Civ3...endangered?

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If only we could merge them.
 
The advantage of the single strength value, modified by whom is attacking whom, is that it can give more realistic combat results between units of different types (melee, archery, mounted, etc), where one has an advantage over the other. Pikes defend better against Knights than Longbows, for instance.
That advantage you are talking about is not for single strength value, but for unit type advantages. If civ3 had the unit type advantages, then it would not matter if you put 'single' or 'double' strength value in that sentence.
 
Wow this thread got
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Just as all discussions do, this thread has changed topics more than once. Who says it's a bad thing? Except the mods of course.
 
I never said it was a bad thing. I will post a new thread on paratroopers. I would like to see what the people vote.
 
Wow this thread got
offtopic.gif

Just as all discussions do, this thread has changed topics more than once. Who says it's a bad thing? Except the mods of course.

I never said it was a bad thing. I will post a new thread on paratroopers. I would like to see what the people vote.

A little "wandering" is normally acceptable, depending on the thread topic. After all, that's how conversations normally flow. When you see it getting too far afield, like the paratrooper discussion, yeah, then it's time to start a new thread. ;)
 
Sadly, nobody at my school ever got into Civ.

I was the only one. It seems pretty endangered where I live..
 
Sadly, nobody at my school ever got into Civ.

I was the only one. It seems pretty endangered where I live..

Agreed, all of my friends were not strategy gamers, about the closest they ever got was playing Risk. :P

I would have expected a bunch of D&Ders to be into it, but all they ever wanted to play was Baldur's Gate or Daggerfall...
 
I don't think anyone in aus plays civ 3 except for me. Everyone at school is playing that Grand Theft Auto crap :P
In elementary school, that was what they were doing, in middle school they all played Halo, and now... I don't really know.
 
I don't think anyone in aus plays civ 3 except for me. Everyone at school is playing that Grand Theft Auto crap :P
In elementary school, that was what they were doing, in middle school they all played Halo, and now... I don't really know.
Wow. When i was in elementary school . . . :old:

Doggone young whippersnappers . . .
 
In elementary school, that was what they were doing, in middle school they all played Halo, and now... I don't really know.

:old: Echoing Aabraxan, in elementary school, I played Monopoly and Scrabble, in high school I played Risk (normally all weekend with our Risk group), and in college Panzerblitz and other Avalon Hill board games and Naval miniature war games. In the Army, SPI games on various topics, in Seminary, Dungeon and Dragons (got to know and work with Gary Gygax) along with SPI games, then I started doing design work for companies.

Now I teach using historical board games of various types, although not the board game version of Civilization. You kids are just not at the right school or live near the Chicago area.
 
Wow. When i was in elementary school . . . :old:

Doggone young whippersnappers . . .

:lol: When I was in elementary school, I was playing Dragon Warrior III for NES, in High School, Chrono Trigger and Civ2, among others. :)

Wow, a wave of nostalgia just washed over me...maybe it's time to fire up good ol' NESticle for some retro gaming action!
 
In elementary school I also played Dragon Warrior III, and in high school I also played Chrono Trigger, Civ II, and Final Fantasy. In elementary school I played M.U.L.E.
 
Now here's a line I would not have expected to see:
. . . . in Seminary, Dungeon and Dragons . . .

And just to join in the reminiscing: In elementary school, let's see, Monopoly, miscellanous board and card games . . . oh, and my parents tried to teach me and my brother to play Bridge. For video games, well, I only remember one kid having an Atari system and we played Tank Commander and Pong, if I remember the names right. Some time in middle school, Dungeons & Dragons arrived in my hometown. It was promptly reviled as devil-worship. I continued to play it (& various other RPGs of the tabletop variety, not computer) up through and including college. D&D was pretty much my game of choice in high school. In college, we played RPGs, as well as Risk, Axis & Allies and a variety of other board games.

Going back to the OP, though: How many people do I know that still play Civ 3? Outside of CFC, one or two, maybe. If you count CFC, though, hundreds! :D
 
My son plays Civ 4. And one of my coworkers is into Civ 4 also.

I haven't been able to get them to join up here. :(
 
:old: Echoing Aabraxan, in elementary school, I played Monopoly and Scrabble, in high school I played Risk (normally all weekend with our Risk group), and in college Panzerblitz and other Avalon Hill board games and Naval miniature war games. In the Army, SPI games on various topics, in Seminary, Dungeon and Dragons (got to know and work with Gary Gygax) along with SPI games, then I started doing design work for companies.

Now I teach using historical board games of various types, although not the board game version of Civilization. You kids are just not at the right school or live near the Chicago area.

Ummm. . . in elementary, Monopoly, Tripoly, Summit, Risk, Careers; in jr high, chess; in high school, bridge, various forms of poker, AH (there was no SPI then), INS (I organized a few sessions of that for my social studies class, very entertaining), & eventually Go (the best of the lot). Afterwards, too many to name :D

kk
 
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