On most of my games the computer always powers ahead of me early on and I can't understand why! I assume that it follows the same laws as human players yet at the moment in my game it is way ahead early on. It feels to me like there is only a limited strategy early in the game with regards to producing things and expanding. Yet I can't understand why the computer is so quick.
The main points of my early game strategy are:
Building my first city.
Building a warrior to defend it.
Building a scout to search for villages.
Building a monumet.
Building a workers and firstly using them to chop trees to speed up production.
Aiming to get Masonry and build the Great Wall to prevent barbarian attacks.
Having specialised cities. My first being one to produce commerce. I have cottages built on flood plains and these are growing. My next city is one where I will build farms and produce great people. I pretty much repeat this unless I see some great resources that provide happiness or health.
I look to build libraries early as well as monastries to speed up research.
When I have a city size above 3 I start to produce a new settler.
I aim to have around 10 cities altogether.
Am I going wrong somewhere?
The main points of my early game strategy are:
Building my first city.
Building a warrior to defend it.
Building a scout to search for villages.
Building a monumet.
Building a workers and firstly using them to chop trees to speed up production.
Aiming to get Masonry and build the Great Wall to prevent barbarian attacks.
Having specialised cities. My first being one to produce commerce. I have cottages built on flood plains and these are growing. My next city is one where I will build farms and produce great people. I pretty much repeat this unless I see some great resources that provide happiness or health.
I look to build libraries early as well as monastries to speed up research.
When I have a city size above 3 I start to produce a new settler.
I aim to have around 10 cities altogether.
Am I going wrong somewhere?