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==Game Info==
 
==Game Info==
 
Indicates this City is the Capital of the empire. Built automatically in the first city you establish.
 
Indicates this City is the Capital of the empire. Built automatically in the first city you establish.
*Connecting other Cities to the Capital by Road will produce additional Gold
+
*Connecting other Cities to the Capital by Road will produce additional {{Gold5}} Gold
*+3 Production, +3 Science, +3 Gold, +1 Culture
+
*+3 {{Production5}} Production, +3 {{Science5}} Science, +3 {{Gold5}} Gold, +1 {{Culture5}} Culture
 
*+ 2 Defense
 
*+ 2 Defense
 
*{{BNW}} 1 Great work of Art or Artifact slot
 
*{{BNW}} 1 Great work of Art or Artifact slot

Revision as of 11:45, 14 February 2014

BackArrowGreen Back to List of wonders in Civ5

Game Info

Indicates this City is the Capital of the empire. Built automatically in the first city you establish.

  • Connecting other Cities to the Capital by Road will produce additional Gold Gold Gold
  • +3 Production Production Production, +3 Science Science Science, +3 Gold Gold Gold, +1 Culture Culture Culture
  • + 2 Defense
  • BNW-only 1 Great work of Art or Artifact slot

Strategy

Your palace is the seat of your government. In the very beginning of the game it provides a significant portion of your capital city's gold and Production, it boosts science output, and is the only source of Culture. It also forms the heart of your empire's trading system.

At all times, the Palace is considered the Seat of your Government in regards of Domination victory. Although the palace is automatically rebuilt in another city if your capital is captured, it can still be a terrible blow to your civilization (and it makes it impossible for you to win a Domination victory until you get it back). Protect your palace!

Historical Info

A palace is the residence of a civilization's ruler. The term is somewhat anachronistic, dating back to a time when most countries were ruled by kings or other hereditary leaders. Nowadays modern rulers live in ornate buildings called something like "the People's House" or "the Place of Justice," but the effect is the same. Palaces (and their modern equivalents) are designed to do three things: to provide the ruler with access to the people and communications necessary to rule, to defend the leader from attack, and to impress upon subjects and foreign visitors the leader's importance and grandeur.