strijder20
Wallowing in irony
I played England, and 'stumbled' upon domination (I was actually just trying to get a huge trading company, but then saw I was only 5% off and used some culture bombs).
I decided to do something unconventional at the start: I loaded all my Longbows on the galleys, and took barbarian Rome using the free barb wins (although my troops would probably have won without those too). I also used one of the settlers to settle Tunis/Carthago.
English empire by 1200 AD: I control Edinburgh, London, Dublin, Tunis and Rome.
After that, I did the usual English opening: self-teching Guilds, Optics, Paper, bulbing Education with a GS and using Liberalism to take Astronomy in 1345 AD. I had already met the Aztecs by then, and was at peace (There is a small, easily abusable bug: when at first contact, just press 'We would like to make to make a trade proposal', and then 'Let us bury the hatchet', allowing quick vassalization - but not capitulation - of the native civilizations).
They both agreed to become a dominion.
At 1400 AD or so I got economics and switched into FM-Capitalism-Republic-Resettlement-Secularism.
I got Rifling and the Trading company by 1470 or so, and my Redcoats just slaughtered the Mughal troops. Rather great side effect of this was that in 1550 Persia - Persia, not Iran - number two in score decided to voluntarily vassalise to me.
During all that time, my core cities had been pumping out settlers/workers/garrisons, and I settled Brazil, North America and a little vanity project in Asia
British empire by 1600 AD: American trio, Los Angeles and Vancouver, four S-American possessions, Hong Kong, a city on Papua New Guinea, Durban, Athens, Appolonia - with the great lighthouse! - Constantinople, Cape Town and Northern India have been added.
After that, I had severe stability issues, thanks to not being in Occupation while conquering India, and had to rushbuy courthouses and Stock exchanges everywhere to prevent collapse. In 1720 AD, I had settled three Australian cities and Dunedin - not for the resources or because they are great spots, but because they add land area.
British empire in 1720 AD: India has respawned and causes severe culture problems, Indonesia has fallen to the Dutch trading company's armies and the other Europeans have finally begun colonising.
I still had to battle stability for the next century with all means (I beelined communism for the stability buildings and Lubyanka's economic boost), but I managed to end the game at Shaky. I used four great artists
love: republic): two in Australia, one in Constantinople and the last in central Africa.
England in 1834 AD:
Three cities in Britain: I don't like building a fourth, like the AI usually does.
Conquering the Mediterranean: The Great Lighthouse, The Great Library and The Great Cothon were fun to have, and the cities themselves are pretty good too.
Usual N-American cities. I didn't settle Denver, because I prefer having Grand Forks, which is probably a mistake
Resource-spammed Brazil and food-rich River Plate.
It's great to have a double shrine city and the Royal Exchange as an UB
India collapsed the turn I won, hence the two independent cities ('India' was two size-1 cities, yes
).
Australia, New Zealand and Port Moresby.
South-Africa and the culture bomb city.
Demographics: I'm always surprised by how explosive England's economic power is, they are the best (and easiest!) civilization to play IMHO.
All the top-5 cities are English
Trading company is great to have, I should have settled more cities benefiting from it - but even now, it's netting me 200 gold per turn.
That's a very fitting leader I got compared to
I decided to do something unconventional at the start: I loaded all my Longbows on the galleys, and took barbarian Rome using the free barb wins (although my troops would probably have won without those too). I also used one of the settlers to settle Tunis/Carthago.
Spoiler :

English empire by 1200 AD: I control Edinburgh, London, Dublin, Tunis and Rome.
After that, I did the usual English opening: self-teching Guilds, Optics, Paper, bulbing Education with a GS and using Liberalism to take Astronomy in 1345 AD. I had already met the Aztecs by then, and was at peace (There is a small, easily abusable bug: when at first contact, just press 'We would like to make to make a trade proposal', and then 'Let us bury the hatchet', allowing quick vassalization - but not capitulation - of the native civilizations).
They both agreed to become a dominion.
At 1400 AD or so I got economics and switched into FM-Capitalism-Republic-Resettlement-Secularism.
I got Rifling and the Trading company by 1470 or so, and my Redcoats just slaughtered the Mughal troops. Rather great side effect of this was that in 1550 Persia - Persia, not Iran - number two in score decided to voluntarily vassalise to me.
During all that time, my core cities had been pumping out settlers/workers/garrisons, and I settled Brazil, North America and a little vanity project in Asia

Spoiler :

British empire by 1600 AD: American trio, Los Angeles and Vancouver, four S-American possessions, Hong Kong, a city on Papua New Guinea, Durban, Athens, Appolonia - with the great lighthouse! - Constantinople, Cape Town and Northern India have been added.
After that, I had severe stability issues, thanks to not being in Occupation while conquering India, and had to rushbuy courthouses and Stock exchanges everywhere to prevent collapse. In 1720 AD, I had settled three Australian cities and Dunedin - not for the resources or because they are great spots, but because they add land area.
Spoiler :

British empire in 1720 AD: India has respawned and causes severe culture problems, Indonesia has fallen to the Dutch trading company's armies and the other Europeans have finally begun colonising.
I still had to battle stability for the next century with all means (I beelined communism for the stability buildings and Lubyanka's economic boost), but I managed to end the game at Shaky. I used four great artists

England in 1834 AD:
Spoiler :
Three cities in Britain: I don't like building a fourth, like the AI usually does.

Spoiler :
Conquering the Mediterranean: The Great Lighthouse, The Great Library and The Great Cothon were fun to have, and the cities themselves are pretty good too.

Spoiler :
Usual N-American cities. I didn't settle Denver, because I prefer having Grand Forks, which is probably a mistake


Spoiler :
Resource-spammed Brazil and food-rich River Plate.

Spoiler :
It's great to have a double shrine city and the Royal Exchange as an UB



Spoiler :
Australia, New Zealand and Port Moresby.

Spoiler :
South-Africa and the culture bomb city.

Demographics: I'm always surprised by how explosive England's economic power is, they are the best (and easiest!) civilization to play IMHO.
Spoiler :





All the top-5 cities are English

Spoiler :

Trading company is great to have, I should have settled more cities benefiting from it - but even now, it's netting me 200 gold per turn.
Spoiler :

That's a very fitting leader I got compared to

Spoiler :
