It's weird, SC may be the first where I choose not to update past 1.0.
It gives some cool UI improvements, but it has almost nerfed all my pre 1.0 strategies to the ground, and for some reason I feel no itching desire to basically relearn the game strategy.
Why would you not want exploits fixed? The mountain issue for instance makes the game ridiculously easy. Bandits? No problem! Surround them with mountains!
Red beating blue? No problem, make a chokepoint with mountains!
Yeah. To be honest, stuff like that was SO cheesy, that if I were to for whatever reason use such a tactic and then make it to the end, I would still consider it not actually a win. Like beating Doom with God Mode on for half the game. It was THAT bad. You could stop almost any unit or threat with mountains. Heck, I cant even consider that one a strategy at this point.
I'd been kinda against the mountain/lake removal even from higher difficulties at first, but..... yeah, the game really is better with those out of the placement menu.
And as for the changes to unit stats, that's all just a balancing thing, to get the units to where they were intended to be in the first place, yes? That's been the impression I've had with those. And the game has just been better since.
Here's a question... would making it so that you couldn't place Mountains or Lakes adjacent to Mountains or Lakes prevent cheesy tactics?
Probably not. I can think of a few ways to do it even with that rule in place. It'd be hard to explain in text though and I dont feel like typing out a long post to explain it (just about meal time for me here).
I'm thinking that the removal of them from the placement menu was a good idea overall.
And you can still make chokepoints in different ways, such as smiting tiles, or creating long thin bridges to spots you're going to place new cities, so it's not like you cant do chokepoints at all anymore. It just means they arent ultra reliable as the game loves to stick more tiles around them when you dont want it to, and it doesnt stop ranged units from firing onto them from the sides (which mountains did).