LordKoros
Chieftain
There are two cities that are left out though, Ephesus and Mycenae, which are NW from Corinth. Both of these cities have a large amount of plantation resources, making them worth keeping them if taken, if not for the commerce, then so another AI civ doesn't move into the space left by a razed city.
Shouldn't we switch to bureaucracy? It would cost a little more in upkeep, but the boost we get the capital inand
would be worth it.
Mitchifer - I forgot to comment on these items in my earlier post. I did leave those two cities off my battle plan on purpose. Since neither city has any production value (lots and lots of commerce with all that sugar and dyes) I think we should bypass them on our first attack wave. Both cities are deep in the jungle so let's let Pericles do all the hard work of chopping down the rain forests. Down the road, we can take him out at our leasure once we have eliminated his production cities of athens and sparta. Heck, we may get Pericles to become a vassal state and use him as a buffer zone while we rebuild our economy.
I second the switch to bureaucracy. My guess is that CS was discovered while we were still recovering from the anarchy when we switched to OR.
Also, one more suggestion to whoever is up next. Before we sell off our Great Merchant for a pile of gold, you might consider whether or not we should us him to bulb the Printing Press. We are two turns from getting Paper and I am pretty sure that the next tech on the GM list is printing press. PP gives us +1gp for all our villages and towns and bulbing it would shave off 20+ turns of research which we weren't going to do until after engineering and/or guilds. The trade off of course is that we'd improve our economy going forward at the expense of upgrading our military units for the war. But at a cost of 180g/axeman to maceman, we probably weren't going to convert that many anyway. Just a thought...