danaphanous
religious fanatic
- Joined
- Sep 6, 2013
- Messages
- 1,501
I was playing a recent Deity Shoshone run. I spawned off isolated on a peninsula-like landmass with only Spain to the North and a natural wonder right next to her. So I went liberty, forward-settled her and trapped off the entire area for myself ~9 city spots on standard size!
Of course Spain disliked this, it didn't help that I raided her for workers earlier and killed a lot of warriors and archers with my early comps from pathfinders. She was feigning friendliness and I needed to get through her to discover more people so I trading open borders, soon I see an ominous sight building on the horizon. Huge numbers of comps and pikes...yikes! Clearly this means war, I prepared my border cities with settling on hills and start building walls and producing more comps. The wave starts to travel through my lands (open borders) because the target city is clearly my capital. .
If we hadn't had open borders there is no way my first city could stand up to a rush of this size with pikes. She did this just before I had the pikes to defend as I was still catching up and a couple techs behind. But because we had open borders she instead moves the whole army PAST my more vulnerable border cities and only DOWs when the first pike reaches my capital. This has the effect of splitting her force into 4 forces scattered all over my empire. Only about 1/3 make it through to the capital side. The rest keep hiking past my hilly border city and ignore it while I take pot-shots
As a result her entire massive army was destroyed and all I lost was one spearman. She later attacked my border cities with the smaller remnants of the split force from DOWing within my open borders but because it was split into 3-4 armies no one city was every really threatened and my walls+comps+hills were more then enough to chew through everything.
I take it the AI has no idea what DOWing in open border does...in this case giving her the borders prior to war saved me from losing a city as I couldn't mobilize in time otherwise without the time this gave me to prepare. You can see I wasn't quite finished with wall yet.
I guess this was bad preparation on my part but she built her force extremely fast (about 20 turns time) due to high pop cities and holy warriors. 
Of course Spain disliked this, it didn't help that I raided her for workers earlier and killed a lot of warriors and archers with my early comps from pathfinders. She was feigning friendliness and I needed to get through her to discover more people so I trading open borders, soon I see an ominous sight building on the horizon. Huge numbers of comps and pikes...yikes! Clearly this means war, I prepared my border cities with settling on hills and start building walls and producing more comps. The wave starts to travel through my lands (open borders) because the target city is clearly my capital. .
If we hadn't had open borders there is no way my first city could stand up to a rush of this size with pikes. She did this just before I had the pikes to defend as I was still catching up and a couple techs behind. But because we had open borders she instead moves the whole army PAST my more vulnerable border cities and only DOWs when the first pike reaches my capital. This has the effect of splitting her force into 4 forces scattered all over my empire. Only about 1/3 make it through to the capital side. The rest keep hiking past my hilly border city and ignore it while I take pot-shots

As a result her entire massive army was destroyed and all I lost was one spearman. She later attacked my border cities with the smaller remnants of the split force from DOWing within my open borders but because it was split into 3-4 armies no one city was every really threatened and my walls+comps+hills were more then enough to chew through everything.
I take it the AI has no idea what DOWing in open border does...in this case giving her the borders prior to war saved me from losing a city as I couldn't mobilize in time otherwise without the time this gave me to prepare. You can see I wasn't quite finished with wall yet.

