Soupturtle
Chieftain
- Joined
- Feb 12, 2015
- Messages
- 19
I want to win my first proper game on immortal, and I'm looking for some advice on initial city placement. Unless the game gives me a great start with lots of obvious resource taking city spots, I tend to struggle with city placement a lot, so I would really like some advice.
I'm playing immortal/epic with Brennus on a standard size pangaea with standard number of opponents. I've done some exploring, and am about to start on my first settler. I feel like I've been given a pretty average start, with plenty of room but no obvious power cities. I've already popped archery from a hut, so there doesn't seem to be a rush to find horses or metals. I've attached a map. My thinking so far was as follows:
City 1: a gold city seems like a given, and would be great for early development. But there really isn't enough food. 1S could grow to size 5 working 2 farmed floodplains and 3 gold, but would stall there. 1W would have health issues. The current site has a few more forests for health and can share the ivory to build its monument fairly quickly, and can work 2 farmed floodplains, 2 gold and a couple of cottages for a solid commerce city. How much should I worry about losing the gold to the AI if it's not in the first ring though? Settling west of the gold seems bad even by AI standards, but they could try to settle south.
City 2: a blocking city up north seems required. Trying to get the crabs gave too much plains/tundra for my liking, while this site has some useful overlap and ok food. I'm not sure what this is though. A production city that helps grow some cottages? A commerce city with good production to build the infrastructure? Or should I just not try to specialize this one?
City 3: a proper production city seems required, but once again I'm not sure where the food is going to come from. Looking at it again, this site has even less food than I thought when I drew it on, as the sheep hill and the plains cow will both only give 3 food, right? But maybe it's still worth it for the green hills?
Beyond that, doing something with the dry corn and the ivory in the east seems like a given, and I'm thinking the riverside option is probably better than the seaside one. Is it worth it to put a city by the sheep in the northeast to grow some cottages for the capital? Or should I put a city without any resources of it's own next to the wine, just sharing the corn and the wine? I'm guessing there should be either some metal or some horses somewhere in here, so that will probably dictate at least one more city. How many cities should I be looking to build in here? Is there any worthwhile plot on the coast?
As for strategy, I'm pretty sure I want to build the oracle when I've been given marble. I'm guessing for currency or code of laws. With how little food I have, is it even worth it to get bronze working early? After that, since I have no obvious great person farm, maybe I should try to build some marble wonders in my capital to generate some great people that way? Especially the great library, and maybe try for the parthenon, the MoM and the taj mahal as well? Or should I be looking to put my ivory to fast military use, possibly even by oracling construction?
edit: One final minor question: can I get bronze working and pottery before teching to priesthood, or does that push me too late? Or can I even get animal husbandry as well? I'll also need to get the wheel, to hook up my marble. I don't really have a feeling for how much I should be trying to get done before building the Oracle on this difficulty.
I'm playing immortal/epic with Brennus on a standard size pangaea with standard number of opponents. I've done some exploring, and am about to start on my first settler. I feel like I've been given a pretty average start, with plenty of room but no obvious power cities. I've already popped archery from a hut, so there doesn't seem to be a rush to find horses or metals. I've attached a map. My thinking so far was as follows:
City 1: a gold city seems like a given, and would be great for early development. But there really isn't enough food. 1S could grow to size 5 working 2 farmed floodplains and 3 gold, but would stall there. 1W would have health issues. The current site has a few more forests for health and can share the ivory to build its monument fairly quickly, and can work 2 farmed floodplains, 2 gold and a couple of cottages for a solid commerce city. How much should I worry about losing the gold to the AI if it's not in the first ring though? Settling west of the gold seems bad even by AI standards, but they could try to settle south.
City 2: a blocking city up north seems required. Trying to get the crabs gave too much plains/tundra for my liking, while this site has some useful overlap and ok food. I'm not sure what this is though. A production city that helps grow some cottages? A commerce city with good production to build the infrastructure? Or should I just not try to specialize this one?
City 3: a proper production city seems required, but once again I'm not sure where the food is going to come from. Looking at it again, this site has even less food than I thought when I drew it on, as the sheep hill and the plains cow will both only give 3 food, right? But maybe it's still worth it for the green hills?
Beyond that, doing something with the dry corn and the ivory in the east seems like a given, and I'm thinking the riverside option is probably better than the seaside one. Is it worth it to put a city by the sheep in the northeast to grow some cottages for the capital? Or should I put a city without any resources of it's own next to the wine, just sharing the corn and the wine? I'm guessing there should be either some metal or some horses somewhere in here, so that will probably dictate at least one more city. How many cities should I be looking to build in here? Is there any worthwhile plot on the coast?
As for strategy, I'm pretty sure I want to build the oracle when I've been given marble. I'm guessing for currency or code of laws. With how little food I have, is it even worth it to get bronze working early? After that, since I have no obvious great person farm, maybe I should try to build some marble wonders in my capital to generate some great people that way? Especially the great library, and maybe try for the parthenon, the MoM and the taj mahal as well? Or should I be looking to put my ivory to fast military use, possibly even by oracling construction?
edit: One final minor question: can I get bronze working and pottery before teching to priesthood, or does that push me too late? Or can I even get animal husbandry as well? I'll also need to get the wheel, to hook up my marble. I don't really have a feeling for how much I should be trying to get done before building the Oracle on this difficulty.