I really liked Civ III and the new resource and artillery mechanics, but it's true that the corruption insanity limited how long I played it.
I might have missed it but- 13 pages and no one picking up on that statement? The thread should be renamed into "people who didn't like Civ5 but loved Civ4, what do you think?" since this is really what this thread comes down to. Ultimately it boils down to Civ3 vs 4 and having to "admit" that one liked 5.I find veteran commentary always really spot on. Are you excited again or has the civ5 format killed it for you?
I might have missed it but- 13 pages and no one picking up on that statement? The thread should be renamed into "people who didn't like Civ5 but loved Civ4, what do you think?" since this is really what this thread comes down to. Ultimately it boils down to Civ3 vs 4 and having to "admit" that one liked 5.
Seems to me that the "oldtimer" playerbase is really not as homogeneous as the OP is making it out to be. Plenty who never got into 5, plenty who did and found it was fine, plenty who ended up preferring it over 5.
I've played Civ 1/2/3/4/5 + all expansions fairly close to their release dates and I am very excited for the next version. I must be their right target audience since I enjoy every new version more then the prior version and rarely ever go back to play old ones.(Except BE - I avoided it because of the Colonization remake / mod and it sounds like it was a good idea)
I prefer X unit per tile over stacks but it needs some tweaks:
- OP Units like Artillery that make warfare easy
- More clear Air Defence - "Who just hit my bomber?"
Roads. I loved that Civ5 changed roads to be more strategic and just not paint the map in roads. I hated in Civ5 that it cost GPT and it was ALOT of GPT - especially in the early game! Limit them somehow but make them not so costly that you avoid building them for anything but the key city connections or until late game when GPT wasn't an issue.
I might have missed it but- 13 pages and no one picking up on that statement? The thread should be renamed into "people who didn't like Civ5 but loved Civ4, what do you think?" since this is really what this thread comes down to. Ultimately it boils down to Civ3 vs 4 and having to "admit" that one liked 5.
Seems to me that the "oldtimer" playerbase is really not as homogeneous as the OP is making it out to be. Plenty who never got into 5, plenty who did and found it was fine, plenty who ended up preferring it over 5.
Been playing since the OG Civ, while Civ II holds a special place in my heart (was the one I first really sank my teeth into) they have gotten better with each iteration. I expect nothing less from this round. I am wary of cutting the tech tree so deeply, but everything else I have heard sounds amazing. I trust the team to deliver a great product.
Played a little Civ 1 when I was a teen. I was very intrigued by the scope of the game back then. Skipped Civ 2 to deal with the real world. Purchased Civ 3 about year before Civ 4 hit the market and played some. Civ 4 is where I really sunk my teeth in. Enjoyed it immensely. Didn't buy Civ 5 until Gods and Kings. Learned how to mod and spent countless hours with my head buried in Modbuddy. One might call it an addiction.
Very excited about Civ 6 so far with everything I have read and seen.
- More clear Air Defence - "Who just hit my bomber?"
But it's true that, as someone stated, a combat log for airplanes (or units for that matter) especially with animations off would be great.
Seriousness aside ... another thought of mine is - damn, time flies quickly! I started playing civ I, 25 years ago, and now we are at number 6! I'm getting old![]()
I started with Civ 2 when I was about 12 and looking for porn on my uncle's computer. Little did I know at the time what I had set into motion just by clicking that innocuous little earth-pyramid icon.
I started with Civ 2 when I was about 12 and looking for porn on my uncle's computer. Little did I know at the time what I had set into motion just by clicking that innocuous little earth-pyramid icon.
My anaconda don't want none if it ain't got SoD's hon
Indeed - I was in my early 30's when Civ I releasedSeriousness aside ... another thought of mine is - damn, time flies quickly! I started playing civ I, 25 years ago, and now we are at number 6! I'm getting old![]()