ChickenHawk
Chieftain
I continue to amazed by the lengths players go to in order to get an advantage in this game. Every week I read posts about how players take advantage of loopholes in the rules. These are called exploits.
The latest example I have found, but definitely not the most flagrant, is RCP (Ring City Placement). This exploit take advantage of the fact that the game sets a city's corruption level based on the number of cities closer to the capital than itself. If many cities are exactly the same distance from the capital, they all share the same corruption level. So if there are 3 cities inside of these equidistant cities, these equidistant cities share the corruption level of the 4th closest city, rather than each city gradually getting more corruption. So players are devising schemes to build as many cities as possible at identical distances from the capital (and forbidden palace) to lower their corruption.
Many people would argue that this is not an exploit; that it is simply a strategy. So what is the difference between an exploit and a strategy? To me, an exploit is a technique that:
a) takes advantage of a loophole in the rules. Of course, whether something is a loophole or not is again open to interpretation
b) has the player behave in ways that a historical figure would not. For example, the ruler of a nation, if he had control over the placement of new settlements, would not implement RCP. He might prefer to establish more settlements closer to his capital in order to maintain tighter control over them ( and hence lower corruption) but he would not ensure that he had a ring of cities that were "exactly" the same distance from each other from the capital regardless of local geography.
Civilization is not simply a game. It is a model of something real, albeit a VERY, VERY simplified model. It models the advance of, well, civilization, and some of the decisions the ruler of a nation might have to face in order for his nation to survive and thrive. I enjoy playing this game because I like to immerse myself in the role of such a leader. I will not use any technique that does not make sense in this context.
I'd like to know how others feel about this.
edit: RCP thread: http://forums.civfanatics.com/showt...&threadid=57026 (Thanks Bamspeedy)
The latest example I have found, but definitely not the most flagrant, is RCP (Ring City Placement). This exploit take advantage of the fact that the game sets a city's corruption level based on the number of cities closer to the capital than itself. If many cities are exactly the same distance from the capital, they all share the same corruption level. So if there are 3 cities inside of these equidistant cities, these equidistant cities share the corruption level of the 4th closest city, rather than each city gradually getting more corruption. So players are devising schemes to build as many cities as possible at identical distances from the capital (and forbidden palace) to lower their corruption.
Many people would argue that this is not an exploit; that it is simply a strategy. So what is the difference between an exploit and a strategy? To me, an exploit is a technique that:
a) takes advantage of a loophole in the rules. Of course, whether something is a loophole or not is again open to interpretation
b) has the player behave in ways that a historical figure would not. For example, the ruler of a nation, if he had control over the placement of new settlements, would not implement RCP. He might prefer to establish more settlements closer to his capital in order to maintain tighter control over them ( and hence lower corruption) but he would not ensure that he had a ring of cities that were "exactly" the same distance from each other from the capital regardless of local geography.
Civilization is not simply a game. It is a model of something real, albeit a VERY, VERY simplified model. It models the advance of, well, civilization, and some of the decisions the ruler of a nation might have to face in order for his nation to survive and thrive. I enjoy playing this game because I like to immerse myself in the role of such a leader. I will not use any technique that does not make sense in this context.
I'd like to know how others feel about this.

edit: RCP thread: http://forums.civfanatics.com/showt...&threadid=57026 (Thanks Bamspeedy)