously and want to mess around. if i want a game, a good game, i stay away from it. and have no trouble at doing so.

lock modified assets as DanF5771 said and you'll be fine. call it :
"intervention"

:D

Pir Lan Tota
Jun 30, 2008, 06:54 AM
Hail All mighty one, Stoney the great...

Which also brings me back to this topic, playing with someone else online does make the game a lot more interresting :D

Kiwi Tyrant
Jun 30, 2008, 09:39 PM
I will normally 'customise' a map to experience a certain feature I wish to try eg. rocky/islands/high sea.
I will then immediately go into WB just to quickly check that the map suits what I want to experiment with. No use trying to play an isolated start, only to find some time later you're the only continent with 6 other civ's! I do this as a time saver, more than just outright cheating....:p

Wolfshanze
Jun 30, 2008, 10:33 PM
ever since i knew how to use WB i can't stop myself from cheating when i get pissed at the game. is there any remedy for such?
Anytime you get a really "unfair" combat result, simply reload (with random numbers activated) and try again... that should keep you from cheating by using the WB! :lol:

SwordofStriker
Jun 30, 2008, 10:58 PM
You could always turn down the difficulty. Maybe you're just not ready for chieftain yet. ;)

henyo10
Jul 01, 2008, 03:42 AM
i play prince. for some reason i just realized that i only had 5 cities even though my borders are gigantic... anyway ill try locking the assets to stop me

Morthis
Jul 01, 2008, 03:55 AM
I sometimes cheat with the world builder for fun (like giving myself a couple hundred nukes to play around with, global warming turned pretty much the entire planet into a desert lol), but beyond that, if you really do feel the need to get an advantage when the game frustrates you, set it to random seed and just save a lot. That way you can reload battles/etc.

It's really not needed though, I've lost with a 95% chance to win a fight, but if you have enough units, that isn't really an issue (unless it's a unit you've been trying to promote high for west point, and even then).

kniteowl
Jul 01, 2008, 06:02 PM
i only use world builder to check on things like odds and stuff.

I tend to more likely to use Auto-save, but mostly for moving my units in the wrong direction, I'm used to using the number pad lol but the reason Iuse it the most is becuase I keep getting unhappy citizens becuase I forget to turn on the Population Growth Limiter thing... I always forget 1 small detail when I micro :S...

unclethrill
Jul 01, 2008, 06:12 PM
Best remedy: Play on settler. If you still need to cheat to win, find a new game to play.

troytheface
Jul 01, 2008, 06:29 PM
or you could refine your method and create a walk through. it'd be more interesting than "which way should the warrior move"? zzzz
Post a screen shot of a really diificult position then say - "and now i will delete the enemy spear from that stack and attack with my created Keshiks" and someone can write in "no- give yourself more iron and take away everyone's sheep."
"The Great World Builder Walkthrough with the Byzantines" (noted for their bribery and treachery, good thing the rightous crusaders pillaged and killed the royal-heirachy-and-peoples-of-indolent-luxery-who made others fight their battles)

Magma_Dragoon
Jul 01, 2008, 08:54 PM
Kick the difficulty down a notch. BAM!

karadoc
Jul 01, 2008, 09:31 PM
I'm with the 'lower the difficulty' crew. If you feel that you need to cheat to win, or that you need to win to have fun, or whatever - lower the difficulty instead.

I've had similar experiences with cheating. I've never used the world builder, but I found that when I set the difficulty too high (to prove to myself that I was the most awesome gamer in the world) I would end up using save games to cheat a lot. If someone captured one of my cities, I'd load a save from several turns in the past so that I could build a stronger army and send it to that particular city. If I didn't win a fight that was of some strategic value I'd load a save and do things in a slightly different order with the hope that the random numbers would work in my favour this time. I kept loading and loading until I got what I wanted so that I could win.

It's crap. Anyone can win by cheating, but you don't get to have that sense of achievement, and you don't get to really _play_ the game. It's a waste of time. Lowering the difficulty is better; at least until you are ready to face the music (be willing to lose).

sirsnuggles
Jul 02, 2008, 01:58 PM
Oh I dont know if it's that bad. Why do people have such a hang-up about reloading? I mean, has anyone ever played a FPS and never died and reloaded. Did you feel guilty when you did?

For some reason, civvers worry about it more.

Stoney the I
Jul 02, 2008, 05:08 PM
For some reason, civvers worry about it more.

I dont.

i hardly ever load, but when i do it, it doesnt bother me. in fact i rather load then live with the frustration of knowing "if i would have done that, well, that would have worked". i dont start a new game for that, if i just spend 4 hours getting this far.

I reload if i miss a wonder by <2 turns and can get it if i chop that last piece of forest with 3 workers.
I also reload if i loose a lot of units in a single turn due to some bad rolls in a row. like 10 attack units with all 70%% chance and losing 7 or 8 of them. doesnt happen often, but when it does, i reload.

i think it bothers civvers more maybe because we want the game to have a certain amount of realism. many mistakes were made throughout history and dealing with them and surviving is part of it. the game can reflect that. Personally i hate it when mistakes kill a good game, so using the time machine and loading the game a few turns back isnt cheating in my book. thank god the AI cant do it though. :D

Elkad
Jul 02, 2008, 05:13 PM
I don't reload, barring genuine unfixable errors. And since I have autosaves turned off, and never save during play, I have to reload back to the beginning of the play session.

I played Diablo2 on hardcore the entire time too. One death=make new character.

sirsnuggles
Jul 02, 2008, 05:21 PM
I agree. I only reload if catastrophe happens simply because it takes 10 minutes for the game to load. That's a good built-in deterent right there.

pumpkin
Jul 02, 2008, 05:49 PM
Oh I dont know if it's that bad. Why do people have such a hang-up about reloading? I mean, has anyone ever played a FPS and never died and reloaded. Did you feel guilty when you did?

For some reason, civvers worry about it more.

Your comparison is incorrect, you should compare with something like an fps player who would reload the game not because they died but just because they spent a little too much ammo for their liking in the last fight. Or with people using godmode or unlimited ammo etc. You'll find there is quite a lot of resentment going on among fps players in that regard.

As to the topic, I read somewhere that everytime you use Worldbuilder, Isabella kills a kitten. If that doesn't keep you from entering WB then you are a lost case...

And a question for people who enter worldbuilder in the early game: Doesn't it spoil much of the fogbusting and resource-finding fun for you if you see the territorial makeup rather than discover it??

I have been known to reload in order not to loose my full-health CR3 swordsman to a crippled spearman etc. (i.e. really bad dice rolls), but i would never use worldbuilder simply because it destroys the 'discovery fun' that makes up a lot of the game for me.

troytheface
Jul 02, 2008, 05:57 PM
reloaders are probably the best players. having reloaded "when your 2 chops away from a wonder" or "only when i lose alot of units" shows a deep understanding of the game in a way non reloaders can never fathom. We are suppossed to learn from our mistakes and reloaders actually do, they learn to go back and not make it whereas average ol non reloaders plod forward blind to their errors and cursing luck and game gods.

karadoc
Jul 02, 2008, 07:12 PM
reloaders are probably the best players. having reloaded "when your 2 chops away from a wonder" or "only when i lose alot of units" shows a deep understanding of the game in a way non reloaders can never fathom. We are suppossed to learn from our mistakes and reloaders actually do, they learn to go back and not make it whereas average ol non reloaders plod forward blind to their errors and cursing luck and game gods.I strongly disagree. Reloaders don't necessarily learn from their mistakes. They don't have to learn anything much at all.

If I miss a wonder by 2 turns and reload a save to do some extra chopping what have I learnt? Nothing! I get the wonder, and the mistake that made me miss it in the first place had no effect. With reloading, there are no risks, no gambits, no good luck and bad luck. You get what you want all the time. Because of the reloading, you know what the enemy is doing; which wonders they are building, where they will attack. You even know which fights you'll win and which you'll lose. Instead of the combat mouseover odds saying "95%", they might as well say "100%" or "0%" - because if the reloader's favourite unit dies, they can just reload! The reloader doesn't learn to deal with mistakes, they don't learn to deal with bad luck, and they don't learn to deal with surprises. Finally, while I'm sure that some reloaders have a deep understanding of the game mechanics, I doubt there is any correlation.

-- edit --
Whether someone uses reload or not is their own choice. As has been mentioned, there are some reasons why someone might find the game more fun if they can reload from time to time. That's fine. Good for them. I'm just trying to get across that reloading is cheating, and that reloading does not make someone a more skilled player!

troytheface
Jul 02, 2008, 07:24 PM
if one could match players of innate equal ability -with one having lost four games and one that won four reloading and ran that test with different age groups and sexes and computers about seventy six times then one would come to the conclusion that the reloader would have retained more relevant information in regard to how to "manipulate game conditions" and would beat the non reloader hands down.

Stoney the I
Jul 02, 2008, 07:32 PM
I'm just trying to get across that reloading is cheating

:eek:

never imagined people could see it like that. using world builder is in my book obvious cheating, but loading the game? i'm surprised by that.

If i have a game thats going well but something preventable happends that i missed for whatever reason (sleepy, ppl talking to me during the game, drunk, etc) and it wrecks that particular game and i should start over, i rather load. because i liked that game and i want to finish it. seems natural to me. i think a poll on this might be interesting :)

reloading does not make someone a more skilled player!
hmm i can go two ways with that statement.

1. if you've finished an emperor game and reloaded 5 times, for sure, yr not an emperor level player. seen that way, you are not as skilled as the diffculty level you play the game on. agree on that.

2. But reloading does learn you stuff and will make you a more skilled player imho. you will recognize mistakes as you see the same scenario twice, and are better able to correct it, in the current game and in future games. If i would have restarted every game that went bad in my early days, it would have taken me a lot longer to see what i actually needed to change in my game in order to advance a difficulty level.

karadoc
Jul 02, 2008, 07:51 PM
:eek:

never imagined people could see it like that. using world builder is in my book obvious cheating, but loading the game? i'm surprised by that.

If i have a game thats going well but something preventable happends that i missed for whatever reason (sleepy, ppl talking to me during the game, drunk, etc) and it wrecks that particular game and i should start over, i rather load. because i liked that game and i want to finish it. seems natural to me. i think a poll on this might be interesting :)


hmm i can go two ways with that statement.

1. if you've finished an emperor game and reloaded 5 times, for sure, yr not an emperor level player. seen that way, you are not as skilled as the diffculty level you play the game on. agree on that.

2. But reloading does learn you stuff and will make you a more skilled player imho. you will recognize mistakes as you see the same scenario twice, and are better able to correct it, in the current game and in future games. If i would have restarted every game that went bad in my early days, it would have taken me a lot longer to see what i actually needed to change in my game in order to advance a difficulty level.Hey, I'm not trying to say that no one should ever reload. Even though I think it is cheating, I still reload from time to time - for example, I might reload if I intended to change what a city was building, but forgot; or if I moved a unit somewhere by mistake (misclick or something). I also agree that is possible to learn stuff after reloading - maybe more or maybe less than one would learn otherwise.

It is cheating though; a mild form of cheating if it is used rarely, but a strong form of cheating if it is used a lot. It is a power that the other players don't have. It certainly wouldn't be allowed in multiplayer games...

Zello
Jul 02, 2008, 10:16 PM
Meh...I guess it depends on how you (ab)use reloading.

I reload every now and then - because I play using a laptop and using the touchpad can have unpredictable results at times (tapping = mouse-click, etc.) which has caused me to send units to the wrong square among other mistakes. That's my excuse :D

It's true that civvers get a lot more agitated about this kind of 'cheating'. If you beat the final stage of a fps, you win. Who cares how many times you died and had to reload from a checkpoint?
I think the reason is because civ is, at its basics, a board game. You aren't duking it out against a horde of enemies, you're matching wits with distinct players, be it AI or human. Imagine playing chess with someone and taking their Queen, only for him/her to move all the pieces back to how they were 4 turns ago, and move the Queen somewhere else. That's pretty much what we're doing when we reload.

Morthis
Jul 02, 2008, 10:56 PM
if one could match players of innate equal ability -with one having lost four games and one that won four reloading and ran that test with different age groups and sexes and computers about seventy six times then one would come to the conclusion that the reloader would have retained more relevant information in regard to how to "manipulate game conditions" and would beat the non reloader hands down.

Beyond that being a "fact" that was pulled out of a rather dark place, I'm really not seeing it at all.

If I'm building a wonder and decide against chopping it or using a great engineer when I'm worried that the computer might beat me to it (older tech/etc).

Without reloading, I get beat by the computer, well crap, shoulda chopped/used GE. When this happens a few times, I'll learn my lesson to either chop/GE or stop wasting my time.

With reloading I'll just risk it, and if for some reason someone does beat me, I've got a savegame waiting for me to fix the problem. I don't have to ever worry about chopping/using a GE, because I can just wait to see how it turns out and load if I don't get it.

Same story for combat. I know I still lose a lot of battles with 80%+ chance to win (in fact it seems a lot more than it should be lol).

Without reloading, my SoD starts to thin out too much (or even gets wiped out), and I have to end my war early or at least pause to reinforce. Bad luck happens, bring extra units to make sure you have enough in case of bad luck.

With reloading. Bad luck happens? Nah, just reload and this time my units live. I don't have to bring extra units just in case, because I can just reload if fights don't go my way.

To me it's impossible to imagine anyone arguing otherwise. By definition, the person opposed to reloading has to be more aware of the game conditions, because if he misjudges them, or makes a mistake, it's going to be like that for the rest of the game (which is especially true for wonders).

The reloader can take all the risk he wants, if things don't go his way, he can just reload. He doesn't have to pay any attention to those finer details of getting a wonder up before the enemy, because load game has him covered if he guessed wrong.

That said, play the game how you want to. I used to reload a bunch, now I try to avoid it. I think it makes me a better player by not doing it, because I am much more careful about starting wars I'm not sure I can win, or building a wonder I doubt I can complete.

Stoney the I
Jul 02, 2008, 11:17 PM
The reloader can take all the risk he wants, if things don't go his way, he can just reload. He doesn't have to pay any attention to those finer details of getting a wonder up before the enemy, because load game has him covered if he guessed wrong.

partly true, it depends where you draw the line for yourself i guess.
personally i dont go back 40 turns and start a wonder from scratch to pop it with a GE because i couldnt beat the AI by chopping. especially if i miss it by more then 3 or 4 turns, i'll just move on.

but getting beat by 1 or 2 turns and with a piece of forest i neglected which i could have chopped in time but didnt? i dont want to miss the badly needed hanging gardens (for instance) for the rest of the game cause i was too stupid to chop a forest. restart the entire game? nah. live with it and move on? that will eat away at me every time a city hits his health cap. or the thought i could have used that chopped forest from the missed wonder for setters or an army to conquer a neighbour. ill hear "1 turn! they beat you by 1 turn!" for the rest of time (ingame time offcource hehe). ill reload and chop that damned last piece of forest and be done with it.

a better example is forgetting something, like karadoc said.
sometimes i start a golden age with the intension to switch civics and i get distracted and totally forget. then after the golden age it hits me i didnt revolt. yeah ill reload it then. and once I build a mine on stone instead of a quarry lol.

but your statement is very true in my opinion if you give yourself the option to reload every key decision. save a bunch of savegamefiles and go to any turning point in the game. especially saving before going to war is one of those.

its personal i guess, and everybody plays like they want to. im fine with the way i play, was just surprised people felt this strongly about reloading a savegame.

its a game vs AI after all. they wont complain about it. if they do, erase them in worldbuilder lol. (JK)

Pir Lan Tota
Jul 03, 2008, 03:50 AM
Reloading, while it happens from time to time is a very minor occurance for me, have to support the missing wonder on 1 or two turns. Just lost out on being the first to discover Codes of Law by 7 turns, in this case, I shrugged and continued playing, AI outsmarted me, fair enough.

What I do reload is if enemy declares war and I am not yet ready for it, in that case, I jump back a few turns, rush an axe or two and see if I can still prevent the game from being over to quickly.

Meaning I give myself a fighting chance. Yes I should have build more units, yes shame on me for not doing so, but instead of restarting I acknowledge my mistake, try to get a work around and then correct it. War always gets declared and in the long run, restarting usually would be the sounder option, but I perfer to fight it out and see how it goes.

szemek77
Jul 03, 2008, 06:14 AM
I can easily understand that reloading can be a sweet temptation, but it kills the game. Ultimately - what kind of satisfaction you can get, if you win that way?

The most annoying thing is that AI is able to destroy your game which you have played for 10 hours. But we should take it as a "beauty of this game". Cheating would make you lazy - you will not try to play smart, balance your power, think about strenghtening your borders etc.

The only reload I can agree is when you are playing on higher level and you get very unfortunate location for your first city. Sometimes is just a waste of time to try playing such a game, and you can consider to start again.

Morthis
Jul 03, 2008, 07:01 AM
Reloading, while it happens from time to time is a very minor occurance for me, have to support the missing wonder on 1 or two turns. Just lost out on being the first to discover Codes of Law by 7 turns, in this case, I shrugged and continued playing, AI outsmarted me, fair enough.

What I do reload is if enemy declares war and I am not yet ready for it, in that case, I jump back a few turns, rush an axe or two and see if I can still prevent the game from being over to quickly.

Meaning I give myself a fighting chance. Yes I should have build more units, yes shame on me for not doing so, but instead of restarting I acknowledge my mistake, try to get a work around and then correct it. War always gets declared and in the long run, restarting usually would be the sounder option, but I perfer to fight it out and see how it goes.

There's things you can do to prevent being caught off guard though. Obviously keeping some units around is one way, but I find unless I'm actively building up my army to go to war myself, the computer's SoD is usually strong enough to knock over a city unless I reinforce it with more troops. The best way I've found to avoid that is first keeping track of relations (If you have a furious Shaka next to you, you better be prepared for war lol), and having some spies keeping an eye on the edge of your territory (inside hostile/neutral territory). Usually if you see an AI SoD heading your way, and it's not escorting a settler, he's probably taking it to your border to declare war.

Between that and a good road network, I can usually pull troops from other cities to the target city within 3 turns, which should always be enough to be ready for the attack (between spies as early warning and the AI probably having to walk for at least 2 turns in your territory before he can start sieging your city).

Wolfshanze
Jul 03, 2008, 07:08 AM
Reloading is just another way of feeding another quarter into the arcade machine! Gives you a few more lives!

Psyringe
Jul 03, 2008, 07:26 AM
Imho, the ideological battles that keep being fought over the "Is this cheating and is it okay to do it?" question are entirely pointless.

Civ4 is a game, its purpose is to be enjoyed. If you enjoy it more when giving yourself free money and/or reloading after something happened which you didn't like, then do so. If you enjoy it more by challenging yourself to win the game on "fair grounds" against the AI, then don't. Both perspectives are perfectly valid. They could also coexist without any problems if people stopped trying to force others to play the game in the way they perceive as "right". ;)

Personally, in most games I don't "cheat" - I really like it to come back from a previous defeat, or to overcome obstacles that seemed insurmountable during the course of the game. And I won't get this feeling when I prevent such defeats and obstacles to occur in the first place. But I don't turn it into an ideology, and sometimes, when I just want to have a bit of fun in an easy game, I don't see any reason not to "cheat".

karadoc
Jul 03, 2008, 07:45 AM
I'd like to point out that while I certainly consider reloading to be cheating, I'm not trying to tell other people to stop doing it! Cheat as much as you like.

(However, in my experience, I find that cheating diminishes the fun of a game more quickly than playing without cheats.)

PieceOfMind
Jul 03, 2008, 07:49 AM
People, people.

We need to stop for one second and think harder about what it is we think constitutes "reloading".

Straight away I can think of at least three different reasons why one might choose to reload, and I think it is fair to say there is a great distinction bewteen each of them.

1. Careless error. eg. forgot to change civics during golden age, forgot to change the build queue of city X 5 turns ago or accidentally moved a unit to the wrong tile.

2. Outcomes of a random event. eg. losing a CR3 swordsman to a warrior in a 97% battle

3. Missing something one wanted, to another player. eg. missing out on the Hanging Gardens because the Incans beat you to it by 2 turns.

I have tried to list them in the order I believe to be least serious to most serious. In fact I often reload for the first reason as I don't believe it is cheating. Instead I figure that since it's a turn based game one should not have to punish oneself for honest errors.

But while people will passionately call others cheaters or whatever just because they have loosely referred to the idea of "reloading", there will be endless confusion and pointless misunderstandings.

If I tried to give names to the motivations for reloading, I would have called the things above, as numbered,

1. honest-reloading or error-reloading
2. seed-reloading or luck-reloading
3. cheating ...ha ha just kidding... try wonder-reloading, tactics-reloading or reward-reloading.

In any proper debate it should always be made very clear from the beginning precisely what the issue is to debate. In the "Is reloading cheating?" debate both parties have generally failed to address this first question of what reloading really is.

oranges
Jul 03, 2008, 07:51 AM
Imho, the ideological battles that keep being fought over the "Is this cheating and is it okay to do it?" question are entirely pointless.

Civ4 is a game, its purpose is to be enjoyed. If you enjoy it more when giving yourself free money and/or reloading after something happened which you didn't like, then do so. If you enjoy it more by challenging yourself to win the game on "fair grounds" against the AI, then don't. Both perspectives are perfectly valid. They could also coexist without any problems if people stopped trying to force others to play the game in the way they perceive as "right". ;)

Personally, in most games I don't "cheat" - I really like it to come back from a previous defeat, or to overcome obstacles that seemed insurmountable during the course of the game. And I won't get this feeling when I prevent such defeats and obstacles to occur in the first place. But I don't turn it into an ideology, and sometimes, when I just want to have a bit of fun in an easy game, I don't see any reason not to "cheat".

Someone please include this in "I understand the terms for posting on the forum" form :lol: Whenever a discussion arises, we can just point back to it, saying the issue's been resolved.

Balderstrom
Jul 03, 2008, 08:02 AM
I know of another reason, You haven't played a game in so long cuz you've been modding so much. And you've forgotten the pace of the game. You slack off on settlers once your little empire is chugging along nicely, and the damned AI surrounds all your borders with absolute crap cities, on every and any tile that it can.
So you reload back 500+ Years after that pacing lesson, and rectify that egregious error :-)

GIDS888
Jul 03, 2008, 08:03 AM
Yeah, if you need to cheat check your game strategy, go down a level, or just admit that that's who you are and live with it.

It's only a game after all - although the Holy Sid will smite you mightily in your sleep one night, you do know that don't you............

PieceOfMind
Jul 03, 2008, 08:06 AM
I know of another reason, You haven't played a game in so long cuz you've been modding so much. And you've forgotten the pace of the game. You slack off on settlers once your little empire is chugging along nicely, and the damned AI surrounds all your borders with absolute crap cities, on every and any tile that it can.
So you reload back 500+ Years after that pacing lesson, and rectify that egregious error :-)

Ok, number 4. :)

Another reason...

5. Regenerating. This is definitely a form of reloading but there are very mixed opinions about how far down the cheating path this is.

Stoney the I
Jul 03, 2008, 08:14 AM
hmm at first i thought it an interesting perspective to view reloading as cheating but

Yeah, if you need to cheat check your game strategy, go down a level, or just admit that that's who you are and live with it.

statements like that annoy mea bit.
feels like a smug, arrogant attitude.
And i dont see any need for it.

anyway...

We need to stop for one second and think harder about what it is we think constitutes "reloading".

Straight away I can think of at least three different reasons why one might choose to reload, and I think it is fair to say there is a great distinction between each of them.

1. Careless error. eg. forgot to change civics during golden age, forgot to change the build queue of city X 5 turns ago or accidentally moved a unit to the wrong tile.

2. Outcomes of a random event. eg. losing a CR3 swordsman to a warrior in a 97% battle

3. Missing something one wanted, to another player. eg. missing out on the Hanging Gardens because the Incans beat you to it by 2 turns.

these options are exactly the poll i was thinking about making, as to why people would reload and how many ppl do it and how many dont. something went wrong while posting it last night, ill have another go at it in a bit.

Joshua368
Jul 03, 2008, 09:56 AM
In my own personal opinion I consider reloading simply to undo a mistake cheating... and I'm trying to wean myself off of it, I'll probably have to jump down a difficulty level. It isn't something I want to do, it's unsatisfying, and it isn't something I do actively. (i.e. reload back a turn if I have bad dice rolls) But sometimes if take a major loss in my warfare (either by bad luck or poor strategy) I get all upset and simply shut the game off on the spot. Hours later when I get back to the game I pick up before I made the big mistake.

So I pretty much end up saving right before starting a war.

Jewman
Jul 03, 2008, 06:15 PM
i hate WB too.
i mostly use it to kill barbarians that annoy me so much.
but occasionally the temptation to add a river in my capital becomes too much...

CHEESE!
Jul 04, 2008, 05:05 PM
Stop cheating or Mr Monty will blow your head off.

raketooy
Jul 04, 2008, 05:22 PM
I don't reload. Neither do I use WB. Period. I also lose games. Sometimes if I am playing on epic or marathon and am going to lose certainly, I do start a new game without finishing the former one.

Inky
Jul 09, 2008, 10:37 AM
Reloading is generally cheating, even to undo a mistake, though that is sometimes justifiable due to playing too long and being tired. You could just go to bed instead, but what if you want to go on playing regardless of how stupid you're getting? :)

If you honestly can say "I didn't mean to do that," reloading to make up for an immediate mistake isn't that bad. But otherwise, it is bending the rules, and too much -- or using worldbuilder to change things -- is definitely cheating.

OTOH, what if you've lost the game, or think you're losing? If you cheat, you may not lose, but I wouldn't class the result as winning the game. Like playing "just one more turn," it no longer counts as a proper scoring win, but it can still be fun. And you may learn something about the game which you wouldn't lose if you kept playing and died, or just quit.

Next game, though, you must resist temptation. Otherwise, it is too easy to keep doing it, and you never play a proper game. It is much more satisfying to win without cheating at all.

Cytral
Jul 10, 2008, 07:53 AM
the WC can be very tempting

esp. if you have desert or ice close by