Ceating Beginners win at Diety!

Shogun Pip

Chieftain
Joined
Oct 15, 2001
Messages
5
Location
Canada
The easiest way for a beginner to win in Diety is to set up on the world map as England and put a city on each island square. The inability of units to make a marine attack and the inability of bombers to make an attack on an undefended city means that all you have to do is not make military units of any kind, and wait for a civ to make a space ship. The game is boring as **** but if you want to say you won on the hardest level and can't do it any other way this is it.:king: :egypt: :ninja:
 
Thats cool but the only problem with that is YOU LOST because another civ made a spaceship before you!
but hey you can at least say you survived ;)
 
Hmmm... Deity level in Civ1??? My Civ1 stops at Emperor. I think I'll move this to a Civ2 forum
 
the name of the game is expand... and if u done that expand...

how 2 expand is a basic concept, of civ2, what the AI doesn't understand!

certainly if he is on a small island... before he researched soem kind of boat... u will have settlements on a few other islands
 
Since you can't found a city in direct contact with another city then this would not work at all. It would be far too easy for attacking forces to land on one of the squares that was next to two of your cities where you were not allowed to settle and just take them both. This idea is nonsense - in Civ 2 certainly.
 
Originally posted by Shogun Pip
The inability of units to make a marine attack and the inability of bombers to make an attack on an undefended city means that all you have to do is not make military units of any kind

In my version of civ, if a city is undefended, any unit can walk into it because they aren't attacking anything. It's treated as a land square.

Maybe thats a bug with my civ for Windows and Civ2 :lol: :lol: :lol:
 
This was supposed to be in Civ I, I meant to say in Emperor level not in Diety, sorry I hadn't played Civ I in a while so I forgot that there was no Diety level. It only Works in Civ I because you can put cities in direct contact with each other and there are no marines so you can not make an assault from the water because there is no free land to land on, and you can't get onto an occupied square.
Also in Civ I one of the ways you can win is to survive to the time that space ships are built. Sure you didn't win yourself and you get no satisfaction from it but all I said is that you would get credit for winning. If you don't know how to do it any other way than this is how you get it in your record books. I did beat the game at Emperor, befor Civ II came out, and not cheating in this way. It does work thought!
:goodjob:
 
I'm normally very lazy and play easy levels (Chieftan mainly, Warlord if i want a CHALLENGE :lol: ) and I decided one day to play at Diety, and after a few quick games (where I got my butt royally kicked by Cavalry against my Phalanxes) I decided a new strategy which worked:

I played on a small map with 3 civs (I know, this is sounding lame already). I built 4 cities as quickly as possible. Once my population grew to 2 in the city, I turned 1 worker into an entertainer to keep the other guy happy and productive. I then built nothing but military units, including 2 explorers, to find my enemies. Once I found them, I let my military units attack them with reckless abandon. I lost many battles, but I won enough that they were forced to put all their efforts into rebuilding their military and sending forces after me. I strategically fortified a few phalanxes atop Mountains near their cities and watched as their forces stupidly attacked my phalanx 1 at a time, losing each round. If the enemy discovered a useful technology, I stole it by attacking a weakly defended city and destroying it, getting a tech in the process.

Around 800 AD I had about 10 cities and finally finished the Hanging Gardens in one of my cities; I was able to put all my citizens to productive use on my land, and improved cities w/ settlers.

Around 1700 AD I had depleted their forces using hit-and-run tactics with my horsemen and decided it was time to finish them off. I had just discovered Chivalry (yes, I know...Chivalry at 1700 sounds pretty bad, but this was my first real Diety game) and devoted all my cities to producing Knights; their weakened cities were no match for my hoardes and I took city after city until I was the last man standing.

That took over 100 years as the game ended in 1826, and I had a finishing score of around 1000. I'm the King of the World :king:
 
thread starter says it was a civ1 topic.Just a mistake about emporer/deity level.
 
they dont have explorers in civ 1
 
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