K-Man
Warlord
Up until now, I have been keeping quiet over the whole issue of reputation. I actually like the idea of being held accountable for past actions when trading in the future. I didn't like the fact that civs hold grudges for 4000 years, or that some civs know all about your dealings with civs you have eliminated before even making contact with them, but in the long run of the game, it hasn't made too much of a difference for me.
My current game has introduced me to a new problem I have never experienced before, or at least was not aware existed. In my Regent game, I started on the middle of a continent that streches from the top to the bottom of the map. I have the French below me, and the Zulus and Japanese above me. The area occupied by the Zulu and Japanese is much further away than the French. Also, there is a wide expanse of Jungle and Mountains between us, while the French occupied area is full of grasslands, plains, and forests. So I immediately make plans for expansion southward into French territory to claim the whole south half of the continent for myself. When I have the French down to one city, the Indians land a boat and settler on the very south edge, and of course plop a city right where I was going to build a city (my settler was only 3 turns from reaching the exact same location, right by 4 furs!!!). I had an immortal fortified in the place where I was going to build the city, so the Indians build their city one square over. Of course now they demand that I move my troops, even though they were the ones that erected the city beside my troops. That wasn't what bothered me though, it was this. Not wanting to move my unit, I clicked the option that says "Why don't we agree to a Right of Passage agreement? This was the reply: "You sneak-attacked France while under the protection of this treaty, Xerxes. I can't possibly trust you."
I was never involved in a treaty of any kind with France, so I never sneak-attacked them. Does this mean that my reputation is already scarred for the rest of the game? Not only do civs hold grudges for thousands of years over something little that happened in the beginning of the game, but now they are making up reasons to be aggressive towards me. That hardly seems fair.
My current game has introduced me to a new problem I have never experienced before, or at least was not aware existed. In my Regent game, I started on the middle of a continent that streches from the top to the bottom of the map. I have the French below me, and the Zulus and Japanese above me. The area occupied by the Zulu and Japanese is much further away than the French. Also, there is a wide expanse of Jungle and Mountains between us, while the French occupied area is full of grasslands, plains, and forests. So I immediately make plans for expansion southward into French territory to claim the whole south half of the continent for myself. When I have the French down to one city, the Indians land a boat and settler on the very south edge, and of course plop a city right where I was going to build a city (my settler was only 3 turns from reaching the exact same location, right by 4 furs!!!). I had an immortal fortified in the place where I was going to build the city, so the Indians build their city one square over. Of course now they demand that I move my troops, even though they were the ones that erected the city beside my troops. That wasn't what bothered me though, it was this. Not wanting to move my unit, I clicked the option that says "Why don't we agree to a Right of Passage agreement? This was the reply: "You sneak-attacked France while under the protection of this treaty, Xerxes. I can't possibly trust you."
I was never involved in a treaty of any kind with France, so I never sneak-attacked them. Does this mean that my reputation is already scarred for the rest of the game? Not only do civs hold grudges for thousands of years over something little that happened in the beginning of the game, but now they are making up reasons to be aggressive towards me. That hardly seems fair.