Alright, my complaints about Civ 4's combat system.
No offense, but your comments seem to betray some unfamiliarity with Civ4's gameplay mechanics. And I think that's the reason for most people's problem with them - simple unfamiliarity.
I played both Civ3 and Civ4 extensively (it was during my army days), so for what it's worth, I'll tell you why I think you're mistaken.
History_Buff said:
Alright, my complaints about Civ 4's combat system. It's mostly about the way artillery type units are set up. The fact that the way to assault well defended positions was to churn out dozens of artillery units and just hurl them at the enemy. While Civ 3's artillery system was admittedly overpowered, Civ 4's was worse.
I don't agree with this at all. I got up to Demigod on Civ3 before switching and the real fight was in the eras before the Industrial. Once I'd built up a stack of more than 30 artillery, the game would become much easier. That speaks a lot about how overpowered artillery was in Civ 3. And there's one very good reason for that - they are not actually involved in combat.
Civ4's system seems counter-intuitive at first. Artillery being involved in combat? What the hell is that? A regression to earlier days of the series? But that actually goes a long way to solve the problem. Now you can actually lose lots of them in the process. You don't have a giant unkillable army of artillery anymore. As for collateral damage, well, either divide up your stack, screen or don't be caught sitting in your cities. Tactics can help you deal with it, and I think that's so much better.
History_Buff said:
And my complaint about Civ 4's graphics has a lot to do with them trying to make everything smaller. The maps were smaller, cities were very expensive, even if well sited, and even the most zoomed-out play mode covered precious little of the map.
What do you mean by smaller? You can control the size of the map, you know. And, IIRC, upkeep costs scale with size. That new city might cost you a bomb on small map, but it wouldn't on a big one.
And personally, fewer cities translate to less micro, and that's a big plus for me.