I'd much prefer to see adjustments to the maps and how distant lands are determined rather than do away with them all together.Destroys the map generation for one.
I'd much prefer to see adjustments to the maps and how distant lands are determined rather than do away with them all together.Destroys the map generation for one.
And with these changes to City State Bonuses...I think it might be time to try out Tecumseh![]()
Resort Town specializations in towns with high Natural Appeal... is appeal already in the game and I've just never noticed it, or are they bringing it back from Civ 6?
I really liked playing around with appeal in Civ 6 but I always got the impression I was in the minority on that one, lol.
Either way, all those towns I've founded around the Ground Canyon (which I seem to get more than any other natural wonder) in the past just got even better!
Civ games never hit peak until second expansion.... the issue is if it will be supported up till second expansion or they sill just stick with one and move on to Civ8For me the only big news was the content at the end of the post. The promise of attempting to fix age transitions and give civs more identity, that stuff makes me hopeful.
The rest not so much, lots of it feels like tweaking round the edges to allow players to just turn off the bits of bad decision making the developers had, rather than actually fixing bigger problems. Maybe that is an ok temp fix, but it’s not that satisfying.
It reminds me of Warhammer 3. They released that in a bad state, and after a year or so they had basically patched the game so that most of the new features that players hated were turned off or never used and after years the game is still not in an amazing state.
Is the brutal reality that this game will never hit its peak state till its second major expansion? Feels that way.
You already know the answer. No, these changes are not going to completely redesign how the game works, obviously.Sorry for the silly question, but since Civ 7 moved away from everything that made previous Civ's great and changed the core fundamental elements of the game...
Do any of these changes now mean I can
a) manage my own civ without needing to change it from age to age?
b) move into an age without losing things from my civ?
c) have a fluid game rather than 3/4 seperate games in one?
My experience has been very different TBH - usually by the age transition my home continent has been completely settled. It probably varies with map settings and difficulty levels but it is very rare that there is still a spot I want to rush to grab in the homelands in the exploration age.I do agree that the focus on distant lands in exploration generally makes it less fun. Often the best land is on homeland still, and there is less focus on making the cities you have better, even with enlightenment.
That particular poster made an account just to make that post. I'm definitely tired of that.You already know the answer. No, these changes are not going to completely redesign how the game works, obviously.
Civ 7's just not for you. You clearly don't like it. That's fine. It's not going back so you might as well just move on at this point. It's OK, somehow Civ 7 will survive. We don't need these same complaints brought up over, and over, and over, and over again, especially when there are already plenty of other threads to share them in and we knew all of these things were going to be like this the day it was officially announced.
It usually happens if you rush your closest neighbor. They are eliminated and the space they would of settled in remains free. Settlement cap is the main restriction usually, sometimes going as high as 2 over. But it depends on how much I am leaning into expansionMy experience has been very different TBH - usually by the age transition my home continent has been completely settled. It probably varies with map settings and difficulty levels but it is very rare that there is still a spot I want to rush to grab in the homelands in the exploration age.
...and I'm not one of those players who over settles to a high degree either, I'm usually at 6-8 settlement.
Agreed. We are a welcoming community for any civ fans, as long as they think like we do, like what we do and discuss what we tell them, where we tell them, and when we let them. /sThat particular poster made an account just to make that post. I'm definitely tired of that.
This thread, initiated by Firaxis, is about game updates that seem designed, in part, to win over civ fans that have yet to purchase Civ7. But I guess Firaxis isn't allowed to hear us, because we're complainers, not former customers and potential future customers.Civ 7's just not for you. You clearly don't like it. That's fine. It's not going back so you might as well just move on at this point. It's OK, somehow Civ 7 will survive. We don't need these same complaints brought up over, and over, and over, and over again, especially when there are already plenty of other threads to share them in and we knew all of these things were going to be like this the day it was officially announced.