227 pictures? Man, you need to cut down a bit! Even I only took 110 for my game, and I surely went way overboard myself! 
Did you grab Fishing from a hut? (That was't clear to me.) And if so, was Sailing the first tech researched? Umm... interesting. Animal Husbandry may have been more useful... Although with a lighthouse those lake tiles would produce 3 food, so it wasn't entirely silly. But definitely unorthodox.
I have no idea what you're talking about when you name the individual units. It's very entertaining though.
Not trying to tell you how to write your reports here, but showing the placement of your second city is usually a lot more important than pics of warriors whacking barb animals.
What was the reasoning for the very early Great Lighthouse? Instead of, say, Pyramids or Stonehenge or Oracle? Those all seem to be stronger wonders than the Lighthouse, although of course the trade routes are useful too. You got Pyramids done pretty quickly too, even faster than Gandhi built it in my game.
The notes for this game are very fun to read, but I just don't get a good impression as to what was going on. For example, a lot of the notes refer to things that you clearly understood at the time, but a reader just going through it won't know what you mean. (For example: 600AD Iron for Ivory... i accept.) Maybe more info about what you were thinking at the time would help (?) It would also be nice to know when and where you were founding your new cities. I don't want to be critical here, I'm just trying to suggest some things for your future reports.
From the 970AD picture, it looks like you needed more workers. Your cities were very small in size for lack of food tiles to work, and the tiles they were using were unimproved. I know I always felt like I needed more workers than I had too!
It looks like those constant war declarations from Monty slowed you down quite a bit. That's the tough part of being next to those civs, but at least you did manage to get on Temujin's good side. As far as the odds go, you will lose sometimes even when the odds are in your favor. Just not that often, fortunately. Nice to see you giving him the business there after all those declarations.
It might have helped to build the Forbidden Palace sooner than 1855!
I would have enjoyed seeing an attempt at Domination too, you were one of the few players who had a chance to go after it due to your alliance with Temujin. Shocking to see Gandhi and Washington take out both Alex and Temujin on their own, however - still not sure how THAT happened. I guess the peaceniks just outteched the aggressive civs. Nonetheless, a very entertaining game to read (although sometimes hard to follow with all the renaming!)

Did you grab Fishing from a hut? (That was't clear to me.) And if so, was Sailing the first tech researched? Umm... interesting. Animal Husbandry may have been more useful... Although with a lighthouse those lake tiles would produce 3 food, so it wasn't entirely silly. But definitely unorthodox.
I have no idea what you're talking about when you name the individual units. It's very entertaining though.

What was the reasoning for the very early Great Lighthouse? Instead of, say, Pyramids or Stonehenge or Oracle? Those all seem to be stronger wonders than the Lighthouse, although of course the trade routes are useful too. You got Pyramids done pretty quickly too, even faster than Gandhi built it in my game.
The notes for this game are very fun to read, but I just don't get a good impression as to what was going on. For example, a lot of the notes refer to things that you clearly understood at the time, but a reader just going through it won't know what you mean. (For example: 600AD Iron for Ivory... i accept.) Maybe more info about what you were thinking at the time would help (?) It would also be nice to know when and where you were founding your new cities. I don't want to be critical here, I'm just trying to suggest some things for your future reports.

From the 970AD picture, it looks like you needed more workers. Your cities were very small in size for lack of food tiles to work, and the tiles they were using were unimproved. I know I always felt like I needed more workers than I had too!
It looks like those constant war declarations from Monty slowed you down quite a bit. That's the tough part of being next to those civs, but at least you did manage to get on Temujin's good side. As far as the odds go, you will lose sometimes even when the odds are in your favor. Just not that often, fortunately. Nice to see you giving him the business there after all those declarations.

It might have helped to build the Forbidden Palace sooner than 1855!
I would have enjoyed seeing an attempt at Domination too, you were one of the few players who had a chance to go after it due to your alliance with Temujin. Shocking to see Gandhi and Washington take out both Alex and Temujin on their own, however - still not sure how THAT happened. I guess the peaceniks just outteched the aggressive civs. Nonetheless, a very entertaining game to read (although sometimes hard to follow with all the renaming!)
