Well this turn was as eventful.
I logged in after dtay to discover that his worker had finished chopping. And that he had moved a warrior onto it. AND that his city was now in view because the forest was chopped. And that that city was EMPTY! I couldn't resist. It was a 50-50 shot at killing a warrior, capturing a worker, and then razing a size 3 city.
At least it was close. I offered a cease fire.
Back home, as turn rolled, the barb on the pasture pillaged it as expected. And the other injured barb moved onto the wheat. Sitting on the wheat meant our cap, at size 5 had to work a PHMine. UNacceptable! I attacked out at 95% odds...
We won, its cool guys. No throat slitting this time.
Chariot attacked the other.
We won, what did you expect our chariot would lose to a barb warrior on flat ground? Pshhhh.
But of course you think Sid would just give up?
New barb in the south. I moved a warrior SW and next turn it will go sit on the hill. Unfortunately I moved the chariot (2.3 health, but has a promo) back into Cock before seeing this new barb threat. But I think we need the chariot to safeguard the clam city anyway.
Note that Atlantis works sheep next turn.
The workers will move and pasture next turn, and they finish the pasture the turn Cock gets to size 3 and needs to work the tile, so yay.
Worker in val will keep cottaging for now.
Eden 2t worker then whip, finish lib. Val will finish that warrior the turn it grows to 6. It would have grow to 6 in 1T if I didn't have to move the warrior out to kill the barb and make the city even more unhappy... Eden is working the hamlet instead of the cottage for the extra gold.
Workers should mine first so El dorado can work the gold before its connected (grows in 2t). Warrior in EL Dorado got promoted and can reach the gold in case there is a barb warrior...
I didn't end turn, but I played it because none of this effects dtay. We cna end turn later after you get a chance to log in and look around Gaspar.
Sorry I killed mardoc, the risk/reward was just too good. And I mean... we were due for some luck? No, apparently not.
“The wind went mute and the trees in the forest stood still. It was time for the last tale.”