Credits Per Turn

Please display credits per turn next to the Credits without having to hover your mouse over it.

 

Thanks.

4,253 views 6 replies
Reply #1 Top

I agree entirely!  If not the exact credits per turn amount, at least an arrow pointing either up or down.  Thank you!

Reply #2 Top

Somewhat related: I see the numbers are white when you are in the positive, and they turn to yellow when it goes negative. But it was somewhat hard to notice the difference on my system at least. Not saying they need to go all the way green and red, but perhaps the differentiation could be increased?

 

 

Reply #3 Top

Quoting Zarkov, reply 2

Somewhat related: I see the numbers are white when you are in the positive, and they turn to yellow when it goes negative. But it was somewhat hard to notice the difference on my system at least. Not saying they need to go all the way green and red, but perhaps the differentiation could be increased?

 

 

 

Or just show a + or - number next to it. Not hard to do, easier to program in fact.

Reply #4 Top

The current color code is pretty much the same as GalCiv 2, in fact imho, it should be left as it was in GalCiv 2, it was perfect.

White : Treasury in the positive no deficit: ( Used to be Green In GalCiv II )

Yellow: Tresury in the positive with deficit

Orange: Treasury in the negative with no deficit.  ( orange is missing in GalCiv III now )

Red : Treasury in the negative With deficit

The claim that White and yellow might be hard to tell apart on some monitors might be genuine although I do not have this problem here. For this reason I support the use of Green.

Reply #5 Top

Quoting EvilMaxWar, reply 4

The claim that White and yellow might be hard to tell apart on some monitors might be genuine although I do not have this problem here. For this reason I support the use of Green.

I agree with this--the color difference (or lack thereof) wasn't an issue for me, but I think green text would be much easier to read at a glance.

Reply #6 Top

The colorization was not hard to separate when focusing on the numbers in a dedicated way. But the transition was not dramatic enough to notice, when busy in other areas. I do not claim the differentiation was next to unspottable, just very neighborly as color scales go. :-p