Congrats, that was a very early impressive Victory for C3C at that level !
I`ve been playing around with your early 500AD.Sav and what struck me was how you had pretty much cleared the Map of all serious oppositon of 3 other Civs. 2 of them, the Zulu & Aztec usually very aggressive, by just that time, as well as researching up to Feudallsm while building up a massive Army, all in a short time frame.
I know Iron and Ivory ( which you must have got early ? ) and the SOZ Ancient Cav. helped ( allthough the SOZ usually take 28+ turns to build in a big City ? )
Did you Warrior/Archer Rush any of the closer Civs. to cripple them early on ?
Did you take them on all at once or one at a time ?
If you have the time to talk about how you pulled the early Game off , and if some of the highly experienced players who have been posting have thoughts on that I`d love to know ?
Thanks !
Okay, some of the early game was like a week ago, so I can't remember everything exactly as I did it, but I'll give you a basic rundown.
I settled in place and immediately recognized both the food bonus (can't remember if it was wheat or a cow) and the ivory. With the food bonus I knew I would set up a six turn settler factory, and I decided immediately that I would build SoZ.
I think there was a goody hut close by that I go a free warrior from, and I think I started with alphabet and pottery, so my initial builds were warrior, curragh, granary, settler.
My first two cities were on the river to build the SoZ, and SW by the food bonuses. In those cities I immediately started building the SoZ (with a pre-build) and a granary.
I tried for the republic slingshot (writing--> code of laws--> philosophy--> free republic tech), but I didn't get it. The Spanish beat me to it. I think I was probably too liberal in my trades, because I was set up perfectly for it. I probably stupidly traded writing away too early.
I traded for Iron Working ASAP to see if I would be able to build swords. The iron was a little bit of a hike to the west, but nobody else claimed the territory, so I sent my first available settler there with some warriors immediately. But I didn't hook up the iron. Instead I started building a bunch of warriors which I would later mass upgrade to swordsmen.
In the meantime, the land was fairly crowded and there was a bunch of useless jungle, so rather than primarily building settlers from my factories, I built a bunch of workers. I used them to hook up roads and irrigate/mine, and then joined many of them into my cities in order to get my population up quickly. This speeds up research and shield production.
Once I researched philosophy (and missed the republic slinghot) I shut off research to build up my treasury for warrior-to-swordmen upgrades at 60 gold a piece. Later on I did the same thing with horsemen-to-knights, though not to the same extent. And I didn't start building horsemen until my cities were producing more shields because 30 GPT can be a little expensive for horses if you build them real early.
I had a pretty sizable military of swordsmen, so the Zulu were easy to take down. They had a town on the other side of the continent which helped keep them alive for a while. Then I warred with the Aztecs, then the Spanish. After a while I had a pretty good legion of Ancient Cavalry as well, which REALLY helped.
I'm not sure, but I think I scored a bunch of late ancient age techs through pointy-stick research. Since I missed the slingshot, I stayed in despotism much longer than I like, and I wasn't able to upgrade my government until I finally beat Monarchy out of someone. I usually prefer Republic, but at that point I just opted for the first chance get myself out of despotism, so Monarchy it was.
You mentioned that I had researched up to Feudalism at that 500 AD save. I am not sure where I was I but I am pretty sure I had some knights when I was fighting the Aztecs, though I guess I could be wrong.
Anyway, there you have it. Hopefully you can gain a kernal of knowledge from my mindless ramblings.
