Cartouche Bee posted:
OK, let me get this straight:
Here comes the obfuscation. OK, bring it on.
Because you can diplomatically trade and sell items to your advantage over the AI that has not been programmed to realize that you are manipulating them, that's OK.
That's called business. Buy Item X from Party A at Price N, sell X to Party B at N+, turn a profit. This is not exploitation, and yes, it's OK.
If you can 'confuse the opponent' in battle in a way that allows you to leverage your strength to win because the AI has a typical response pattern then, that's OK.
No, not necessarily. Sullla offered his understanding of smoke n mirrors, but I coined the current usage and that's not my definition.
In RBD9, Cyrene discovered that sometimes an AI tends to call back its entire army. I followed on the next turn, and tried out a few things, and pinpointed that sending troops into range of an enemy city does kick in a stimulus AI response in which they abandon their current target and send everything they have toward the threatened city. This Army-Wide response, wherein ALL the offensive units of a civ get essentially the same mission on every turn (with a few local target-of-opportunity exceptions) is a most unfortunate weakness of the AI. I spotted this as an exploit at the time, but I have not used it since, not as puppet strings. If Sullla is using it, that may be exploitative, but it may not be. Just because the AI is mind-numbingly dense and one dimensional at times does not mean you do not get to play the game, though. Sending a diversionary attack or using the chance to counterattack where the enemy is weak are, in general, legitimate war tactics.
Another example of this "confuse the enemy" dilemma is in LOTR2, Always War variant. We declare war at first contact with all civs and never accept peace, so the game is nonstop war end to end and an interesting struggle of attrition as our civ fights off continuous invasions by all the others. Just because the AI's will turn their entire army around and run off on a wild goose chase if we send out raiding parties to go pillage some of their lands, should this take the option to do so off the table for us? No way. On the other hand, if you stick one unit out there somewhere and hop in and out and in and out of range of an AI city, just to paralyze their entire army in a back-and-forth go-nowhere dance, yes, that would be exploitative and, IMO, not OK.
So who am I to say what is or is not, what should or should not be OK? I'm just another player like any other, yep. Tis true. But I have the right to voice my opinion. Who are you to declare that because the issue is subjective, I don't have the right to state my opinions about it? You're nobody special either.
If the AI attacks me on a ROP like the Romans did to me this GOTM game, that's OK.
The Romans did not move a whole army next to one of your cities, abusing the RoP (and the turn-based nature of the game) to move everything into perfect attack position while you are paralyzed because you're not "up", then attack you.
If someone attacks the AI on a ROP that is NOT OK.
Correct, that's not OK in my view. You understand why, so you aren't doing your point of view any good by equating what Archer99 is doing to what an AI does. They don't compare.
If the AI builds ICS as the Romans did in my game that's OK.
If I build a ICS that is NOT OK.
The AI's never, ever, EVER build a city within two tiles of any existing city. More obfuscation. They won't build within three tiles in most situations, but sometimes they will. They do not do ICS.
If you play to achieve points that's NOT OK.
It's OK, but is it worth basing a contest around? When the GOTM was conceived and put into play, was it with the idea of setting up a row of cows and seeing whose bucket would have the most milk in it at the end of the day? The fact that score is also hugely influenced by early warmaking, which has until the current patch been the sovereign realm of poprush exploits, indirectly links milking to exploiting, since the two converge under the scoring system. But... I admit, you can milk the score without exploiting, so even though they often go hand in hand, they don't have to.
You can disagree with the lines I draw and limits I set on my own gameplay, but you here disputing the right for me (or anybody) to draw lines and set limits would put you at odds with the GOTM, which has at least two rules of things it has deemed to be Not OK, and with SirPleb, who has detailed his understanding of exploits but indicated he sets his limits differently than I do. You... you don't believe in limits. Do you? Well so what. I do, and I think the contest would be more meaningful with a few more limits. It's Matrix's and Thunderfall's contest, so if they disagree with me, nothing will change. What's it to you either way?
- Sirian