Having just wrapped up involvement with the Alpha Centauri beta program only a week or so before receiving my copy of Civ2 Gold for this review, I found it impossible not to compare the two in great detail. While this is supposed to be a review of Civ2 Gold and not a preview or review of Alpha Centauri , I'll warn you right now that I don't think I'll be able to discuss Civ2 Gold without mentioning the game that many people think of as "Civilization 3".
In the end, though, there are no real losers in this comparison - it's a great blessing to strategy gamers everywhere and perhaps a big problem for their employers and spouses that both of these games hold up so very well.
Having heard plenty of words like "ugly" and "fiasco" and several not fit for a family publication used to describe the original CivNet multiplayer adaptation, I was a little concerned when I popped open my copy of Civilization 2 Multiplayer Gold. Loyal Civ2 fans need not worry, however - in addition to the full single-player game and both expansion packs, Civ2 Gold contains a very stable and playable multiplayer component. I'll try to focus on the multiplayer aspects, since Civ2 Gold in single-player mode is essentially still just a very clean and very complete version of the strategy game that GDR's strategy editor Tim Chown once called "the best PC strategy game that money can buy".
Two years later it's still an excellent bargain. Far and away most important thing to note about the Civ2 Gold Multiplayer edition is that it is still very much a turn-based game. When you play a game of multiplayer Civ2 , you will take turns in fullest sense: there will be a period of time when you are not able to move your units because you are waiting for the other players to move theirs.
Any changes you make won't take effect until later, however, because in your empire things only really happen on your turn. Somewhat surprisingly, this works out pretty well. I played a large number of multiplayer games on a LAN and found that for three players or fewer you rarely find yourself watching the timer and waiting for your turn. Before long you grow accustomed to moving your units during your turn and handling everything else - including diplomacy - during someone else's.
Civilization is such a complex game world that there is almost always something useful to look at or do while you are waiting. It's a slightly different story as you add more human competitors - with four players you may start to find yourself idle for a few seconds between your turns at bat, and with a full seven human players the game may seem a little slow depending on the time limit for the impatient gamers among us.
When I did find myself becoming a little restless I usually came to the conclusion that, well. I could really find something worthwhile to do like spending a little extra time in the Civilopedia to figure out what sorts of research would get me to that next crucial Wonder of the world.
In a challenging game filled with human players, every moment you spend in planning between turns usually pays off. All in all, the turn system works well enough that it's renewing my interest in the multiplayer aspects of Heroes of Might and Magic III , which is allegedly going to have a turn-based system very similar to the one found in Civ2 Gold.
When I say that Civilization is a complex game world, though, it's definitely a relative sort of complexity. Victory in Civ2 sometimes involves the launch of a spaceship - a spaceship that in some senses flies right out of your game of Civilization 2 and right into a game of Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri. While Alpha Centauri bears a family resemblance to its predecessor and may not represent a four light-year leap beyond the gameplay found in Civ2 Gold , it is a substantial evolutionary leap indeed.
Anyone who doesn't believe me should spend some time in the Alpha Centauri system and then try a return trip to planet Earth - you'll realize just how much you've changed since you've been away. In some respects Sid Meier's Alpha Centauri is one of the most ambitious multiplayer strategy games ever released. Unlike Civ2 Gold , Alpha Centauri was built from the ground up to be a multiplayer game. It offers up a host of gameplay enhancements and a wide variety of fresh design elements while at the same time allowing all players to take their turns simultaneously.
This is somewhat similar to the simultaneous-turn mode employed in Warlords III. So even the though the game is considerably more complex than Civilization 2 - you'll find yourself dealing with 3D terrain, a complex sociological model and custom unit designs, among other things - you'll find yourself waiting even less in multiplayer mode than you would in a game of Civ2 Gold.
I can only imagine how much more intricate the programming model must be for a game design of this complexity. After playing many hours of Alpha Centauri , Civilization2 Gold Multiplayer seems a little bit like "strategy lite". Lite or not, though, Civilization 2 in multiplayer mode is still a lot of fun.
The multiplayer-specific portions of the interface are pretty basic, but they are solid and they work right out of the box. Saving and loading works for multiplayer games, and if the host crashes then the AI takes over the player slot and server duties are passed on to someone else.
You can also re-load the game at any time and swap a human in for AI players, which means that someone who crashes and has the AI take over for him has a chance to join back in right away.
Considering the included expansion packs and the excellent single-player value, though, that's still worth the price of admission. Internet play is sponsored on the MSN Gaming Zone - I haven't played on the net but when I checked the site it was midnight west coast, USA and there were at least 20 people still playing.
We have 2 separate sections in the download database for these 2 versions, please see:. For discussions please civit the Civ2 modding forum , and for other scenarios, please also check the Scenario League , another section of the forum devoted to scenarios. Civ2 Gold lets you play nearly all the scenarios in the collection.
The categories below are the outdated old download database. Battle has been straightened out and new units, advances and ponders presented, with the goal that players of the first will have a lot to learn.
In any case, the most clear alter is one of viewpoint — everything in the Civ world is presently totally three-dimensional. Maybe the greatest disillusionment is that organization play will not be incorporated; this is on the grounds that MicroProse are going to dispatch Civnet, an organization play form of the first.
In any case, regardless of whether an organization prepared Civ 2 will seem is hazy right now. At any rate, on to the 3D point of view. The other improvement to the interface is the capacity to open more than each window in turn.
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