Jalicos

Jalicos

Joined Member # 2810082
4 Posts 203 Replies 653 Reputation

[quote who="djcityscapes" reply="14" id="2571207"] Quoting Dr Guy, reply 12 And the added bonus is no one would complain about global warming! I read the Mars series by Kim Robinson. One of the themes is how eco-terrorists rise up against the terraforming of Mars. "we must get rid of the nasty green stuff sprouting up everywhere!"[/quote] I was going to mention the Mars trilogy, but you beat me to it. Recommended reading for anyone interested in space colonization, te

21 Replies 117,030 Views

"When do we start the killing?" "This place is all we have. I won't let you harm it!" "He questioned me. It was obviously a suicide." "Do you know what would really liven up this battle? Fire." "They will have my answer when it plunges between their ribs." "You should run. It won't save you, but I promise to find it entertaining." "I am in your city slaying your peasants." "That's 'MISTER bloodthirsty mongrel' to you!" "Take comf

96 Replies 283,411 Views

"Pointy end goes where?" "The secret is to stab them until they die." "Stabbity stabbity stab stab stab!" "Look! A diversion!" "Time to thin the herd." "Why blot out the sun when you can just put out their eyes?" "I've hunted smarter prey than you." "I bring the pain!" 'I think this place would look better in red." "When in doubt, wipe them out." "Remember: It's pillage, THEN burn."

96 Replies 283,411 Views

It seems to me that in a world with a multitude of equal and diverse nations, you would be less likely to find a dominant currency than a dominant material . Historically, people traded precious metals or valuable, easily transportable goods such as tea bricks. It wasn't the image on the coin that was valuable so much as the weight and purity. What you need isn't a currency name so much as a generic word for shiny coins or colorful beads or whatever these people carry around i

232 Replies 344,353 Views

What happened with SupCom2 wasn't innovation, it was reversion. They took the franchise's defining strengths, the very things that made the first game "innovative", and replaced them with the same generic mechanics we've been seeing for years. If a company wants to make a game that's more mass-market than the fresh, innovative product that made them successful in the first place, they should create a new franchise. Then they won't have potential customers ignoring them because they "h

18 Replies 36,104 Views

[quote who="Whiskey144" reply="33" id="2550261"]@Jalicos, earlier in the thread- yes, you can actually buy stuff off Steam. It's just that Steam makes it suck for a lot. There are really only 2 games I'd buy on Steam- Portal, and Osmos. Osmos is kind of an ambient/casual game that has surprising depth and interest. Plus, who doesn't like little sentient bubble-things that absorb each other.[/quote] I was referring to the fact that Steam's DRM fits into the "rental-only" category. At a

86 Replies 251,845 Views

Won't buy due to Steam. (Can you actually buy anything on Steam?) I like blocky units so the graphics don't bother me, and I never really got a handle on the unit tier thing, but the resource system changes are simply unforgivable. That tricky balancing act that totally hoses your economy if when you get it wrong is part of the fun, and it's one of the things that really made the game something more than Generic Sci-Fi RTS:

86 Replies 251,845 Views

Whatever you do, don't let us pave the entire map. Civ4 always has a tendency to turn into World of Roadcraft when I play, and I end up with roads on every tile I can reach safely. If the whole world is covered in roads, you may as well not have roads at all.

287 Replies 653,950 Views

[quote who="vieuxchat" reply="23" id="2547979"]Population, prestige and food : [/quote] This is pretty close to how I thought it worked, but it's good to see confirmation. [quote who="Tasunke" reply="24" id="2548034"]Okay, so in a way my idea was only expanding the Idea of Prestige in a way?[/quote] Looks like it. In fact, I thought this was already something they had said prestige would do. The key concept here is

28 Replies 16,203 Views

I really like the food-based systems. They seem like they would do a lot more to stop city spam than the governor system would. The governor system is still a good idea, though. I like that heroes can come in political flavors, and it provides another way to customize your cities. I would change things a little, though: 1. A governor must stay in the city they govern to provide a bonus to it. 2. The larger a city is the more inefficiency there is, so higher-level citie

247 Replies 545,500 Views

I like Demiansky's and Tasunke's ideas. They seem to solve city-spam while making cities themselves more memorable and valuable, and provide a large number of soft targets so warfare is less binary. Since some people seem to be having trouble understanding those walls of text, here's my own formatted TLDR-friendly version: Food Supply Limits Population Food is harvested from resource tiles, and automatically transported to whereve

28 Replies 16,203 Views

I've found that while doming a console cuts down on dust and pet hair accumulation, it also tends to cause overheating issues. Perhaps removing sections of the dome and replacing them with washable air filters would work better, but I haven't had time to try it out yet. (Really? Four pages and no one mentioned it? You guys are slacking.)

121 Replies 234,392 Views

[quote who="Gazing" reply="96" id="2543821"] The system, earlier suggested in this thread, of mining/farming/harvesting colonies is much better in my humble opinion. These colonies, as I imagine them, would be small outposts that require next to nill micromanagement and support. Like the space stations in GalCiv, they become a strategic location and not a domestic one, meaning I deal with it only on a need-to basis and not constantly.[/quote] I was going to point this out, but yo

157 Replies 495,018 Views

Um, Hackbar, you do know where Stardock is located, right? Your "rabid fanbase" wouldn't make it ten feet before the guys with the pitchforks decide they'd rather be the guys with the fire, and the guys with the fire start wishing they'd picked something pointier to defend themselves with. [e digicons]:)[/e]

79 Replies 136,969 Views

Thinking about this some more, I agree with Machina. The balcony image is Elemental to many of us, but could be seen as "generic fantasy art" to the average gamer. Combine that with a small publisher and intentionally campy name, and you've got something that screams "I'm a budget title! Don't buy me!" That's probably one of the reasons I didn't buy GC2 until I heard about SD's response to the Starforce fiasco; the thing really looked like uninspired shovelware. I think the b

69 Replies 136,211 Views

I had a friend in high school that was really into Tiberian Sun when it came out. I didn't have a computer back then and had never played an RTS game before, so I made him tell me all about it. We would look through the manual together and he would say how awesome GDI was, and I'd be like, "But Nod has stealth tanks! And flamethrower tanks! And are these things laser death ray towers?!" I suspect I'm in for a huge disappointment, but I'm glad I finally get to play this game.<

13 Replies 33,802 Views

[quote who="vieuxchat" reply="74" id="2536799"] Any chance that a liguist would take cae of the naming ? Because ... porcipinee, wel .... And Edar is a cool name for some balrogish creature, but why keeping something as overused as "daemons" ? Why not "Edaerlings" ? Or something like that...[/quote] I thought the Edar looked pretty badass, but when I read "daemon" I knew that wiry-looking thing would be all kinds of bad news. You just know they saved that name for the

84 Replies 260,259 Views