Thanks HR. Sorry for those screens, but that's what it looks like on a macbook.
I forgot to answer the questions:
- How many cities did you build and how many did you decide to acquire?
Well, I built three cities and intended to acquire 3 more (Riga, Rio, and Sao Paolo). But I ended up acquiring all of Brazil, most of Persia, and an Assyrian city. But that's a little problem I have, and anyway with the exception of Brazil, they started it.
- How did you use religion or spying to your advantage?
Built Stonehenge and established a major religion. Later used my totalitarian position in the world congress to force the World Religion (but I didn't need to). Used spies all game long to get CS and in the end also put them all in as diplomats. The thing was the end wasn't even close, so these things didn't matter on the margins.
- How did diplomacy go with your neighbors?
Was going well until Brazil nabbed a couple of wonders that I couldn't resist. All downhill diplomacy from there.
- How did the difficulty level affect your game decisions?
I am used to Diety / Immortal, so underestimated the AI's ability to get wonders and Caz beat me by 2 turns on Petra. That changed things dramatically I think.
- Did the new Diplomacy Victory conditions change how you play a diplomacy game?
Yes. In hindsight it's all about science (if you're playing this in a contest). You have to beeline the top part of the tree all game long, unless you want to or have to fight a little. And then once you get there it's about aligning the stars/sun/moon like in a CV. Not a fan if I'm honest. I like a good old fashioned breakdown-in-diplomacy smack-down.
I forgot to answer the questions:
- How many cities did you build and how many did you decide to acquire?
Well, I built three cities and intended to acquire 3 more (Riga, Rio, and Sao Paolo). But I ended up acquiring all of Brazil, most of Persia, and an Assyrian city. But that's a little problem I have, and anyway with the exception of Brazil, they started it.

- How did you use religion or spying to your advantage?
Built Stonehenge and established a major religion. Later used my totalitarian position in the world congress to force the World Religion (but I didn't need to). Used spies all game long to get CS and in the end also put them all in as diplomats. The thing was the end wasn't even close, so these things didn't matter on the margins.
- How did diplomacy go with your neighbors?
Was going well until Brazil nabbed a couple of wonders that I couldn't resist. All downhill diplomacy from there.
- How did the difficulty level affect your game decisions?
I am used to Diety / Immortal, so underestimated the AI's ability to get wonders and Caz beat me by 2 turns on Petra. That changed things dramatically I think.
- Did the new Diplomacy Victory conditions change how you play a diplomacy game?
Yes. In hindsight it's all about science (if you're playing this in a contest). You have to beeline the top part of the tree all game long, unless you want to or have to fight a little. And then once you get there it's about aligning the stars/sun/moon like in a CV. Not a fan if I'm honest. I like a good old fashioned breakdown-in-diplomacy smack-down.