A nice and simple bardur game. Almost broke 130K! Videos will have to be lowish quality otherwise the game will crash my phone as I record! Join the polytopia discord channel here: / discord
Man love your video! It's amazing to see your train of thoughts in practice. I love how you turn almost all forests into stars, 'cus I've been growing forests! lol But it'd be great if it was filmed horizontally so I can see more of the map to understand your amazing strategy! Good work, thank you!
Red bars are the "minus upgrade points". To make it clear, after u upgrade something, you get some blue bars ("upgrade points"). If you destroy something, those blue bars will be reducted from your city "progres bar" (?). If there aren't any bars to reduce, you get "red bars" + the stars you earn get decreased - so it's just like you had a level down or sth... Got it?
Since i'm really bad at this game, I don't actually know if what I have to suggest was the right choice. But on turn 10, you placed a customs house on a corner of land (next to 2 waters), which was next to a port. You could have placed another port on the other water tile to produce more stars. The next city you placed it next to only one port, where there was another corner somewhere else where you could have placed 2 ports, gotten 4 production and population. But i don't actually know if that's a good thing to do (25 stars total for 4 stars/turn (pays off in 7 turns)
nice video btw! have a question about the fishing? Why do you not to farm fish? will it benefits from fish(i mean get more stars) if you dont take it and build port on it?
The only real benefit from getting the fish is 1 population, and if you are nowhere near upgrading the city it's not really worth it. However, By putting down a port and then a customs house, he increases his production which is the real reason you would want to upgrade your city anyway. It's just more efficient to spend 10 stars on a port and then get the customs house rather than spend the 2 extra stars to do essentially nothing in the long run.