Post short tips here!

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Originally posted by marceagleye
Hey denyd, (and all others) you cannot build Hoover Dam without a river. A lake simply will not do. Once as the Americans I had 3/4 of a continent while the Aztecs had the other quarter and the only river on the entire continent. In the whole of my territory the only fresh water I had was a one tile lake, on the shore of which I built the city of Detroit. In this particular game I was leading in tech and production and was eager to build Hoover's in Detroit, but I could not. I had to conquer the Aztec capital and hurry the wonder with a leader. So even though a lake eliminates the need for an aqueduct, It doesn't have the current needed for a hydro plant.

I have noticed the same when playing CIV Vanilla, but when I moved to PTW 1.14 I could build Hoover in a city located near a lake.
 
im not 100% sure, but while fighting a war, if a unit continues to be successful and becomes elite, he has a chance of producing a great leader when he beats another enemy force and you can rename the successful unit as well. the leader will just appear where the unit is, itll be obvious when it happens, so keep on playing and trying to succeed in battle and you will eventually get one. i think its more likely if you are a militaristic civ...
 
hey shinji kun, when asking questions like these, just ask in the "newbie thread" stickied at the top of the main forum, where you will get fast, accurate answers.
 
Beware losing workers... always protect them or you might never see them again... I seem to lose a worker to an enemy and magically that worker is transported to the enemy civ's capitol... so unless you want to settle for peace right then and there and trade back for your worker I suggest you keep up tight security on the workers... which in the beginnin of the game are all too precious.
 
JMK sorry I didn't know you could build Hoover with a lake but no river in any version of civ3. I'm playing PTW 1.21f. It's not possible in this version.
 
JMK sorry I didn't know you could build Hoover with a lake but no river in any version of civ3. I'm playing PTW 1.21f. It's not possible in this version.
 
When improving grasslands, I usually mine the bonus grasslands, and irrigate other grasslands if I need food and I am out of despotism. This gives the greatest flexibility with regards to micromanaging.

However, if you haven't experienced your golden age, consider irrigating bonus grasslands and mining the other grasslands. That way, all tiles will enjoy a production bonus during your golden age.

In later stages of the game, you sometimes find yourself irrigating over mines to increase your food production. Irrigate bonus grasslands rather than non-bonus ones if you haven't had your GA. (Not unusual on deity with a sucky UU).

Finally, the same considerations are important if you plan to mobilize.
 
Originally posted by denyd
Hoover dam must be on fresh water (lake, river...)
I thought it needed a river, and not necessarily running through the city but anywhere in the city radius.
Must have a chapel in the city to build Sistine Chapel
A temple? Never noticed that.
I think the Oracle requires a temple in that city
Never noticed that.
 
How does one deal with overcrowding?
 
Originally posted by Smellincoffee
How does one deal with overcrowding?

Build improvements that increase happyness and the complaints will go away....
Temple, cathedral, colosseum will do fine, but my personal favourite is a marketplace combined with a few luxuries...
 
This thread is 28 pages currently, therefore it might have been mentioned:

When you stop war tell the governor in the SAME turn to adjust the moods of all citizens: suddenly tons of gold and shortened science turns!
 
Not sure if this has been posted already, but if you hold down shift, it speeds up automated and enemy movement . Great for watching your workers run around and those pesky barbarians running around.
 
Another one:

When you are razing cities and not building new ones instead (because of corruption effects or else) but you still want to keep other civs out: build outposts on every coastal tile so the civs your are at peace with may not land.

You can do it with captured workers (free) and it is cheaper than parking a military unit on it (no upkeep!)
 
Originally posted by Bretwalda
This thread is 28 pages currently, therefore it might have been mentioned:

When you stop war tell the governor in the SAME turn to adjust the moods of all citizens: suddenly tons of gold and shortened science turns!

Also do this after anarchy. Right after telling the game that you want to be a democracy (for example), you still may have entertainers left over from the anarchy. If you re-tell the governor to control moods, those entertainers will be fired.

Also do this everytime you adjust the luxury slider/or gain luxuries, so you know for sure the moods will be adjusted NOW, and not later.
 
Hoover dam must be on fresh water (lake, river...)

I thought it needed a river, and not necessarily running through the city but anywhere in the city radius.

A river tile must be in it's radius, but I don't think lakes count. I had a game where I couldn't build Hoovers, despite the fact the city was built on a lake (there was no rivers on my island).
 
Originally posted by Bamspeedy


Also do this after anarchy. Right after telling the game that you want to be a democracy (for example), you still may have entertainers left over from the anarchy. If you re-tell the governor to control moods, those entertainers will be fired.

Also do this everytime you adjust the luxury slider/or gain luxuries, so you know for sure the moods will be adjusted NOW, and not later.

Interesting Bamspeedy. I thought most good players NEVER used governors and I count you in that group.
 
Here's a quick question for somebody:

The Great Library gives you any tech that two of the civs you are in contact with possess.

Does this mean ALL civs you have ever contacted, or only ones you can currently trade with? In other words, do you still receive techs if you are at war with the civs that get them first? (I am sure someone out there who likes always-war games knows...)
 
Siegmund,

It's whomever you've ever met.

On a side note, I learned something interesting about the GL lately during a GOTM. Because the GL doesn't expire until the turn after you acquire it. If you are way behind on tech and take the GL city from another Civ you get all the techs that are known by the AI's you know, which in this case was all the way into the Industrial Age. The next turn the GL becomes useless because you now have Education (and you don't get the culture points because you didn't build it yourself)

DenyD

:beer:
 
When you are about to get a Tech advance you can often decrease your Science allotment to 10% or so and still get the advance in 1 turn (or 2 or whatever) and get a major boost to your treasury.

I was dropping Science from around 80 to 10, still getting the Tech when I otherwise would have, but getting an extra 1000 gold on that turn.
 
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