Okay, after a full weekend of playing Civ V (as both Huns - love those battering rams! - and then the Greeks) there are two very minor issues, but worth a mention.
Playing on 1920 x 1080 res, there are (with my system specs.) some momentary screen redraw issues, just a tiny 're-sharpening' of tile graphics when you scroll a lot.
The other oddity - and I'm not sure if this is a feature(!) - is that there are sometimes red 'blobs' on one or two tiles... are these graphic rendering errors or some 'secret' message meaning "this tile has a resource on that you haven't discovered the means to use yet"?
Red blobs seem to be a common occurrence. I think they are a defect in the Windows DirectX (9?) code that Aspyr had to use as the basis for the Mac port. I don't think you can assume anything useful about the tiles they appear on.
Playing on 1920 x 1080 res, there are (with my system specs.) some momentary screen redraw issues, just a tiny 're-sharpening' of tile graphics when you scroll a lot.
I've just updated to the latest MacBook Air and MacBook Pro Update 2.0 and the graphic performance is notably better.
I've loaded a previous game which was around turn 200 and could scroll the screen much faster than before and with very little choppiness. Before the upgrade, scrolling was nearly unbearable, especially when restarting CIV and loading an existing game.
The update seems to only be for the June 2012 MacBook models, so not sure if it helps anybody else or is even available for other hardware.
I've just updated to the latest MacBook Air and MacBook Pro Update 2.0 and the graphic performance is notably better.
I've loaded a previous game which was around turn 200 and could scroll the screen much faster than before and with very little choppiness. Before the upgrade, scrolling was nearly unbearable, especially when restarting CIV and loading an existing game.
The update seems to only be for the June 2012 MacBook models, so not sure if it helps anybody else or is even available for other hardware.
It's worth checking this article out on how the MBP retina drives its display. Moral of the story seems to be don't buy a retina display, or at least don't play at the scaled resolutions.
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