games-pc sid s meiers-civilization iii 사용자 설명서

다운로드
페이지 243
as much gold as the remaining shields needed for completion. (You cannot pay to rush
a Wonder of the World.)
Under some forms of government, paying for a rush job isn’t an option.You can, how-
ever,“spend” population points to hurry production.Your foremen use every means at
their disposal to get more work out of your citizens for the same pay—including forcible
coercion if necessary. As you might imagine, people don’t enjoy working under those
conditions, and they look for ways to leave town. By the time the work is done, emi-
gration will have diminished the size of the city. (You can’t spend population to rush a
Wonder of the World.)
To rush a job without using either of these costly methods, you normally have two
options. Any unit that you disband in a city contributes a portion of its cost in shields
to the current construction project, whether it is an improvement or another unit.The
other method is to clear forests in the city’s radius.The resources gained from this action
go straight into the construction project.
One way of completing a job in record time is available to you only if you have a leader
and have not yet used it to create an Army.A leader, when entering a city, can complete
whatever is under construction there.The leader disappears in the process, however, so
this is not an action to be taken lightly.This is the only really effective way to rush the
production of a Wonder of the World.Any leaders that you currently have available are
listed on the Military Advisor’s screen.
Items completed by rush jobs are available at the beginning of your next turn, so there
is no advantage to rushing items that would be complete on the next turn anyway.To
determine whether an item can be completed next turn without rushing, check the City
Display. The number of turns to completion is noted in the Production Box and
beneath the city on the Map screen.
Culture
The definition of  ‘culture’ is a slippery one. It can encompass anything that gives a civ-
ilization social cohesion, its members a sense of belonging to something greater than
themselves. Culture contributes to feelings of nationality, pride of place, and the will-
ingness to resist that which is alien.A strong culture can impress other nations.
Many things contribute to a city’s cultural strength. Improvements, especially those gen-
erally considered enlightening, like a Library or a Temple, add to a city’s culture. So do
both kinds of Wonders.The longer a thing exists, the more venerable it becomes, and
113