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Stanford STS 145 - LECTURE NOTES

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Shawn Fu STS 145 – Lowood Final Paper 3 / 18 / 03 The games of Sid Meier’s Civilization (Civ) series have been a curious anomaly on the computer gaming landscape. The games are slow-paced, graphically mediocre by most standards, and have not been successfully ported to multiplayer versions. Yet the Civ series has enjoyed both success and critical acclaim. Many major gaming magazines or resources mark Civilization 1 and/or 2 as some of the best and most influential games ever produced. Gamespot.com1 named it one of the 15 most influential games of all time. IGN’s PC division named it the 4th best game of all time. It’s in the Hall of Fame at Gamespy.com2 and PC Gamer.3 Not only did the game receive high marks, but it catapulted its chief designer into a star within the computer gaming industry. Sid Meier is today considered a design guru and one of the most creative minds in the business. Sid Meier’s Civilization is a turn-based4 strategy game in which the subject matter is the rise of human civilizations and cultures throughout history. It is the ultimate god game. During the game, a player must balance elements of diplomacy, economics, government, military conquest, exploration, science and research, and population dynamics. The game can be won either by defeating other empires and dissolving them into your own, or being the first empire to reach Alpha Centauri, a mythical planet in space. Along the way, the player is forced to match wits against some of history’s most prominent leaders. The original Civilization was released in 1991 for the PC by MicroProse, and has since been translated into multiple foreign languages.5 In addition, there have been many sequels in the series: most notably, CivNet (1995), Civilization 2 (1997), and Civilization 3 (2001).6 1 http://gamespot.com/gamespot/features/pc/most_influential/p10.html 2 http://www.gamespy.com/legacy/halloffame/civ.shtm 3 PC Gamer, May 1997. 4 Turn-based games allow the player to make all of his or her moves in a linear fashion during a ‘turn’, after which the computer or a competitor makes their moves. This process is repeated over and over. In real-time games, all of the action occurs simultaneously. 5 http://apolyton.net/ 6 http://www.civfanatics.com/sidlegacy/index.shtmlHistory: Pre-Civilization The original Civilization was Sid Meier’s piece de resistance, and probably the game for which he will be most remembered. However, many people often overlook the fact that Meier’s career spans over a decade both before and after Civilization. Any review of Meier’s development of the Civ series cannot be complete without an examination of Meier’s work on other games, because they provide insight into the formulation of his designing principles and dogma. Meier’s story begins, fittingly, with a tall tale. In the early 80s, Sid was a systems analyst for General Instrument Corporation. One day he happened to be playing an arcade flight game with a co-worker, Bill Steale. Steale, a former military pilot, was amazed that Meier could consistently rack up such high scores. Meier explained that the secret to the game was remembering the patterns used by the enemy AI; once the patterns were learned, the player could respond before the enemy could. The story then has it that Meier bragged that he could create a game with better AI in a matter of weeks. Somewhere during this process, Meier and Stealey formed a small garage operation, and gaming giant MicroProse was born.7 MicroProse’s evolution followed a similar script to that of many other pioneering companies in the gaming world – a small group of engineers working out of a makeshift office and eventually growing into a large operation: MicroProse was a pretty linear evolution…reflecting what the PC industry was doing…The irony is we thought we were behind the curve, that the industry had already peaked, and we were just trying to catch up. This was like 1981, 1982. In hindsight, it was a great time, the timing was excellent.8Despite the humble beginnings, MicroProse grew steadily through the 80s and 90s, and Meier built up an impressive resume of games, that spanned many genres. In 1985, the submarine simulator Silent Service brought a fresh emphasis on action and excitement to a genre that focused on realism and detail. This trend was continued in the wargames Crusade in Europe and Decision in the Desert. One particularly bright spot was Meier’s Pirates!, an action/adventure/RPG game that ClassicGaming called “one [of] the greatest combinations of role playing, strategy, resource management and action ever to have 7 http://www.civfanatics.com/sidlegacy/index.shtml#formative 8 http://www.civfanatics.com/sidlegacy/index.shtml#formativebeen produced.”9 Pirates! successfully blended just the right amounts of real-time and turn-based gaming. Experience with both these formats in Pirates! and other games would be crucial in Meier’s eventual work on Civilization. However, Meier’s “fun” games were also balanced with detail-heavy simulations such as the wargame NATO Division Commander and the flight simulators F-19 Stealth Fighter and Gunship. NATO Division Commander was a port of an Avalon Hill board game, but was hampered heavily by an emphasis on detail and micromanagement. Although many of the wargames were disappointments, some of Meier’s flight simulators managed to combine just the right amounts of realism and fun. F-19, in particular, was lauded for breathing cerebral qualities into a genre centered mainly on reflexes and flying skill; for example, the F-19’s stealth capabilities meant that knowing when to fight was just as important as being able to fight well. Gamespot.com notes “MicroProse thus built its early empire by becoming the undisputed champion of flight sims, and it was games like Gunship [and F-19] that got them there.”10 Looking over Meier’s pre-Civ body of work, it was apparent that by 1990, Meier had experimented with enough games so that he had a good feel for how best to combine cerebral, detail-oriented gaming with fun gaming. History: Enter The Classic Will Wright’s SimCity introduced a whole new paradigm into computer gaming: the god-like simulation, where the player presides over a large map and interacts with a simulated system of some sort. Railroad Tycoon was Meier’s first SimCity-inspired game – a real-time strategy game in which the player


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