EndoConvert
Warlord
- Joined
- Dec 17, 2010
- Messages
- 297
I'm often faced with a situation in which I can either settle on a river or 1 tile away from a river. The 1 tile away might be a better strategic location (a choke point, closer to a resource, etc.).
So does settling on a river make up for the better strategic location? Off the top of my head, the only benefits of settling directly on a river rather than 1 tile away are:
- garden
- water mill
- hydro plant
- only having to build 1 road to get a bridge (since the city acts as the other side of the bridge) rather than 2 roads to get a bridge
- harder to assault the city if enemies have to cross the river to get to it, but this works both ways (it's harder to attack from the city) and is irrelevant if enemies are not on the other side of the river anyway
Water mill sucks more often than not (cost < benefit), and garden is only good in very specific types of cities geared to building GP. Hydro plant is really late game, requires aluminum I'd rather spend on units, and is a huge hammer investment anyway (especially compared to workshop, forge, factory, etc.).
So are there any other benefits of settling on a river rather than 1 tile away that I'm missing?
You get the civil service farming benefit even from 1 tile away. When there are strategic benefits to settling 1 tile away, it seems better to settle that 1 tile away than on the river, which doesn't seem to offer enough benefits to offset the strategic advantages.
So does settling on a river make up for the better strategic location? Off the top of my head, the only benefits of settling directly on a river rather than 1 tile away are:
- garden
- water mill
- hydro plant
- only having to build 1 road to get a bridge (since the city acts as the other side of the bridge) rather than 2 roads to get a bridge
- harder to assault the city if enemies have to cross the river to get to it, but this works both ways (it's harder to attack from the city) and is irrelevant if enemies are not on the other side of the river anyway
Water mill sucks more often than not (cost < benefit), and garden is only good in very specific types of cities geared to building GP. Hydro plant is really late game, requires aluminum I'd rather spend on units, and is a huge hammer investment anyway (especially compared to workshop, forge, factory, etc.).
So are there any other benefits of settling on a river rather than 1 tile away that I'm missing?
You get the civil service farming benefit even from 1 tile away. When there are strategic benefits to settling 1 tile away, it seems better to settle that 1 tile away than on the river, which doesn't seem to offer enough benefits to offset the strategic advantages.