rdfs:comment
| - Civilizations are playable factions, each of which represents a historical nation, empire or cultural group. Each civilization in Civilization VI has a unique ability and two unique components: a unit and a piece of infrastructure, which may be a building, a district, or a tile improvement. Vanilla Civilization VI included 18 different civilizations at the launch, with the Aztecs (19th) as a pre-order bonus that became available to everyone 90 days after the launch. The Poles, Australians, Persians, Macedonians, Nubians, Khmers, and Indonesians have since been added as DLC.
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abstract
| - Civilizations are playable factions, each of which represents a historical nation, empire or cultural group. Each civilization in Civilization VI has a unique ability and two unique components: a unit and a piece of infrastructure, which may be a building, a district, or a tile improvement. Civilization VI makes a distinction between a civilization and its leader, not unlike Civilization IV - each civilization can now have multiple leaders, and each leader comes with his or her own unique ability and pursues a specific agenda throughout the game (when controlled by the AI). Some leader abilities also provide an additional unique unit. So, the civilization's unique unit, infrastructure and ability remain unchanged, while the leader ability and agenda are affected by the leader chosen. Thus the same civilization may behave quite differently throughout the game, depending on which leader leads it. A wise player will learn not only all different civilizations' special abilities and units, but also their leaders' special traits and agendas, which will allow him or her to anticipate the AI behavior during the game. Vanilla Civilization VI included 18 different civilizations at the launch, with the Aztecs (19th) as a pre-order bonus that became available to everyone 90 days after the launch. The Poles, Australians, Persians, Macedonians, Nubians, Khmers, and Indonesians have since been added as DLC. For now, there are only two civilizations with multiple leaders: the Greeks, who may be led by either Pericles or Gorgo; and the Indians, who may be led by either Gandhi or Chandragupta (in Rise and Fall).
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