Cài đặt Steam
Đăng nhập
|
Ngôn ngữ
简体中文 (Hán giản thể)
繁體中文 (Hán phồn thể)
日本語 (Nhật)
한국어 (Hàn Quốc)
ไทย (Thái)
Български (Bungari)
Čeština (CH Séc)
Dansk (Đan Mạch)
Deutsch (Đức)
English (Anh)
Español - España (Tây Ban Nha - TBN)
Español - Latinoamérica (Tây Ban Nha cho Mỹ Latin)
Ελληνικά (Hy Lạp)
Français (Pháp)
Italiano (Ý)
Bahasa Indonesia (tiếng Indonesia)
Magyar (Hungary)
Nederlands (Hà Lan)
Norsk (Na Uy)
Polski (Ba Lan)
Português (Tiếng Bồ Đào Nha - BĐN)
Português - Brasil (Bồ Đào Nha - Brazil)
Română (Rumani)
Русский (Nga)
Suomi (Phần Lan)
Svenska (Thụy Điển)
Türkçe (Thổ Nhĩ Kỳ)
Українська (Ukraine)
Báo cáo lỗi dịch thuật
It's likely safe to use though, but the tech costs may be slightly off.
surprise - you mean jump straight to their capital
Jump drives had no disadvantage, the game still converged on jump drives anyway.
Getting rid of everything aside from the Hyperdrive was a terrible idea in my opinion, since it just gives me the feeling that the dev behind that blunder was having a Star Wars fanboy wank or something.
Let me be able to surprise (and be surprised BY) my enemies in my campaigns because my civ and theirs use different FTL methods! It gives more fun and in-depth options when waging a war, since a civ with jump drives can circumnavigate all known systems at the risk of being eaten by the Warp, while hyperdrive-using civs are safe but constrained only to known Hyperlanes.
Isn't that the point of grand STRATEGY games? To have advantages and DISadvantages because of the civ and choices you make?