Look, Im sure lots of people have a ton of fun with Civ5, which is fine. But when it comes to complexity and importance of choices, there is really no discussion at allIm actually hoping that Civ6 sparks a new discussion - but a discussion where Civ5 is not present at all. A discussion about which is the better game, Civ2, Civ4 or Civ6!
Edit: And Civ3, while having good intentions, was always flawed unfortunately.
I knowCivilization (and other strategy-games) have always been about controlling territory, and it has worked like this: More territory=stronger civ. In Civ5 they wanted to dumb the game down for casual players (who, for some strange reason, never build enough settlers and workers), so they wanted to make the "tall" playstyle better. But think about this, this might be n00b-friendly, but since territory is no longer a scarce resource that needs to be fought over, it also completely removes conflict from the game. Now of course, on very crowded maps with a ton of civs, were even getting two citites can be a challenge (always my preferred way of playing Civ4, 50civ alexmod), conflict still remains, however, they at the same time wanted to create tactical combat that desperately screams for a way bigger scale on the game to work. Basically, this paradox between wanting bigger maps for the warfare, and needing smaller for conflict to even take place, was never adressed in Civ5. Thus they had to program the crazy trigger-happy AI that just declared on you at random, not because he wanted your land. I actually think this intention of trying to make "tall" empires viable against "wide" was the single, biggest mistake in Civ-history, despite my earlier claim that this was 1upt. Together though, they were dynamite, and completely ruined a once great franchise.
Edit: What the fuck is up with all the complains about graphics, that means nothing if the gameplay is not up to the task.
I don't get the hate about the visuals. What do you expect a Civ game made on modern tech to look like?
I'm not sure if this is deliberate irony at all. But there absolutely *is* room for discussion about complexity and important of choices between the two games, and there is *not* objective fact about which is better or more complex or whatever.
You don't like Civ 5, we get it. That's great, you are entitled to your opinion. Just stop passing it off as fact. It's not. It's silly and distracts from the real point of this thread - complaining about how awful the new graphics are.
i don't like calling it dumbed down, and I say this as one of those freaks who played thousands of hours of civ4 multiplayer
civ5 had a lot going for it primarily because the social policy system finally gave a real reason to stay small instead of just relying on the other players to militarily punish the players who expand too rapidly.
it just needed some time to get good in a balanced way because the happiness system was a mess. instead, the devs chose to just go in a completely different direction with patches/expansions and nobody outside of the ~500 people who played competitive multiplayer in 2010 actually understood what the point of civ5 was
it's not that small empires needed to compete symmetrically with large ones, but it basically gave a real attainable victory condition to people who did not get the best starting land and the best neighbors and the best early luck. and then a few months later that victory condition was replaced with some culture warfare crap
The thing I'm most wondering about is how they will handle tech. Will they go back to the old fashioned tech tree, expand on that terrible tech web of Beyond Earth or do something new?
I'm really hoping for a Age of Wonders 3/Stellaris-esque semi-random tech progression
Well, I am pretty certain Jon Shafer have written about wanting to reach out to more people with the game - which is fine of course. And while "dumbed down" of course is a derogatory term so it should probably be avoided (sorry), the end result was that the game certainly became easier to play, more appealing to a broader audience, and, unfortunately, less appealing to veterans. But yeah, I agree their intentions were the best, so that "dumbed down" should probably be avoided. I also find it ironic that by wanting to balance out that early luck - they ended up making a game where luck became more important than ever![]()
Whilst it changed game to game, you cannot deny there has always been an "optimal" path through the tree. Yes, you make minor changes depending upon your surrounding terrain and strategic / luxury resources, but the overall path through ther tree and the prioritisation is normally the same. Civ 4 and Civ 5 shook that up a bit with cultural victories, because they pushed you in a different direction than other victory conditions, but even then the early game generally stayed the same - you bee lined for certain techs because they let you get the cultural techs you needed faster.
Personally I really like the idea of the map having a big impact on your tech options. Whilst there is the danger it will push you down a certain route, I hope that the impact is to make you consider your new cities and exploration more. If it means you now have to choose between a good location with resources, versus a worse location than offers you more tech options, then that's a good addition to the strategic decision making.
I don't get the hate about the visuals. What do you expect a Civ game made on modern tech to look like?
They already talked about this. The tech three is still here, but stuff you do/your environments will give you bonuses on certain parts, thus making those more attractive for you. This can be done in a good or bad way of course. It can be even more "the game plays you", or it can be fun objectives to strive for to get that edge in one particular direction.
One of the great things about Civ has always been that you have to consider your starting position and your environments when choosing techs. There never was a perfect way of going through the tech three, because it changed from game to game. And the skillful players would always be better to adopt. If they now want to make your environments push you more in one direction, it can possibly lead to one less interesting decision to make. But yeah, we will have to wait and see I guess.
sure, but they could have made the game more accessible and more strategic at the same time. most people think that civ4 had already accomplished that in comparison to civ3.
other than 1UPT, nothing was making it impossible for civ5 to at least have the potential to accomplish that
Search the workshop for Touhou civs.
Eh, it's at least better than that Beyond Earth-shit, but I agree that this feels less interesting than in previous iterations.
Whilst it changed game to game, you cannot deny there has always been an "optimal" path through the tree. Yes, you make minor changes depending upon your surrounding terrain and strategic / luxury resources, but the overall path through ther tree and the prioritisation is normally the same. Civ 4 and Civ 5 shook that up a bit with cultural victories, because they pushed you in a different direction than other victory conditions, but even then the early game generally stayed the same - you bee lined for certain techs because they let you get the cultural techs you needed faster.
Personally I really like the idea of the map having a big impact on your tech options. Whilst there is the danger it will push you down a certain route, I hope that the impact is to make you consider your new cities and exploration more. If it means you now have to choose between a good location with resources, versus a worse location than offers you more tech options, then that's a good addition to the strategic decision making.
the tech path for expansion and military and science and culture and religion are pretty different
in most single player games it's easier to just do the peaceful stuff and play the same way every game, but if you play against a tougher AI or good human opponents there is no optimal path and it varies based on the game situation
you can't get a wonder if you opt to find metal early.
you can't get an early religion if you opt to go for resources instead
you'll lag behind your rivals on land if you go for the navy stuff
A lot of people are saying "graphics" when they really mean the art direction. The tech may not be bleeding edge, but most people aren't complaining about that. The art direction moves in a very cartoony direction reminiscent of freemium mobile games. I just pulled a random Civ V image off of google for comparison.
The visual equivalent of giving up on life and wearing sweatpants.A lot of people are saying "graphics" when they really mean the art direction. The tech may not be bleeding edge, but most people aren't complaining about that. The art direction moves in a very cartoony direction reminiscent of freemium mobile games. I just pulled a random Civ V image off of google for comparison.
Civ VI
Civ V
The visual equivalent of giving up on life and wearing sweatpants.
Who's narrating the tech upgrades?
In these pics it's clear to me why they went with the new art style. Civ 5 looks busy and takes a while to read on first glance, Civ 6 looks much cleaner and is readable immediately even as thumbnail.
It looks like a mobile games because mobile games emphasis ease-of-use and readability over any other aspect of the graphics, these are also the aspect Civ should emphasis IMO. At the end of the day it's Civ, gameplay is going to reign supreme over any beautiful scenery.
I played all the Civ Games since Civ II, Civ V BNW is the best out of them for me.
it's good, but it's true that CivV is a flawed game, these aren't mutually exclusive or anything.
Hopefully Civ 6 will be better.
There is no perfect Civ game. A lot of people hail Civ IV as perfect but without its expansions it was mediocre. And with its expansions it was quite great but even then it had its flaws (especially wrt handling happiness and the incredible meat grinder wars with the AI).
The Civ game closest to perfect for me is probably Civ 1. It's also the one I played the most, for years and years on the Amiga and PC. All the sequels offer better experiences in some way or another but the complete package never feels as satisfying.
These games can run ok at low graphics settings on integrated graphics. The issue is often the weak mobile cpus that has to process every turn which gets progressively worse as more and more units are added as a game continues.This may be the game to finally get me back into PC gaming. Its been about 15 years since I had a half way decent PC (macbook pro now which does the job but I cant even play cities skylines on it really). I've been on the fence about it forever but no way am I going to miss out on a new Civ
This is complete wishful thinking, but any chance of them listening to negative fan backlash and changing this garbage art direction?
1. It's not garbage
2. They are not doing such a drastic change for a game that comes out in 5 months.
This is complete wishful thinking, but any chance of them listening to negative fan backlash and changing this garbage art direction?
A lot of people are saying "graphics" when they really mean the art direction. The tech may not be bleeding edge, but most people aren't complaining about that. The art direction moves in a very cartoony direction reminiscent of freemium mobile games. I just pulled a random Civ V image off of google for comparison.
Civ VI
Civ V
1. It is.
2. Damn!
The art style reminds me too much of Settlers and pretty much every mobile game.
I think 'clean' art will be essential with the 'unpacking' of cities, but I don't like the generic 'cute' style. Civ should be leading the field, not aping the most generic and overused style on the market. The art-deco style of Civ5 was brilliant and distinctive, which makes this look even more dissaponting in comparison.
A lot of the changes sound good. Focusing on geography sounds great, especially for tech trees. I'm a casual Civ player and don't have a super-optimised path - but I usually find myself taking a very similar route in most games.
And most of my cities tend to become generic all-rounders, with just a few exceptions (a super-production city for army-building and a few shitty desert/tundra towns for securing a necessary strategic resource).
Civ:BE was the absolute worst at this, with everything feeling utterly samey. It's good to see the AI is being given some character. I really want each empire to seem different.
Support units sound like they'll remove the clutter and fix a lot of the problems with 1upt. I'm not sure about corps though. They had that in Civ Revolutions and it just meant that a corp became the default unit since any singleton units would be pathetically weak in comparison and useful only for barbarian-chasing and scouting.. It just adds some tedious micromanagement to get groups of three organised.
After the abysmal BE and the general unbalanced mess of release-day Civ 5 there's no way I'm buying this on day one.
I'll keep an eye out for a good deal and probably jump in after a patch or two.
This backlash will be forgotten like a month after release IMO.This is complete wishful thinking, but any chance of them listening to negative fan backlash and changing this garbage art direction?