gamezrule44 said:maybe the us culture is currently not the leader, however, at one time it was, so they would have won even if they aren't in the current lead
gamezrule44 said:ooh well so noone one a culture victory but usa would still have sort of won diplomatic victory
Not a single Secretary General of the U. N. has come from the U. S. A quick scan of the wikipedia page also suggests to me that this would NOT have happened, although admittedly it's hard to figure out what would translate into a diplomatic victory. Difficulties exist. For example, I don't see how one could claim the U. S. would have gotten enough votes in the Cold War era, or during the recent Bush administration. I could more see it during the first Bush administration and the first Gulf War, when a significant number of nations contributed to that war, but even then... does that come as enough to match the conditions of a U. N. victory in civ III?
That's deliberate policy. No SG has ever come from one of the permanent Security Council powers--they never even bother to politic for one. The SG has always come from a neutral, nonaligned, or 3rd world country. In this respect, CivIII doesn't mirror the real world. From the founding of the UN until roughly the mid-60's, though, the US could usually round up enough votes on any position it chose in the General Assembly, then have it overturned by a Soviet veto on the Security Council. That was in fact a key position for the US to take: to be so diplomatically dominant as to force the Soviets to the unpalatable result of vetoing everything. It would be defensible to argue that this was the real world equivalent of CivIII's diplomatic victory.
The problem, of course, is that unlike CivIII, the real world game continues & in recent decades the US has been pushed into the same position as the Soviets were in. You could then argue, on the above basis, that the US is currently losing either the 2nd game of CivIII, or the continuation. However, it isn't clear that anyone else is winning, either. The Chinese may be doing best in the overall diplomatic scene, beyond the UN, but they are also building upon a sand of dictators around the world & are anything but sweetness and light; it is likely that sooner or later this will backfire on them, although possibly not before they have everything they wanted. If you get what you want, then pull out of the game, is that then a victory? Depends on your POV, I suppose.
kk
Diplomatic Advisor: The Argentinians are annoyed with us.![]()
LOL. If life were like Civ the USA would have to conquer all the great wonder cities so no one could achieve culture victory. And leaders would live a long long time.
Would we play more turns after 2050 if no victory conditions were met or would we just award histograph victory?
LOL. If life were like Civ the USA would have to conquer all the great wonder cities so no one could achieve culture victory. And leaders would live a long long time.
Would we play more turns after 2050 if no victory conditions were met or would we just award histograph victory?