What about take out active player and retire instead of fighting AI? Or just see if other player wants to retire. You still win the game.
steamrolling games/games with one probable outcome
i have had games where after say day 16 the winner of the game is obvious but you have to wait weeks in order to clear out all of the countries in order to reach that massively high victory point. the first time i had this problem i was playing as spain and the turkey (the second active player) was significantly smaller and less powerful than me, so i spent weeks clearing out ai with no real challenge and this time the other online player is yukoslavia and since day 20 i am more than double the VP of him and i have no doubt i will steamroll him but i still will have to clear out every country to end the game. elite ai could be an option if i was a gold user but i am not and it isnt an option for me.
First image is my opponent who i havent gone to war with yet. second image is me.


7 Replies
how do you retire?
When there are 3 or fewer active players in the game there is a retire option at the bottom of the World Herald. If all remaining active players agree to retire the game will end, the person with most VP will win and players will get gold depending on how many VPs.
And, needless to say, if you're the only player left, you can end the game.
thank you, i wish i played against better opponents that wouldn't be outmatched so easily so this wouldn't happen
Yeah my first match was 22 players that was boring even i won, i fought against only 3 players before wining the match. My second match is 100 players world map, in this match i fought against 11 players and killed more than 1 million soldiers, big naval battles, crazy rocket battles this was really fun but it is about to end and getting bored again only 4 players remaining and they are my coalition after capturing last lands we will retire as well. I recommend you to try world maps, 22 players map is really boring..
yeah but i dont like only having four industrial complexes because it means low unit production early on and stuff like research takes longer
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