Civilization Wiki
m (Made a mechanical change.)
Tags: Visual edit apiedit
(→‎Historical Info: Renamed section.)
Tag: Visual edit
Line 22: Line 22:
 
What's more, when the dig is another civilization's territory, extracting an Artifact from it will lead to a diplomatic incident - they will rightfully insist that the Artifact belongs to them. On the other hand, if you build a Landmark in their territory (expending your Archaeologist), they will be grateful. This is also valid in the case of [[City-state (Civ5)|City-States]] - you will gain some {{Influence5}} Influence with them if you built a Landmark on their territory.
 
What's more, when the dig is another civilization's territory, extracting an Artifact from it will lead to a diplomatic incident - they will rightfully insist that the Artifact belongs to them. On the other hand, if you build a Landmark in their territory (expending your Archaeologist), they will be grateful. This is also valid in the case of [[City-state (Civ5)|City-States]] - you will gain some {{Influence5}} Influence with them if you built a Landmark on their territory.
   
==Historical Info==
+
==Civilopedia entry==
 
A Landmark is any magnificent artifact, structure, work of art, or wonder of nature that draws visitors to a location. Nelson's Column in London is a landmark, as is Mount Rushmore in the United States. Not every significantly sized object, however, is a landmark: the World's Largest Ball of Twine may never rise to that stature (though it might well be worth a visit).
 
A Landmark is any magnificent artifact, structure, work of art, or wonder of nature that draws visitors to a location. Nelson's Column in London is a landmark, as is Mount Rushmore in the United States. Not every significantly sized object, however, is a landmark: the World's Largest Ball of Twine may never rise to that stature (though it might well be worth a visit).

Revision as of 00:48, 27 August 2018

BackArrowGreen Back to the list of improvements

Game Info

Great Tile improvement.

Constructed by a Great Artist. (Vanilla and GodsKings5 clear)

Constructed by an Archaeologist from an Archaeological Dig. (BNW-only)

  • Effect:
    • +6 Culture Culture Culture (Vanilla and GodsKings5 clear)
    • +1 Culture Culture Culture for each era of difference between the era of origin of the archaeological site and the current era (BNW-only)

Strategy

While the use of the Landmark is pretty straightforward in vanilla Civilization V and Gods & Kings, it has some twists in Brave New World. Since you can no longer construct it just anywhere you decide, but only on the predetermined Antiquity Sites, you have to think before deciding what to do with each site. Keep in mind that a Landmark will only be useful to you if it's within your territory and close enough to a city to be worked; otherwise it's better to extract an Artifact from the Archaeological Dig.

What's more, when the dig is another civilization's territory, extracting an Artifact from it will lead to a diplomatic incident - they will rightfully insist that the Artifact belongs to them. On the other hand, if you build a Landmark in their territory (expending your Archaeologist), they will be grateful. This is also valid in the case of City-States - you will gain some Influence (Civ5) Influence Influence with them if you built a Landmark on their territory.

Civilopedia entry

A Landmark is any magnificent artifact, structure, work of art, or wonder of nature that draws visitors to a location. Nelson's Column in London is a landmark, as is Mount Rushmore in the United States. Not every significantly sized object, however, is a landmark: the World's Largest Ball of Twine may never rise to that stature (though it might well be worth a visit).