Can't find one place where this is explained, but I THINK the following is correct:
- Each government type has a different legacy bonus
- You earn the bonus by sticking with the government for a length of time (how long?) America has the special ability to halve this time
- (What I'm most unsure about) After you earn the bonus it stays in force for the remainder of the game, no matter what your present government is.
- Multiple bonuses in effect at the same time would therefore be possible.
- The legacy bonus is fixed, that is once you earn it, staying with the government longer has no further legacy bonus effect (hmm, not too sure about this either).
If the above are true, it might be wise to switch governments as soon as you earn the legacy bonus to maximize them. America especially might be able to get all of them. Other factors like cost of switch, or current situation may of course delay or make unwise any government switch.
Are my assumptions right?
- Each government type has a different legacy bonus
- You earn the bonus by sticking with the government for a length of time (how long?) America has the special ability to halve this time
- (What I'm most unsure about) After you earn the bonus it stays in force for the remainder of the game, no matter what your present government is.
- Multiple bonuses in effect at the same time would therefore be possible.
- The legacy bonus is fixed, that is once you earn it, staying with the government longer has no further legacy bonus effect (hmm, not too sure about this either).
If the above are true, it might be wise to switch governments as soon as you earn the legacy bonus to maximize them. America especially might be able to get all of them. Other factors like cost of switch, or current situation may of course delay or make unwise any government switch.
Are my assumptions right?