Alright. Hello again. It is now Turn 109. 150 BC. It has been a long Dark Age.
A turn or so after I stopped reporting, the third Barbarian Archer died ignominiously. No other Barbarians ever attacked. The Raging Barbarian crisis ended. The First Raging Barbarian Crisis, at least.
I take this to mean that I was basically right about the immobile Macemen etc. busting the spawncap. There was a little bit of room once we human players settled our second cities, but then our culture busted the fog more and the Raging Barbarians were neutralized.
So I was a bit unlucky to be attacked by two Barbarian Archers like that. And Thrawn must have been terribly unlucky, poor guy. And Gavagai made a mistake by building The Great Wall.
. Though at least he had some fun kicking the immobile Barbarians around.
. I'll get to that.
This report will be a bit of recap and a bit about the modern day.
This is what the Iranian-Indian border looks like now. Spoilers! I don't want to dig up an appropriate screenshot from about 50 turns and 2 months ago, so this contemporary one and the POWER OF IMAGINATION must suffice.
Back in the day, when young was mountain under moon, I wanted to settle a city on the City Ruins tile that is now 1NE of Salamis. Look at all those delicious tiles! Unfortunately, Gavagai settled Delhi 5 turns or so before my Settler was ready. At first, I blithely continued with my plan to settle on the City Ruins, but as the fateful turn approached, I began to doubt.
Gavagai had a stronger army at the time, and he would certainly raze a city founded on the City Ruins if he could. My new city might survive, but it would be a bitter and uncertain fight. Also, I doubted that a victory decisive enough to make the City Ruins city (I was going to name it "New Tabriz" after the evocatively-mentioned Iranian lunar colony in Gene Wolfe's
Seven American Nights, by the way) as delicious as I had imagined before Gavagai settled Delhi was likely. That is to say, even if I kept my new city, it would be difficult to control, improve, and work the Corn and Pig tiles. The resources are exposed on flat ground. The Workers would have to be protected as they worked, then the improvements protected. Always.
Also, see the "Barb Gallic I" and "Barb Gallic II" signs? Gavagai's expanding culture kicked that poor unit all around.
. I was worried that, depending on how the culture conflict between my city and Delhi went, the Barb Gallic Warrior could be kicked somewhere really bad for me, and become an asset for Gavagai. You can see that its second location was on the Corn. Gavagai would kick it off that tile if he won culturally, but if I settled, then the Barbarian would block the Corn of a long while.
I think that no Civ IV player has ever cared so much about
custom-placed immobile Raging Barbarian teleportation mechanics.
. It doesn't get much more obscure than that. In the end the Gallic Warrior teleported towards the origin (that might be coincidence) and did not block anything too important.
Anyway, the big idea is, settling New Tabriz where I originally wanted would guarantee a war with Gavagai. Holding the city would be difficult and expensive. If I held the city, it would take even more expense to actually benefit from the Corn and Pig, the main appeal. Also, I knew that in the long run Silver Web and Goodneighbor (I realized by this time that Gavagai would flip Goodneighbor eventually) would flip the Pig tile to Gavagai's side.
So I figured that settling New Tabriz was a good idea only if war with Gavagai was a good idea. New Tabriz would be a great first blow in such a war. Deny him the Corn and Pigs (he would have at least as much trouble benefitting from them as I would). Get a forward base, vision, unit production on the front lines, Road control, all that good stuff.
New Tabriz would make a war with Gavagai inevitable, but more likely and profitable to win (Corn and Pigs, Goodneighbor maybe). But still not nearly likely profitable enough, I concluded. Gavagai was weakened because Thrawn burned his third(?) city, but he was not weak enough. Why lock in a target now? Why not grow and expand and all that?
So after much pondering at the last second, my Settler and Workers and military units turned around and went to settle Marathon first instead (out of frame to the northwest).
Salamis was settled fifth. It was contested with Gavagai, sure, and it would be a shame to lose the "Plains Horse" and "Clam" too by delaying, but Marathon was simply too incredible to delay. Case in point: as of the current turn Marathon is now the proud home of 3 world wonders. And there will be more, I guarantee it.
(same screenshot again.
. My Adventures With Gavagai are not yet over)
Next up was the "If You Chase Two Rabbits You Will Catch Them Both" era of my game. One of the theatres was against Gavagai again.
Gavagai was going to flip Goodneighbor with culture from Silver Web's The Great Wall. I realized that. I tracked Silver Web's culture turn by turn in the Victory Screen (Gavagai was and is the player with the most culture).
This is about when I realized that flipping Megaton with New Tehran wasn't that clever and special, it was keeping up with Joneses. Everybody was going to flip the Barbarian cities! It was the way to go!
Did Scooter know this would happen?
Anyway, I coveted my neighbor's Goodneighbor. I hatched a delightfully devilish plan. Gavagai was distracted by Thrawn. But I wasn't. Gavagai might not have Sailing yet. But I did. I would train a Galley in Salamis (that hurt, by the way. Galley before Granary), embark two Immortals (one was promoted from the First Raging Barbarian Crisis), and capture Goodneighbor the very turn it flipped. The free flip Archer couldn't stop two Immortals!
I had honor, though, so I would take the second half of the turn to give Gavagai a chance to ferry in defenders, if he had any.
This plan failed, obviously. It was only ever going to work if I was very lucky or Gavagai was very careless. Well, Gavagai was not that careless. I tried to be really clever, but I made some mistakes and was not clever enough.
The plan went wrong when Gavagai trained a Galley. He sailed it over into my view, for some reason. Even without my
honor, Gavagai had declared war in hopes of a binding Peace Treaty (probably so he could focus on Thrawn, at least at first), and he had the first half. So with a Galley he could just put another Axeman/Archer or whatever in Goodneighbor when it flipped and he would easily keep it.
I panicked and took 1/3 shot with my Galley attacking his. I reasoned that my Galley was worthless for all purposes except capturing Goodneighbor, and I had no hope of capturing Goodneighbor if his Galley lived. So I had nothing to lose.
Boy, winning that 1/3 shot felt great. Lucky lucky lucky. And so rational of me.
. I think no units were aboard, though.
Anyway, what needed to happen was for Goodneighbor to flip RIGHT AWAY. It could have. Gavagai had the majority culture by then. But it didn't. He had time to train another Galley.
Then I had the bright idea to train a Trireme in Salamis. Metal Casting unlocks more things than just The Colossus, don't you know? I didn't for about 10 turns! Maybe if I trained a Trireme earlier, the plan could have worked. Probably not, though.
I never did train a Trireme. I dropped off my two Immortals on the island 1SW of Goodneighbor. It was some silly scheme to attack with more than two units when the city flipped, some from island and some from Galley, or something? Whatever it was, it ended with Gavagai killing my Immortals with two Spearmen in an amphibious attack. I was 1 turn too slow with the Axeman protector. I could have been faster.
ALSO: MY IMMORTALS PILLAGED THE ROAD AND THE MINE IN BARBARIAN TERRITORY. SORRY. I SWEAR I FORGOT THE RULE.
I think that was when I gave up the plan and conceded Goodneighbor to Gavagai. I felt pretty low at that point.
The funny epilogue is that Goodneighbor just refused to flip for another, 15 turns maybe? Gavagai had the majority culture, but the Barbarians won the 9/10 roll every turn. They even built a Monument, and at the last possible turn before they got majority culture back on their city tile,
that was when the city flipped. Poor Gavagai. That was close! And he was denied the yields for so long.
Then Goodneighbor stole Salamis' "Clams" of course.
Peace has existed between Iran and India since that time. May it remain unbroken until I can draft Rifles.
Shortly after that, I captured Megaton from Superdeath. It wasn't supposed to happen like that, but all's well that ends well and it raised my spirits.
Simply, Superdeath built The Oracle (and took... Feudalism?) in Fuji Steakhouse. With +8 Culture he beat New Tehran to majority culture in Megaton by a few turns, and I had no chance to turn the tide of that culture war.
Of course I immediately plotted against him as I did against Gavagai, but I was stretched too thin.
"Chase Two Rabbits And You Will Lose Them Both".
Superdeath could easily defend Megaton when it flipped, I thought.
I was feeling down about the game after making peace with Gavagai, and I thought all my Galleys and military units were a waste, all for nothing. But I dutifully took a belated shot at Megaton (can't remember what Superdeath briefly called it). And I won!
Superdeath never reinforced the free revolt Archer. Superdeath was careless where Gavagai was not. So my plan worked against Superdeath.
I landed the Immortals 1E of Megaton, which New Tehran still controlled at the time, so Superdeath had one turn of warning.
He sent this:
(he called it KFC, I see)
Also there was a usual silly Superdeath message about him fighting Gavagai and I fighting Dreylin.
Frankly this threat just pissed me off and made me want to capture Megaton back even more, which I promptly did. I doubted that Superdeath was bluffing, but I figured I could take him.
Superdeath also promoted his Archer in KFC to a Longbowmen. That was when I learned he had Feudalism.
. But the Immortals prevailed with their +50% bonus vs. Archers.
That bonus saw little use this game, but what use it did see was a big deal. No regret for picking Persia.
I recall that the first Immortal to attack won? That was another lucky roll, but I had backup.
Also, this was almost the same turn that I settled Artemisium on the landbridge in the north. Jimmy's BBQ didn't exist yet, but it was still a close border and another front with Superdeath. But I sent a lot of units from Marathon (it had a bit of time between Wonders to 1-turn some units) and Artemisium was fine. "Chase Two Rabbits And You Will Catch Them Both".
It was a shame to lose Artemisium's Lake Fish, which I improved, to Superdeath later, but it still makes good commerce and opens the route to Shady Sands and Sunny Boulders. But that's another story.
Superdeath agreed to binding peace shortly. That was a pleasant surprise. I was ready for battle.
(I guess I have the will to dig up old screenshots after all)
Another "rabbit" was Little Lamplight. Anti-Tyre was settled to flip Little Lamplight and is otherwise a mediocre city, especially for its place in the order of founding. But Little Lamplight is an excellent city. This plan, at least, happened exactly as I intended and was a complete success.
Dreylin didn't interfere. The Barbs didn't make any culture. It was nice.
Little Lamplight was important not just for its yields (best commerce in my civilization) but for its trade routes. I wanted The Great Lighthouse (observe Marathon building it), but I knew that I would need to rely on myself for my trade routes. The other players would probably embargo me. So I needed 1 island (normal), 2 islands (TGL), 3 islands (Currency). That was why I was so disheartened at failing to get Goodneighbor and Megaton (at least at first, muahahaha). I only realized later that I could settle on those 1-tile Tribal Village islands if trade routes were what I needed. But now I think that won't be necessary anytime soon.
.
What is there to say about The Great Lighthouse and The Colossus? They seem like obvious good ideas on this watery map, I am IND, Marathon is an incredible hammer city. Not many actual resources, but we don't need resources in Scooter's Wonderland.
. Getting them as quick as reasonably possible took some doing with whipping and Workers (chopping that island Forest, chopping out-of-culture Forests), and I don't know if anyone was close behind, but I got the Wonders in the end. My economy is booming.
.
I think this is a good place to end Part 1: The Endless Past. The past keeps getting bigger and it is late at morning here.
Kick me in the head if I don't tell you all about Shady Sands and the war with Thrawn, at least, within 24 hours.