(P)REVIEWS - Civilization IV: Beyond the Sword Review by Solver
Taking over the flavour, one event at a time
BtS Random events Pros: Excellent overall flavour, a greatly different range of triggers. Quests are a very good novelty. Good for modding.
BtS Random events Cons: Not enough difference between some quests. Bad for competitive play.
BtS Random events Tips: Having some extra money might give you access to better choices.
Beyond the Sword includes random events, which
can almost be considered a new feature in the genre. Random events have been
seen before (as far back as Civ1, in fact), but they have never come in such
numbers and with such flavour.
First things first, there are two things that
everyone needs to understand about events. First, they are not for the most
hardcore strategists and not for challenge games. In such games, every little
move matters, and players will probably not want random events affecting them.
Second, events are mainly a flavour feature – you won’t be building strategies
around them and their effects are usually fairly minor.
The system itself is simple. Events are
triggered at random times, with more of them happening in the late game. Some
events will not give you any choices, others will give you some. There are
about 150 unique events in the game.
The best thing about events is that their
triggers are tied to in-game conditions, and thus events reflect what happens
in the game. The triggers are quite wide-ranging. One event might require that
you have a source of Gold, another will require the presence of a religion in a
city, and yet another requires a Laboratory and the Free Speech civic. There’s
good diversity all around.
Events are generally minor boosts or penalties,
which may include choices between two rewards or the choice of investing
something (like money) for a chance of greater returns. For example, there’s an
event where you discover some valuable information in ancient ruins (how
ancient ruins can contain information leading to a breakthrough in the research
of electricity is another issue). You can just put the information to good use,
or you can spend gold to fund additional exploratory efforts, which will give
you the chance of having the research bonus doubled.

A more refined version of events is quests.
There are not too many of these, but they are interesting. When a quest starts,
you will be given a task to complete with a certain time limit – such as
building a number of Stables before you reach a certain level of technological
advancement. Completing quests gives you rewards, often with the ability to
choose between several rewards. Quests could use a bit more diversity (most
just require you to build enough of X before you get tech Y), although there are
also exceptions to this pattern.
Random events should be enjoyable to the vast
majority of players. If you are a hardcore strategist who just doesn’t like the
chance of some minor boosts or penalties, you won’t like events. If you’re less
hardcore than that, however, you will probably enjoy events.
They are, in my opinion, an excellent flavour
feature. For example, the notification messages you get as events happen
worldwide do bring the game world alive. In the late game, you may be reading
things such as “French elections results were so close that a court had to rule
on the outcome” or “A German passenger aircraft has crashed in Russian
territory. Neither side is providing details on the incident” – I feel that
these messages add to the feel that you rule one civilization in a world where
there are others, and things are happening in them, as well.
Part of the fun definitely comes from the fact
that it will take a long time to see all the events. Given the diversity of
triggers and their sheer numbers, you’ll probably keep seeing new events for
quite some time. It also depends on your playing habits. For example, if you
rarely run Free Market, you’ll probably not be seeing the event that requires
it for a long time, and so on.
I also have to give praise to the technical
execution of events. They are pretty straightforward to modify, you can do a
lot with just XML and Python once you get the hang of it, leaving the road open
for player-created event packs that can add events and quests. This should
become really interesting, as there are easily possibilities for many more
events and quests.
On the balance side, I would also say the
events are pretty well-done. Of all the events in BtS, there are only a few I
have an issue with balance-wise – such as events that can grant all Axemen a
free Shock or Cover promotion. These two events may just make warfare in their
time a bit too easy. The event that gives you a free Great Artist also leaves
me in doubt as to its balance. I am pointing this out only for lack of bigger
flaws, however – with only a few events that seem a tad too powerful, the
system is definitely well-balanced overall.
Above all, the event system is an extremely
solid framework for something introduced in an expansion. I am sure that we
will see it being used to take the concept to new heights through modding and
hopefully also in Civ5. A great framework for modders and addition of diversity
for regular players, the random event system is truly a worthy addition to
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