An open-source Android/Desktop port of Civ V, Made with LibGDX on Android Studio
Is this order:
- Polish! As you may have noticed, Unciv is fully functional but rough around the edges. This means:
- UI+UX improvements (suggestions welcome!)
- Better automation, AI etc. in-game
- Development and distribution cycle - Done! (tests, f-droid/Google Play/itch.io deployment)
- Missing features from Vanilla - Natural wonders (done!), city-state quests, missing civs etc.
- G&K mechanics - religion, faith etc.
- BNW mechanics - trade routes etc.
Programmers start here!
Translators start here!
Modders start here!
You can join us in any of the open issue, or work on improving anything you want - once you're finished, issue a pull request and it'll go into the next version!
If not, you can help by spreading the word - vote for Unciv where you can, mention it on Reddit or Twitter etc, and help us with new ideas of how to get the word out!
If it's in the original Civ V, then yes!
There's a lot left to implement, so it's hard to give an estimation of when exactly each feature will be added, but we're constantly improving!
If not, then the feature won't be added until we've finished all the features from the original Civ - as mentioned, this will take a while!
THE most common request, hands down. Everyone wants their favorite Civ in the game, I get that. But there are so many other things to work on - automations, AI, UI, graphics, bugs, and of course other features from the original game that are currently missing. Eventually we'll have them all, but the key word is "eventually".
In the meantime, you can mod it yourself!
Considering how long it took to get this far, no.
Yes! Windows and Linux versions are available at itch.io, and if you're using the Itch app, your game will stay up-to-date - and we release pretty frequently so that's an issue ;)
If you have Java 8, and are familiar with the command line, there are (considerably smaller) JARs in Releases which you can run with java -jar Unciv.jar
. This is also (currently) the only way to run the game on MacOS.
Be aware that the game will generate files inside the folder where the Jar is located!
If you also have JDK 8 installed, you can compile Unciv on your own by cloning (or downloading and unzipping) the project, opening a terminal in the Unciv folder and run the following commands:
Running: gradlew desktop:run
Building: gradlew desktop:dist
Running: ./gradlew desktop:run
Building: ./gradlew desktop:dist
If the terminal returns Permission denied
or Command not found
on Mac/Linux, run chmod +x ./gradlew
first. This is a one-time procedure.
If you get an error that Android SDK folder wasn't found, firstly install it by doing in terminal:
sudo apt update && sudo apt install android-sdk
(Debian, Ubuntu, Mint etc.)
After that you should put its folder to the file local.properties
by adding this line:
sdk.dir = /path/to/android/sdk
which can be /usr/lib/android-sdk
or something other.
If during the first launch it throws an error that the JDK version is wrong try this JDK installation.
Gradle may take up to several minutes to download files. Be patient. After building, the output .JAR file should be in /desktop/build/libs/Unciv.jar
For actual development, you'll probably need to download Android Studio and build it yourself - see Contributing :)
I'm not planning on it.
It means paying money to Apple, yet another release path, and since I don't have an IOS device it means I can't test it properly.
LibGDX doesn't work on Raspberry, and so neither does Unciv.
If you're really invested, I'd be thrilled if you could make it work - this seems to be possible, see https://github.com/chrishumphreys/LIbGDX-Pi for his detailed instructions
All the tutorial information is available in-game at menu > civilopedia > tutorials
All the information is included in the amazing Civ V wiki
Since this is a Civ V clone, you can search Google for how to play Civ V and there are loads of answers =)
Alternatively, you could join us on Discord and ask there =D
This is a subject that I've heard a lot of hearsay on but no solid sources of law.
From what I gather, it is illegal:
- To use the Civilization name
- To impersonate the Civ games (so calling yourself civi|zation with a similar logo, for instance)
- To use any assets from the original game (images, sound etc) - they belong to Firaxis
From what I understand, intellectual property rights apply to names, characters and settings. They do not apply to mechanics - as I'm sure you know, there are a billion Flappy Bird knockoffs
If anyone has any real legal sources, or can shed some light on the limits of what is and is not allowed, I'd be happy to hear!
Multiplayer takes advantage of Dropbox, which is non-free software, for syncing purposes.
Single player does not use this feature.