When you click on a building and the queue is empty it just puts it in the queue and then close the city-screen or auto-move to the next city if there are multiple cities that have an empty queue. If you decide to invest/pay for the building it puts it in the queue but does not move to the next city with an empty queue. It's quite annoying. I don't recall that being a thing previously. Is there an option to revert that cause as mentioned it's quite annoying.
Certainly so if you want to add multiple buildings to a queue or do some other micro on the city when you are there. As you then have to go back to that city and open it and add again and then do things.
It has always been there. That is as far as I know permanent. That said the weird thing I guess is that you can only ask once. If they reject you they have rejected you forever on that issue. If they accept it they accept it forever. So the cheese with that is that you ask when you are "friends", or as soon as they found their religion, cause then they are more or less always going to agree to it and then it lasts forever even if you later go to war or start to hate each other for other reasons (such as religious differences ...). I guess it's one of those early things that you just do in the early stage of the game when everyone sort of are friendly and then you forget about it for the rest of the game. I guess you could say that it breaks one aspect of the religious game.
Certainly so if you want to add multiple buildings to a queue or do some other micro on the city when you are there. As you then have to go back to that city and open it and add again and then do things.
They are permanent, if I'm not mistaken.
It has always been there. That is as far as I know permanent. That said the weird thing I guess is that you can only ask once. If they reject you they have rejected you forever on that issue. If they accept it they accept it forever. So the cheese with that is that you ask when you are "friends", or as soon as they found their religion, cause then they are more or less always going to agree to it and then it lasts forever even if you later go to war or start to hate each other for other reasons (such as religious differences ...). I guess it's one of those early things that you just do in the early stage of the game when everyone sort of are friendly and then you forget about it for the rest of the game. I guess you could say that it breaks one aspect of the religious game.