Navelgazer
Emperor
- Joined
- Jul 4, 2012
- Messages
- 1,080
Apologies if this is a well-worn subject by now.
Getting back into Civ V after some absence, I realized/remembered that while Alex is always the leader I groan the most at when encountering, because the AI seems to play him so crazy well, I had no idea how to play him properly myself, so I've been experimenting on King to see what works best for him, as well as reading up some. from what I can tell, the major points are:
1. Despite the two military UUs, which flourish in the ancient/classical era, early war is probably not a great strategy. Neither are ranged units, the Companion Cavalry sucks at taking cities, and the Hoplites still want ranged support, which stretches the bulbs and hammers too thin for a viable early attack. Instead, use these for defense, exploration, and fulfilling early CS quests.
2. As implied by point #1, the early game should be about building a strong foundation for the cities as peacefully as can realistically happen. Get those monuments, shrines and libraries up quickly, and once you can grab a pantheon, nab one that can grab you the most faith, or faith+culture, if possible.
3. Flavor-wise, Greece seems to urge you to go wide, but mechanically, there's no real reason to not be tall. You'll be spending the game relying on your CS allies, after all, so resources should be plentiful if you're doing it right.
4. That said, the Liberty tree is still worth a look here, especially based on my recommendations to follow. Considering the amount of quick infrastructure to be built, the free worker, faster tile improvement, extra production, free settler and quicker settler production can allow for early libraries and wonders in a way that is trickier in my experience with pure Tradition.
5. Obviously the Patronage track. I mean come on.
So, to put this then into BNW terms, the big piece of the puzzle is Religion, which is where I'm seeing Greece truly shine.
1. Pick up a pantheon that generates a ton of faith, like I said above. In my current game, Athens started right next to three Pearl resources, so Tears of the Gods was a no-brainer.
2. If successful, this should grant you a religion, so grab Papal Primacy and Divine Inspiration and keep gunning for the early wonders which can actually help your game.
3. Hold off until you've got your second Prophet, and if possible grab Holy Order (and whatever other follower bonus makes sense for you.)
4. Once you work your way into the Patronage track, every CS with your religion will be permanently friends with you at least, and easily made into allies, so you can turn your focus to gold production - made al the easier if you secured Colossus and Petra in the early stages.
I'm looking for comments on how to improve this strategy, and how to tweak it for higher levels, particularly considering how much tougher religion/early wonders are at that stage.
Thanks!
Getting back into Civ V after some absence, I realized/remembered that while Alex is always the leader I groan the most at when encountering, because the AI seems to play him so crazy well, I had no idea how to play him properly myself, so I've been experimenting on King to see what works best for him, as well as reading up some. from what I can tell, the major points are:
1. Despite the two military UUs, which flourish in the ancient/classical era, early war is probably not a great strategy. Neither are ranged units, the Companion Cavalry sucks at taking cities, and the Hoplites still want ranged support, which stretches the bulbs and hammers too thin for a viable early attack. Instead, use these for defense, exploration, and fulfilling early CS quests.
2. As implied by point #1, the early game should be about building a strong foundation for the cities as peacefully as can realistically happen. Get those monuments, shrines and libraries up quickly, and once you can grab a pantheon, nab one that can grab you the most faith, or faith+culture, if possible.
3. Flavor-wise, Greece seems to urge you to go wide, but mechanically, there's no real reason to not be tall. You'll be spending the game relying on your CS allies, after all, so resources should be plentiful if you're doing it right.
4. That said, the Liberty tree is still worth a look here, especially based on my recommendations to follow. Considering the amount of quick infrastructure to be built, the free worker, faster tile improvement, extra production, free settler and quicker settler production can allow for early libraries and wonders in a way that is trickier in my experience with pure Tradition.
5. Obviously the Patronage track. I mean come on.
So, to put this then into BNW terms, the big piece of the puzzle is Religion, which is where I'm seeing Greece truly shine.
1. Pick up a pantheon that generates a ton of faith, like I said above. In my current game, Athens started right next to three Pearl resources, so Tears of the Gods was a no-brainer.
2. If successful, this should grant you a religion, so grab Papal Primacy and Divine Inspiration and keep gunning for the early wonders which can actually help your game.
3. Hold off until you've got your second Prophet, and if possible grab Holy Order (and whatever other follower bonus makes sense for you.)
4. Once you work your way into the Patronage track, every CS with your religion will be permanently friends with you at least, and easily made into allies, so you can turn your focus to gold production - made al the easier if you secured Colossus and Petra in the early stages.
I'm looking for comments on how to improve this strategy, and how to tweak it for higher levels, particularly considering how much tougher religion/early wonders are at that stage.
Thanks!