I'm using the 1.06.1 patch, in only my second campaign, and the first time playing the French Indian War.
I won very easily at the normal setting, with normal aggression and AI detection at low bonus.
I can't be this good and will now try going to the next level of difficulty. I'm posting this in hopes of being helpful to Pocus about whether this sounds right with the game engine at the normal setting.
I was playing the French (inspired that the French are the good guys since they develop software as good as this). I held every single objective with 24 turns to go. The Brits had much larger forces, in much better positions, to really hit me head on at Albany -- or any other objective (because I was spread pretty thinly).
I kept waiting for the big hit. They made moves toward Montreal, but never went farther than fighting and holding Crown Point for a while. When I tired of waiting for the big conflict, I figured I would commit suicide by pushing into Boston and New York. I easily captured Boston and held it. The Brits abandoned Crown Point and did bounce me out of New York when time ran out.
But for 24 turns, with the game ending, the Brits made no real attempt to knock me out of Albany or any other major objective. They were content to concentrate all forces in one spot and then sit.
In the whole campaign, there were many turns with no attacks at all, allowing me to continue amassing a lead and roll up more strategic and objective cities.
Have I become this good, just by all my reading and posting on the forums? I'm sure I'm not, with my blunders and feeble attempts to figure things out.
Or will I notice a significantly harder time by going to the next setting? Is the AI detection bonus or more "think" time for the AI a dramatic way to influence these results?
I'm really asking myself and will experiment and find out. But I also wanted to post in case this seemed like the Brits are too timid even with the 1.06.1 patches.
I still don't see any real advantage to building forts or depots, etc., even though the distances are quite considerable in the French Indian War. It certainly didn't seem to hurt me. Am I missing something in the strategic importance of doing this? Will this become a big deal at the harder settings?