ColtSeavers
Prince
I think most players probably do not enjoy managing dozens of cities.
pure speculation...


I think most players probably do not enjoy managing dozens of cities.
pure speculation...There is a reason why Civ 4 is still (after more than 10 years after its release!) that popular, and that is the possibilty of REAL EMPIRE building!
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Civ IV is estimated to have sold over 3 million and CiV is estimated over 7 million. To say Civ IV shows the popularity of empire building and ignore the fact that CiV more than doubled it kind of defeats your point.
Civ IV is estimated to have sold over 3 million and CiV is estimated over 7 million. To say Civ IV shows the popularity of empire building and ignore the fact that CiV more than doubled it kind of defeats your point.
Non sense, comparing the sales of game which was released more than 5 years later (including the famous steam sales) is comparing apples with oranges![]()
Nah. You've pretty much just proven that you believe facts to suit your theories as opposed to believing theories that suit that facts. "You can't compare those two things because that comparison doesn't support my world view!" Unless you want to legitimately make an argument about why that can't be compared anyway.
Civ IV has been out longer. Longer lifetime = more opportunity for sales.
"But newer games sell more in general! The hobby is more popular now!" That's correct. Because capitalist markets will naturally move products in the direction that increase sales. The longer a market has been in play, the more data they have to create the best selling product and move in a desired direction. Even if both games had the same market share of overall consumers, if one did so with a larger pool then it's still clearly more successful and thus more popular.
"CiV being on steam and with their sales has inflated it's number!" Civ IV has also been on steam for a very long time, and also part of steam's famous sales. That 3 million includes, but is not limited to steam for Civ IV.
I've always hated the apples and oranges expression. You can compare apples and oranges. Saying apples and oranges taste different is a comparison. You're comparing the taste. Everything you ever assess in your life is based on relativity and comparisons. Everything can be compare. Everything is always compared.
Apparently the article I was looking at however was from 2009, and the CiV article was from 2013, so there is a chance that those numbers have become much closer due to the date discrepancies. But if you want to use steam to compare popularity there are 422 people playing civ IV right now to CiV's 37,922.
But if you want to use steam to compare popularity there are 422 people playing civ IV right now to CiV's 37,922.
This is probably the best way to indicate popularity. Only thing better is percentage of people playing compared to owners. Using Steamspy, there are 1.4 million copies of Civ IV on Steam and CiV has 9.1 million copies on Steam. Using those stats above, that is 0.003% of Civ IV owners on Steam still playing it vs 4.17% of CiV owners still playing. Of course these numbers can only be taken with a grain of salt because we do not know how many Civ IV owners are playing off of Steam.
I play Civ 4 without ever having logged into Steam for this, and my take is, a lot of people do the same. Therefore this comparison doesnt make much sense imho.
While I'm exclusively a IV player (for now!), and I've never played on Steam, you and I arn't anywhere near as statistically important as the 38,000 people playing V on Steam. Since we don't have 'currently playing' statistics for people playing offline, we have no way of saying what is 'a lot of people'? The active members of these forums? Still doesn't compare in size to the above figures.
To add more confusion to the statistics, some people, like me, bought the physical copy of Civ IV and later the Steam version. I bought my Civ V Complete edition from a Humble Bundle and that included Civ III and IV Complete editions (all Steam versions).