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Turn Based Strategy
Civilization IV: Colonization | Civilization IV: Colonization |
| Written by Anthony | |||||||||||||
| Wednesday, 01 October 2008 | |||||||||||||
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Trade, diplomacy and war form the foundation of Sid Meier's Civilization IV: Colonization. Tasked with populating the New World you will leave the shores of your oppressive Motherland and form your own country to live amongst the natives until such time your armies and economy are strong enough to claim independence. The title bares large resemblance to Civilization IV and the classic Colonization and as a stand alone expansion it should appeal to fans of either of these older titles.
At your disposal are a variety of key options such as various map sizes, online multiplayer including a play by email mode, several difficulty levels and game speeds all to guarantee the colonising experience you desire. To begin your journey towards independence, choose your Motherland (France, England, Germany or Spain) and who your predominate leader will be (each with their own unique benefits) and then set sail for the New World.
Choosing where to begin colonizing is very important, without the right resources to develop and trade your town will develop slowly. The game will highlight tiles which are a good choice for starting towns. As you continue to play migrants will be waiting at Europe for you to pick up, at which point you may decide to sell or buy resources with the Motherland. Early in a match interacting with Europe is a powerful way to gain a head start against your rival colonists, however as the Motherland starts to demand gifts, increases taxes and natives begin to convert to your towns your interest will slowly fade. Until such time you are ready to severe the Motherland completely.
Culture, as with immigration, production, farming and so forth is accomplished by allotting towns people to the appropriate building or land tile. Each towns person can adopt any profession you desire, although they often possess specialities enabling them to accelerate in their field of expertise. Educational facilities can allow you to improve these specialities.
This focus on population management and trade makes Colonization unique, but also very dull. The game includes an AI which can automatically assign towns people work and recommend what structure to build next. Although I found the AI never understood my strategies and forced me to micromanage every single worker and keep track of which resources were needed in which towns. Automatic trade routes can be applied between towns but selling to natives, the Motherland and competing colonists has to be operated manually and this is where my own interest in the game totally diminished.
Despite my personal preferences I am able to appreciate that some people adore this genre and have fond memories of the classic Colonization, which this new iteration faithfully recreates (apparently). It is a decent expansion to the regular Civilization formula that changes a few fundamentals that may interest Civilization IV fans after a new way to play. The focus on resource trading and population micromanagement makes Colonization a fairly dull game to endure, except for the select few gamers who find this style of game rewarding and challenging. The title will appeal very strongly to fans of the original Colonization by providing them with a more modern interface, new features and vastly improved technology in which to enjoy the classic gameplay. Gamers keen on entering the genre should definitely look into Civilization Revolution or Civilization IV instead as Colonization is reserved for a small niche of gamers. Platform reviewed: PC
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