games-pc sid s meiers-civilization iii 사용자 설명서

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What good is all this culture? It expands the city’s cultural sphere of influence and 
contributes to your civilization’s overall cultural dominance.We discuss your empire’s
culture in the next chapter. The sphere of influence is what’s important to city 
management.
The greater a city’s culture value, the more area is encompassed by your borders—the
spheres of influence. All squares within this border are considered your territory, and
you are within your rights to demand that trespassing foreign units get out.Your civi-
lization benefits from any luxuries and strategic resources connected to your cities that
fall within your sphere of influence (without the need of a colony). All terrain inside
your sphere of influence is always visible to you, regardless of whether you have a unit
nearby. Last, but not least, other civilization’s units do not enjoy the movement bonuses
normally provided by roads and railroads while inside your territory.
It’s a good idea to help any city, but especially one near the outside edge of your 
civilization, enlarge its sphere of influence. Defense is always a priority, but once that’s
reasonably assured, consider building some of the more civilized improvements. The 
earlier the better, because the longer an improvement has been around, the greater its
effect on your culture.
Happiness and Civil Disorder
Understanding happiness and its inverse state, civil disorder, is extremely important.The
citizens in your cities have one of four different attitudes or emotional states: happiness,
contentment, unhappiness, or resistance. The first citizens of your first city start out 
in a contented state. As the population of the city grows, competition for jobs, com-
modities, and services increases. Eventually, depending on the difficulty level at which
you play and the economic conditions in your city, some citizens start to grumble and 
display unhappiness. If you don’t take an active role in city management as population
increases, the natural trend of citizens’ attitudes is toward unhappiness.
So what can you do to counter this trend? If your population is already suffering civil
disorder because of an attitude imbalance, you need to take immediate steps, as we sug-
gest under “Restoring Order” below. However, you needn’t wait until a crisis occurs;
you can keep citizens content by taking a longer view and providing services as the
demand becomes imminent, or even ahead of demand.
Two special conditions can also cause further unhappiness in your populations. If you’re
ruling under a representative form of government (Republic or Democracy), war 
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