Some small mistakes:
- you forgot to road the cow. Luckily the river will connect your cities
- food bar in capital indicates that you forgot to work forested plains hill for that one turn
- your warriors are not well placed and your worker could be attacked from two different locations
Better locations to fogbust would be for example the ones marked x. A panther or a wolf could capture your worker from tiles labeled "panther?"
No worries, these mistakes are rather small and won't prevent you from winning this game.
I suppose you are going to settle on that jungle as I suggested earlier.
Research: Pottery. You want to lay down some cottages on those floodplains.
Capital: Worker. Since we went for early Bronze working, we should chop some forests to speed up early development. You want many cities as fast as possible.
2nd city: Warrior. You want to grow to size 2 asap since there are 2 decent tiles (rice+horse).
Warriors: Keep one exploring the south (don't go too far though!) and send another one to check what is on the coast north of capital. You want to settle there to share the clams.
Worker 1: Improve rice first (no need to road), then horse, then road horse.
I think you should switch to slavery and whip in capital as soon as it is available (should be in 3 turns). This gets worker out 3 turns earlier which is great.
Worker 2: Move to a forest and chop. Then you should start building a warrior to grow. But when the chop is done, you must switch to a settler! Otherwise the chop is more or less wasted. Next turn switch back to warrior to resume growth. Move worker to another forest and chop.
Oh and one more thing you should be getting used to: your slider should nearly always be set either to 0% or 100%. After you settle your 2nd city, you start losing gold at 100%, so you should set it to 0% for one turn.
There is a lot to handle so don't worry if you forget something. I suggest that in that case you re-load and play it again, since this is a training game after all. It's your game though so do as you please.
Post when pottery is done.
- you forgot to road the cow. Luckily the river will connect your cities
- food bar in capital indicates that you forgot to work forested plains hill for that one turn
- your warriors are not well placed and your worker could be attacked from two different locations
Spoiler :
Better locations to fogbust would be for example the ones marked x. A panther or a wolf could capture your worker from tiles labeled "panther?"
No worries, these mistakes are rather small and won't prevent you from winning this game.
I suppose you are going to settle on that jungle as I suggested earlier.
Research: Pottery. You want to lay down some cottages on those floodplains.
Capital: Worker. Since we went for early Bronze working, we should chop some forests to speed up early development. You want many cities as fast as possible.
2nd city: Warrior. You want to grow to size 2 asap since there are 2 decent tiles (rice+horse).
Warriors: Keep one exploring the south (don't go too far though!) and send another one to check what is on the coast north of capital. You want to settle there to share the clams.
Worker 1: Improve rice first (no need to road), then horse, then road horse.
I think you should switch to slavery and whip in capital as soon as it is available (should be in 3 turns). This gets worker out 3 turns earlier which is great.
Worker 2: Move to a forest and chop. Then you should start building a warrior to grow. But when the chop is done, you must switch to a settler! Otherwise the chop is more or less wasted. Next turn switch back to warrior to resume growth. Move worker to another forest and chop.
Oh and one more thing you should be getting used to: your slider should nearly always be set either to 0% or 100%. After you settle your 2nd city, you start losing gold at 100%, so you should set it to 0% for one turn.
There is a lot to handle so don't worry if you forget something. I suggest that in that case you re-load and play it again, since this is a training game after all. It's your game though so do as you please.
Post when pottery is done.