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TLDR; A variation on the civilization games allowing the player to explore future technology such as mechs and aquatic cities. Nothing fundamentally new but offers a new twist on the basic civilization game.
Call to power (CTP2) 2 was released before Civ 3, and shares the same basic gameplay of a Civ2/3 game, so if you don't like civilization you likely won't want to play CTP2. CTP2's major difference is that it deviates from Civilization's technological realism and allows you to play and research many years into the future with mechs, hover tanks, A.I. and aquatic cities.
If you like the basic Civilisation gameplay but find it becomes repetetive and want a bit of variation in the gameplay now and again then I would reccomend buying call to power (and alpha centauri).
I personally own CTP2, alpha centauri and Civ 4, and I switch between the games otherwise I get bored.
I won't bother going into detail with the basic game mechanics as they are more or less the same as civilization 2/3 however it does have some noticeable differing features. The graphics are midway between civ 2 and civ 3, probably closer to civ 3.
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MichaelFurlong: TLDR; A variation on the civilization games allowing the player to explore future technology such as mechs and aquatic cities. Nothing fundamentally new but offers a new twist on the basic civilization game.
Call to power (CTP2) 2 was released before Civ 3, and shares the same basic gameplay of a Civ2/3 game, so if you don't like civilization you likely won't want to play CTP2. CTP2's major difference is that it deviates from Civilization's technological realism and allows you to play and research many years into the future with mechs, hover tanks, A.I. and aquatic cities.
If you like the basic Civilisation gameplay but find it becomes repetetive and want a bit of variation in the gameplay now and again then I would reccomend buying call to power (and alpha centauri).
I personally own CTP2, alpha centauri and Civ 4, and I switch between the games otherwise I get bored.
I won't bother going into detail with the basic game mechanics as they are more or less the same as civilization 2/3 however it does have some noticeable differing features. The graphics are midway between civ 2 and civ 3, probably closer to civ 3.

You basically say it`s a decent game, but you give no stars?
I clicked on submit by accident, I hadn't actually finished as I was also going to give a sentence on the mods available. I was going to give it 4 stars.
I tried finding a way to edit it and created a thread asking GOG to give us the ability to edit reviews for a few minutes after posting them.
I am quite annoyed that it happened.
Post edited March 03, 2010 by MichaelFurlong
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MichaelFurlong: TLDR; A variation on the civilization games allowing the player to explore future technology such as mechs and aquatic cities. Nothing fundamentally new but offers a new twist on the basic civilization game.
Call to power (CTP2) 2 was released before Civ 3, and shares the same basic gameplay of a Civ2/3 game, so if you don't like civilization you likely won't want to play CTP2. CTP2's major difference is that it deviates from Civilization's technological realism and allows you to play and research many years into the future with mechs, hover tanks, A.I. and aquatic cities.
If you like the basic Civilisation gameplay but find it becomes repetetive and want a bit of variation in the gameplay now and again then I would reccomend buying call to power (and alpha centauri).
I personally own CTP2, alpha centauri and Civ 4, and I switch between the games otherwise I get bored.
I won't bother going into detail with the basic game mechanics as they are more or less the same as civilization 2/3 however it does have some noticeable differing features. The graphics are midway between civ 2 and civ 3, probably closer to civ 3.

I think I would warn potential players that the game will often be "over" in terms of
points long before any futuristic technology kicks in. Although some of the future tech is interesting, game aspects make it almost useless.......by the time you can build a city on the ocean floor, you've already reached your population limit.....it's a big planet and at the very most you can have 45 cities, which isn't much once you start conquering territory.
The futuristic tanks and such are powerful, but prohibitively expensive, and take a very long time to build.
The real pain in the neck with this game is pollution. It spreads fast, and there aren't very many things you can do to deal with it. Very late in the game, you'll gain the ability to
reclaim tiles that pollution turned "dead" but by then it won't matter.
Don't get me wrong, a great game, some real advantages over Civilization or Empire Earth, but it has flaws for sure.