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COMING SOON: Galactic Civilizations III: Worlds in Crisis DLC & v4.0 Update

Galactic Civilizations III: Worlds in Crisis and Major v4.0 Update Announced

[h2]Experience new world crises, planet types and traits, plus visual and balance improvements with v4.0[/h2]



[h3]GalCiv III - Worlds in Crisis DLC[/h3]
Stardock announced the new Worlds in Crisis DLC and free v4.0 update for its massive space sandbox 4X strategy game, Galactic Civilizations III today.



Worlds in Crisis introduces several new world events with ideological choices, new planet types, and over a dozen new planet features. Long-time players will find many new strategic options while players picking up the game for the very first time will also encounter exciting new experiences.

[h3]v4.0 Update[/h3]
The free v4.0 update adds huge performance increases and makes vast visual improvements to the game’s planets, both on the surface and from orbit. A massive list of additional balance and AI improvements also accompany v4.0, which is already in opt-in. The current changelog is available in the forums.



In Worlds in Crisis, players may encounter worlds struggling with crises from planetary mutations, to raging pandemics, to murderers on the loose, and much more. Each crisis tells a planet’s story and the player’s decisions on how to handle them will determine how it resolves in the end.



There are also several new planet types to explore, offering new and exciting bonuses for those brave enough to colonize them. Players might encounter a sterile planet that isn’t meant for housing life, but is suited for the experiments of a mad scientist, or a beautiful and serene tranquil type world, perfect for retirement and tourism. New islands, continents, and landmasses provide many new options.

“Our community provided most of the feedback that shaped v4.0,” said Stardock CEO Brad Wardell. “Thanks to them, we were able to review and optimize everything in order to make things run faster. We also worked in some performance improvements while still making the game look better than ever.”

[h2]The Worlds in Crisis DLC and 4.0 update is coming soon![/h2]

GalCiv III Dev Journal: April 2020

We are on the road to v4.0.

[h2]It's hard to believe that GalCiv III was released nearly five years ago.  We've made a lot of changes since then.[/h2]

Version 4.0 is being designed to bring a ton of new features, we won't go over all the changes here but instead will take you on a bit of a guided tour.

Most of the changes are for users of Retribution which is the latest expansion.  If you don't have that, I highly recommend getting it.

[h3]Turn 1[/h3]
On your first turn you're going to likely notice some subtle but important changes.




First, more food.  There are a lot more fertile tiles in general that you can use either for farming or plow away to build other things.




There is also an Administrative Center that you can have 1 per planet with.  It gives you 2 admin points but it's also useful because it enhances adjacent structures.




There has also been a slight tweak to the costs of planetary improvements (on Retribution).  You also end up with a fuller set of choices. 
 



Not only have asteroid fields been made bigger but Durantium is more common as well.




Technologies have been tweaked so that more administrative points are handed out and a lot more trade routes are handed out.  For instance (Retribution), Xeno Commerce now provides 5 trade routes instead of 2.

[h3]Early game changes[/h3]


Resources like Promethion are somewhat more common as well.




On the other hand, while we've added more asteroids, we've reduced the amount of raw resources mining bases give from 1.0 to 0.50.  As many know, by late game, a disproportionate amount of raw resources ends up coming from the asteroids which was not the intent.  

Instead, because food is so much more common, players will tend to have much larger populations which do provide, over time, more production.




Planets themselves have gotten a bit of a make-over.  More interesting layouts and more interesting cosmetics.

[h3]Even Mars.[/h3]


And this is all in the first 20 turns or so.   We will discuss more as we get closer.

[h3]Highlighted feature[/h3]
A lot of users have asked for the ability to turn OFF the colonies auto-upgrading structures.



v4.0 Coming in May!

GalCiv III: Dev Journal - March 2020

[h2]I found a magic planet.[/h2]



It’s not that it is a class 20 planet – it only started as a class 14 and I’ve upgraded it since. It is that it had 6 fertile tiles with 5 of them ready to have something amazing placed in the middle. In this case, Kimberly’s Refuge. Combined with the planet being a fertile world the result is that this one planet produces 34 food.

Of course, having the time to build this up required relative peace to be the norm which is the subject of this dev journal.

[h2]Leave me alone[/h2]
One of the most common questions we get is how do you keep everyone from going to war with you? Can you play the game without having to build up a huge military. The answer is, yes and…maybe.

I’m playing as a benevolent civilization. This means my polar opposite civilizations (malevolent) will be inclined to go to war with me. If I were playing as pragmatic, they would also not like me but they are somewhat less likely to pull the trigger on going to war with a pragmatic civilization versus one that is their opposite.

So what’s the key to getting them to leave me alone?

[h2]Relationship factors[/h2]



Here is the Drengin. The biggest two things helping me with them are the fact we’re trading with them and they are relatively far away.

[h3]Tip #1: Trade with them [/h3]
When I play as a peaceful civ, I am careful to trade as much as I can. You do take a hit due to trading with their enemies but it’s still a big benefit.

Trade helps in so many other areas too. For example, the more you trade, the less easy of a target you are since they really want your money.

[h3]Tip #2: Treaties[/h3]


Make sure you are setting up treaties with them.

[h3]Tip #3: Financial Aid / Tribute[/h3]


You can give tribute to civilizations (give them money) which will make them happy.

[h3]Tip #4: Don’t be an easy target[/h3]
If a bear is chasing after you and your friends, you only need to be faster than the slowest friend. You don’t need a big military to keep from being attacked. But if you are absolutely defenseless then you are inviting conquest.

[h3]Tip #5: Use Diplomats[/h3]


If you have trained any diplomats, you can use them on the powerful civilizations that you want to leave you alone. You don’t need them to love you, you just need them to hate someone else more.

[h3]Tip #6: Build up your diplomatic skills[/h3]
There are certain planetary improvements and technologies that give your civilization more diplomatic points. Your increased skills will cause other civilizations to like you more.

[h3]Tip #7: Spy with Freighters[/h3]
A lot of players will try to keep an eye on what other civilizations are doing by building starbases and sensor ships. But these can sometimes cause other civilizations to consider them trespassers. But freighters don’t have that issue.

Instead, design freighters that have great sensor ranges. Make sure you get an open borders treaty with them.



Hopefully these tips will help you maintain a galactic peace…or at least long enough to either ascend or get a diplomatic victory!

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Galactic Civilizations III v3.96 Released

We are happy to release a patch that improves planet visuals, improves gameplay, and fixes bugs. Read below for details.


Change Log
Planets
  • The planetary map generation system now prefers placing tiles near the equator. The result is fewer, isolated tiles near the poles. Change does not affect the total number of tiles placed.
  • Improvements to the planetary material system that allows for greater detail and color.
  • Continent shorelines blend better with the water.
  • City lights on the dark side of some planets (e.g. earth) get will get to max bright brightness when the population is 15 (was 30).
  • Jupiter has been told to "stay in its lane" and use its own gradient colors instead of Mars'


Gameplay
  • Players start with a shipyard. This has been added back because there is now sufficiently tight starting choices that we feel that holding back the shipyard simply creates an unnecessary repetitive starting condition
  • Retribution: New starting improvement: Industrial Center (one per player). Good way to boost initial manufacturing
  • Fixed a bug where the AI would sometimes delete a rally point if it found an object in it (as in, its own fleet!).
  • AI combat ships are more willing to travel through dangerous territory to defend threatened planets.
  • AI will ignore reinforcing planets that are already defended and not under threat.
  • AI will focus on its primary enemy more so when targeting ships to attack.


Bugs
  • Fixed a trade exploit with Hypergates.
  • Fixed a problem with colonization events that aren't imagined yet.
  • Updated the Planet window so the Build Queue buttons don't break out of their frame in Normal UI scale