I'm not sure, but I expect it to be something relatively hard to placate. Given how they've built leader traits this time around, more aggressive civ's agenda usually dinging you on strengths of their's, It could be something like having a lot of horse resources or something easy for him to be pissy about.
Korea and Netherlands might be a T3 level civ on a Pangaea map. Probably T2 on a Island Plates and maybe T2 on a Fractal map.
Mongolia is on par with Sumeria and Scythia. Two civs that can ruin your day on a Deity/Immortal game and in multiplayer.
Like someone else pointed out earlier, if Mongolia can escort a settler with a horse unit, can you imagine how fast they can settle spots on the map? Beating out the AI to a good spot? Show of hands, how many times have you been beaten to a settle location by an AI, by a factor of a few turns? Build a builder unit faster in your capital or 2nd city, then let the horse fast move it to your newest city? Instead of the usual 7-9 turns of one and two tiles per turn?
I mean it depends on what setup we're talking about. Obviously some crazy military civ will be insanely strong in multiplayer or if you're super tryharding in single player, that's nothing new. But for a "normal" civ game then you shouldn't really look at it from that angle
Don't get me wrong, this is definitely going to be a very strong civ, but for people that prefer to play a little bit more pacifistically then it's a bit of a weird comparison
If I'm not mistaken, both delegates and embassies are removed when you're at war with that leader, which means Genghis will lose visibility that come from this sources once he declare wars, so accepting his delegate shouldn't give him a bonus (the bonus will be removed as soon as he declare war). I think he will only get a bonus from visibility that isn't removed by war: Spies/listening post, trading post, printing technology.
Idk, I need to play and pay attention on visibility interaction with war.
Dislikes: Everyone within reach of his ponies.
Likes: People far, far away who make allegiances with him and give him gifts.
There's really not much with trade routes that can tie into agendas, given that they are non-consensual. Maybe his agenda will tie into the refined allegiance system, which hopefully will finally at least make trade routes offer both the sender recipient of a route some mutual benefit.
Oh, this looks awesome. Much more interesting design than Korea or Netherlands, IMO. Genghis Khan himself looks quite cool, too. Like an actual human being, unlike some leaders I could mention.
Someone beat me to referencing Dschinghis Khan? Well, have this:
I will say, for whatever reason, Civ VI really seems to like giving its leaders chubby cheeks (at least on release). Teddy, Wilhelmina, Seondeok, Genghis... Amanitore but that makes sense
Only the Keshig get's the escort speed ability. That is part of the UU, not part of any of the other abilities. So although it's very powerful, at least it is a mid-game ability so it won't fuel early game settler rushes.
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