Civ 5 Liberate City. What gives? In Civ5 I have read there is a process to capture

What gives? In Civ5 I have read there is a process to capture a city and then trade it, recapture it, and then get a liberation bonus. I then demanded Don't know if this can be done without the DLL but it's annoying when you take a Venice puppet back and there is no liberate option. In order to “liberate” a city originally belonging to an existing civilization, it This question is a bit old, but yes, you can liberate it after conquering+gifting. When a city is conquered, or acquired through a trade deal or other method, the player is prompted with up to four options of what to do with it: The first two options are always available, but the total amount depends on the city being captured, as not all captured cities are eligible to be razed Yes, you absolutely can liberate city-states in the Civilization series, specifically in Civ 5 and Civ 6. It also works for non-capitals. They're going to be on a much lower In this save game, any attempt to conquer the city state Milan will end up taking it over. This act of digital diplomacy not only earns you favor with the grateful city-state but also If a city-state captures a city that cannot be razed, what happens? The examples where this will happen, that I can think of, are: An original main R5: just took this former citystate city from korea, if it is useful information, yes i had terrible relations with them all game and were at war with them when they got I know it's possible to liberate city states , the question I'm asking is if I capture the city state to liberate it will it just disappear when j capture it. Cities do most of the advancement in a Did a patch change how to do this? I used to get a "Liberate" button after conquering a city state which had been previously conquered by an AI civ. Contrary to what you may expect, liberated cities would typically retain their original alignment, becoming allies or becoming In vanilla Civilization V, liberating a city is possible only if the city was part of an extinct civilization or city-state. This completely removes the city from the map and seriously harms relations with its previous owner. Can I "liberate" it a few turns later Augustus captured a city state i was ally with and when i kicked his ass during a war he declared he asked for peace and i even could ask for the Yes, you absolutely can liberate city-states in the Civilization series, specifically in Civ 5 and Civ 6. Especially considering how game breaking a mechanic Hi, Civ A has puppeted a city from Civ B. It happens to be located in between most of our area, so I'm planning to capture it No, you cannot liberate cities in Civ 5 in the classical sense. Is there a waiting period that the city Better to liberate City-State or just keep it? Usually I keep nearly every city I capture, but with the new unique bonuses from city states (like unique luxuries) - Later in the game I did the same thing with a different city-state ally that had been conquered and I could liberate that one. I go to war with Civ A and annex the city for strategic reasons. . So, perhaps the AI annexed the first one, but not the other one? If you conquer enough City-States, you'll eventually persuade them all to band together and declare permanent war on you. I found that the liberate option did not appear so I turned it into a puppet state. This is because I'm playing with the one city challenge turned Only in the most unique of circumstances Most of the time you will have plenty of citiesliberating another civ's capital will give them one city. When razing, a To convert a Free City to your Civ you can do two things - increase Loyalty pressure on it from your Civ, until it swings into your control, or conquer it with military force. So if you liberate Troyes FIRST, then you have the option between Can you liberate a city-state after you conquer it? So a Civ declared war on me and they have a suzerain city-state. This act of digital diplomacy not only earns you favor with the grateful city-state but also the only other way a civ can gain control of a city state is military conquest. If a City-State that declares permanent war on you is then During a war against Venice I captured one city state that it had turned into a puppet. You just have to deal with the war mongering malus To Raze the City means to rob the city of all its wealth and burn it to the ground. if you conquer the city state in question from your opposing civ, you'll be prompted to annex, raze, puppet state, or Yes, the game assumes that once you show no interest in liberating a Civ that you don't want to liberate any other cities. Now I get no option at all. What are the conditions for this. You don't need to wait for it. Sometimes city-states declare war on me because they are I liberate/give away cities if my civ becomes dominant militarily I do this to keep the other civs in check, so they spend time fighting/bickering with each other than with me. I am pretty sure if I tried to conquer It doesn't make any sense to me that you can liberate city states from other civilizations but you can't liberate them from yourself. In civ 5, you couldn't swing a city-state to your side if you were at war with it (and if you really wanted a city state, one option was to gain suzerainty, then declare war on anyone else that wanted that city Is that not possible? First I captured Venice, then I wanted to liberate the city states that they had captured, but I didn't get this option - only Back to Civilization V A city is the basic unit of a civilization, and in many ways they are its most valuable type of possession. No option to liberate.

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