Sisiutil
All Leader Challenger
All Leaders Challenge Pre-Game Show:
Game # 3 - China/Qin
Game # 3 - China/Qin

In the next ALC game, I'll be playing as Qin Shi Huang, leader of the Chinese Empire.
The fact sheet:
- Traits: Industrious and Financial
- Starting Techs: Agriculture and Mining
- Unique Unit: Cho-Ku-Nu
This should be an interesting contrast with the Mao game. The UU and starting techs are the same, but the traits are completely different. China is like Germany and Russia in that regard, in that the civ has two leaders with no overlapping traits (unlike America, England, France, India, and Mongolia).
Industrious means Wonders cost 50% less to build, as do Forges. A bee-line to Metal Casting may make even more sense than when playing as Mao. MC will not only allow Qin to build his cheap forges; it's also a pre-requisite for Machinery, which opens up China's UU, the Cho-Ku-Nu. And it allows you to build the Colossus; if the map lends itself to a few coastal cities, this Wonder makes Qin even more financial. By the time the Colossus is obsolete with Astronomy, the cottages should have matured to compensate. Too bad China doesn't start with Fishing to make it even more attractive.
(Historical footnote: Qin is "Industrious" because he's the guy who built the Great Wall of China. Well, not himself personally--you know how that works:

And what can you say about Financial that hasn't already been said here on the boards ad nauseum? Remember I'll be playing with the 1.61 patch, so banks are no longer cheap, but Financial is still an awesome trait. If stone is available, the Pyramids seem even more attractive, since it would give Qin early access to the Universal Suffrage civic. Then he can do something about all that money burning a hole in his pocket.

We discussed the Cho-Ku-Nu extensively in the Mao Pre-Game Show thread. I don't think we need to repeat ourselves. I found in the Mao game that it's a good UU--not in the "awesome" class like Praetorians, Redcoats, or Cossacks, but respectable nonetheless. I usually never build Crossbowmen, but I do like this replacement for them, especially with Drill promotions. As I mentioned above, with Qin's traits, it makes sense to access the CKN earlier.
As for the starting techs: Mining is even more of an advantage to Qin since it puts you one tech closer to Metal Casting. As with Mao, Agriculture means I could justify building a Worker earlier if there's a farmable resource in the capital's fat cross. A farmed resource would also lend itself to faster production of more workers and settlers.
On that note: one strategem I'm thinking of using in this game is NOT building early wonders in the capital. Instead, I rush out a couple of settlers and building any early wonders I decide to pursue in the 2nd and 3rd cities as their first build orders. The capital focuses on the first military units, workers, settlers, and since it's usually the best commerce/science city, eventually, a library. Much has been said about how building a wonder slows your early expansion, and this strikes me as a way to avoid it. The wonder-building cities would grow faster, since they're not held back building Settlers and Workers. The capital then should have more forests available for chopping later Wonders, and with better yields thanks to Mathematics. Plus this approach would lend itself to the city/wonder specialization I used in the Mao game, although that was more productive mainly because of Mao's Philosophical trait. (Maybe I should go after the Parthenon too?) Of course, a lot of this depends on the map.
Thoughts?
Regarding religion, Qin doesn't really have any strengths here, but then again, no more or less so than Mao, and I wound up founding three religions in that game--though I really only took advantage of one of them. I think building Oracle for a CoL slingshot would be attractive. Courthouses are always good.
I look forward to everyone's perspective on Qin before I start the next game. I'm very pleased and even humbled to hear how enjoyable and useful these ALC threads have been to everyone. I'm certainly learning a great deal, and it's fun too!