Thalassicus
Bytes and Nibblers
I generally have 10-20
for the first fifty turns (depending on luxuries) and only the capital. That's a direct 10-20%
boost, which is especially significant since it's early. I increased tech costs 15% to compensate (and slow late tech pace too, which people said was too fast).
I was surprised at how interesting this makes the early game! We're presented with a strategic choice: build a settler and expand now, or wait a while longer and enjoy the science bonus?
It's similar to a National College rush, but better! The NC-rush forced us to a restrictive build order. Providing an inherent science bonus for tall capitals means we can still do an NC-style-start, but with any tech path or build order! In fact, this new bonus reduces the importance of the NC, since the modifiers add instead of multiply.
It's a great counterbalance to the rapid expansion urge. We have to expand eventually, so the question of when becomes even more important. Expansion inherently adds to science, so this helps early tall-empire players keep up technologically with quick expanders. In my first test games I expanded ASAP like I usually do, and realized I was missing out on the science bonus. In the next game I waited a long time to expand and got overrun by an AI. It's a matter of balancing expansion with research in the early game. I'm really excited about this!


I was surprised at how interesting this makes the early game! We're presented with a strategic choice: build a settler and expand now, or wait a while longer and enjoy the science bonus?
It's similar to a National College rush, but better! The NC-rush forced us to a restrictive build order. Providing an inherent science bonus for tall capitals means we can still do an NC-style-start, but with any tech path or build order! In fact, this new bonus reduces the importance of the NC, since the modifiers add instead of multiply.
It's a great counterbalance to the rapid expansion urge. We have to expand eventually, so the question of when becomes even more important. Expansion inherently adds to science, so this helps early tall-empire players keep up technologically with quick expanders. In my first test games I expanded ASAP like I usually do, and realized I was missing out on the science bonus. In the next game I waited a long time to expand and got overrun by an AI. It's a matter of balancing expansion with research in the early game. I'm really excited about this!
