Honor
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionThe Honor tree is one of the three social policy trees available from the Ancient Era. Each of the Ancient era policy trees rewards investments into different aspects of the early game: Tradition rewards small empires that focus on...
Basic Guide to Social Policies
and how they fit into various strategies
Introduction
Social Policies are the flavour additive to your game. You can play the same map and same civ multiple times, but by taking different policies, and therefore actions, you can end up with a very different...
Freedom
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionFreedom, available in the renaissance era, contains three policies devoted to specialists, one devoted to culture, one providing gold, and a city strength increasing policy. Though the game claims this branch is best for small...
Piety
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionReligions, especially organized religions, had a huge impact on civilizations and governments throughout our history. Not bound to any particular religion, the Piety social policy branch describes various levels of influence and...
Liberty
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionLiberty is one of the three social policy branches available in the ancient era, and generally the strongest of those three in most game situations, the only exception being a one city challenge game.
The Policies
Liberty...
Patronage
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionPatronage, available in the medieval era, contains policies entirely devoted to city state alliances. The initially available half of the branch contains policies that ease the procurement and maintenance of alliances, and the...
Tradition
A closer look at the social policy branch
IntroductionTradition is one of the three social policy branches available in the ancient era. Choosing the tradition tree opens three policy choices: Aristocracy, Legalism and Oligarchy, with the remaining Landed Elite and Monarchy requiring...
Yep, those Barbarians only have 292 more turns tog o, and Milan is theirs. Oh, and did you notice Spanish Venice? Of course, 1 turn later, I took both cities with military force. (I'm France)
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