SuperSmash5
Warlord
- Joined
- Mar 5, 2009
- Messages
- 118
I think one of the things that can be annoying about this game is the micromanagement involved with getting the best yields out of your cities and having your workers improve tiles.
So if you were in making a new Civ game and wanted to do something about this, how would you change how city yields and improvements work in order to make them involve less micromanagement?
I've come up with a few ideas but nothing that really fixes the problem. I think being able to queue up worker actions would help or specify certain tiles to get certain improvements would help. Maybe improvements would work better if you built them from the city instead of using a worker or if the workers were tied to the city and existed within the city menu. City yields are harder to work with because the situation changes every time you grow and sometimes you want to grow fast and then suddenly stop growing. And then sometimes you want to change specialists after finishing a new building.
Any ideas? I know a lot of people who play Civ like to mod little tweaks. So maybe some of you guys have ideas for how you would deal with micromanagement.
So if you were in making a new Civ game and wanted to do something about this, how would you change how city yields and improvements work in order to make them involve less micromanagement?
I've come up with a few ideas but nothing that really fixes the problem. I think being able to queue up worker actions would help or specify certain tiles to get certain improvements would help. Maybe improvements would work better if you built them from the city instead of using a worker or if the workers were tied to the city and existed within the city menu. City yields are harder to work with because the situation changes every time you grow and sometimes you want to grow fast and then suddenly stop growing. And then sometimes you want to change specialists after finishing a new building.
Any ideas? I know a lot of people who play Civ like to mod little tweaks. So maybe some of you guys have ideas for how you would deal with micromanagement.