So, having recently completed all the other requirements for Quartermaster, I decided to get a Histographic win in, which I've never done before.
Looking at the tables, I decided on a Large Regent map--that way I couldn't do worse than third!
I decided that Sumeria would be a good choice--Agri = growth, Scientific for those nifty SGLs and quick research. Don't know what settings are best for these sorts of games, but I assumed lots of land was a must, so I went with 60% continents. Chosen opponents were England, France, America, Byzantines, Greeks, and Russia--on a Large map with only 6 opponents, I wanted some expansionist civs to come meet me, and a couple scientific ones to trade techs with as the game went along.
Mapfinder is quirky (to say the least) for me for whatever reason, so I hand-roll starts, looking for the usual spiffy starts with cows and rivers and stuff. Eventually, I come across this.
Wanting to get on the river, I move the settler north, and I'm in love:
Well, this looks like a pretty useful start.
Founding Ur in 3950BC, I get a fairly pleasant surprise:
Two cows, three game, and lots of fresh water. Yeah, that'll do.
Ur became an absurdly low-maintenance settler factory at size 3-5--one mined BG and the game made things run hands-free. A second factory in Sumer filled most of the rest of my settler needs. The surrounding land proved, well, absurdly useful for me, with FIVE luxes within fairly easy reach. By 1200 BC, I had three of them hooked up, England had temporarily snagged the wines, and I'd met an American scout along with the English. Research was CB, Myst (SGL fishing), Writing, Code of Laws, and Philo. Code of Laws yielded a SGL, which of course rushed the Pyramids in 1275BC.
In 1200 BC, with Philosophy about to complete, the empire looked like this:
Spices near Der, silks near Akshak, dyes at Erech. An incense would soon come into view just east of the Kutha/Kua area, and the wines you can perhaps make out inside Coventry's borders. With five luxes on the island, it was obvious that I'd drawn a pretty good size landmass, which was a plus.
Looking at the tables, I decided on a Large Regent map--that way I couldn't do worse than third!
I decided that Sumeria would be a good choice--Agri = growth, Scientific for those nifty SGLs and quick research. Don't know what settings are best for these sorts of games, but I assumed lots of land was a must, so I went with 60% continents. Chosen opponents were England, France, America, Byzantines, Greeks, and Russia--on a Large map with only 6 opponents, I wanted some expansionist civs to come meet me, and a couple scientific ones to trade techs with as the game went along.
Mapfinder is quirky (to say the least) for me for whatever reason, so I hand-roll starts, looking for the usual spiffy starts with cows and rivers and stuff. Eventually, I come across this.
Wanting to get on the river, I move the settler north, and I'm in love:
Well, this looks like a pretty useful start.
Founding Ur in 3950BC, I get a fairly pleasant surprise:
Two cows, three game, and lots of fresh water. Yeah, that'll do.
Ur became an absurdly low-maintenance settler factory at size 3-5--one mined BG and the game made things run hands-free. A second factory in Sumer filled most of the rest of my settler needs. The surrounding land proved, well, absurdly useful for me, with FIVE luxes within fairly easy reach. By 1200 BC, I had three of them hooked up, England had temporarily snagged the wines, and I'd met an American scout along with the English. Research was CB, Myst (SGL fishing), Writing, Code of Laws, and Philo. Code of Laws yielded a SGL, which of course rushed the Pyramids in 1275BC.
In 1200 BC, with Philosophy about to complete, the empire looked like this:
Spices near Der, silks near Akshak, dyes at Erech. An incense would soon come into view just east of the Kutha/Kua area, and the wines you can perhaps make out inside Coventry's borders. With five luxes on the island, it was obvious that I'd drawn a pretty good size landmass, which was a plus.