![my play city 2016 my play city 2016](https://my-town.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/04/MyCityHome.jpg)
#My play city 2016 install#
Find your Civilization 6 install folder, which if it's in Steam's default location will be C:\Program Files (x86)\Steam\steamapps\common\Sid Meier's Civilization VI.įrom there, navigate to \Base\Assets\Gameplay\Data and find Eras.xml. If you want to muck with the starting conditions yourself, it's pretty easy. Now that early wars aren't quite so much of a drain, though, I'm really enjoying being an all out warmonger in Civ 6. But I was always annoyed by city-states hogging land I wanted, so much that I started turning them off altogether. I never took an aggressive approach in Civ 5, preferring to expand on my own and turtle.
![my play city 2016 my play city 2016](https://my-live-05.slatic.net/p/a6c1aba2b7f66309333612e4ac77485c.png)
My civilization at turn 110 with four cities and my starting Settler hanging out in Toronto. Despite all her big talk, she didn't have much of an army at all (this was on Prince difficulty, so not too hard). Every few turns Cleopatra offers me a deal, even offering to let me keep Shedet, but I ignore her and march toward Râ-Kedet. Instead of settling things at the peace table, though, I've decided to smash the peace table with an axe.
![my play city 2016 my play city 2016](https://i2.wp.com/www.manjulikapramod.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/07/The-big-painting-that-caught-my-eye-in-Sandton-city.jpg)
And with my rule that I won't found any cities, it's the only way forward. It's lost a bit of Civ 5's nuance-eg, installing a puppet government until the war is over, and then annexing only the best cities when you can afford to buy courthouses to cheer everyone up (when have they ever done that?)-but I feel much more encouraged to expand through war if that's what I want to do. I'm glad Civilization 6 simplifies this: Keeping a city no longer suspends its production, instead making it less productive until the war is over and it's negotiated for at the peace table. I was always irked by how Civilization 5 discouraged conquering with revolts and unhappiness-not that bombarding a city with arrows and then marching in with axes wouldn't cause those things, but it was such a pain I typically installed puppet governments or razed cities when what I really wanted to do was expand my empire while keeping it under my creative control. To a degree, I think it was Civ 5's wording that turned me off-captured cities didn't really feel like mine, even if I got them up and running again. This is what you get for calling my army puny.