View Full Version : New Civilization: Bavaria


abethebrewer
Dec 30, 2005, 06:15 PM
I'm working on a Module for Bavaria, and I am far enough to start asking for feedback.

Bavaria0.1.zip (http://autophobia.no-ip.com/~abek/bavaria0.1.zip) v 0.1

Here is what I have so far:
Leaders:

Ludwig II - Creative and Industrious
Franz Josef Strauss - Philosophical and Expansive

Starting Techs: Agriculture and Mining
UU: Alpine Troops (replaces Marine, Flat movement, 5 movement points, starts with Guerilla and March)
(replaces Marine, 1-2 first strikes, starts with Guerilla II and March)
Unique Building: Beergarden (simply a renamed Colosseum)

I have most of the buttons created, but know nothing about making the 3D models. Learning that is my next step.

Most of the text is in both German and English, but aside from city names, nothing else has been translated, and the Civilopedia is lacking.

I would like to get the Alpine Troops to have no penalty on hills, and be able to move over peak squares... but I can't figure out how.

I don't know that starting a unit with Guerilla II is kosher, but the unit does come late in the game, and I wanted the movement bonus over mountains... is there a better way to get that?

I'll call this version 0.1, and see where it goes from there. Any comments or improvements are welcome.

Screenshots: http://autophobia.no-ip.com/~abek/bavaria/

Shqype
Dec 30, 2005, 06:49 PM
UU: Alpine Troops (replaces Marine, 1-2 first strikes, starts with Guerilla II and March)
That is overpowered, the US Navy Seal starts with March promotion, never mind another one too and more first strikes.

Lares
Dec 31, 2005, 04:48 AM
Nice idea. But Franz-Josef Strauss with the trait philosophical? This is a joke, isn't it? He was a die-hard reactionary and polarized the public like few others. He had several scandals, including the "Spiegel-Affäre", in which he simply arrested the editor-in-chief of the influental "Der Spiegel" magazine, Rudolf Augstein, for more than 100 days. Simply because "Der Spiegel" attributed the German army as being "prepared for defense to only a limited extent", Augstein and the magazine were accused of treason. Strauss was forced to step down as defense minister as consequence. If you really want to use him as bavarian leader, I would rather give him the traits aggressive and expansive.

Italicus
Dec 31, 2005, 09:04 AM
Andrea Hofer would be a good Bavarian leader.

Missrevolver
Dec 31, 2005, 11:12 AM
Nah Pope Benedict XVI would be a good leader!

Italicus
Jan 01, 2006, 04:04 PM
Nah Pope Benedict XVI would be a good leader!

Yeah! But for Bavarians. :D

abethebrewer
Jan 01, 2006, 11:43 PM
Nice idea. But Franz-Josef Strauss with the trait philosophical? This is a joke, isn't it? He was a die-hard reactionary and polarized the public like few others. He had several scandals, including the "Spiegel-Affäre", in which he simply arrested the editor-in-chief of the influental "Der Spiegel" magazine, Rudolf Augstein, for more than 100 days. Simply because "Der Spiegel" attributed the German army as being "prepared for defense to only a limited extent", Augstein and the magazine were accused of treason. Strauss was forced to step down as defense minister as consequence. If you really want to use him as bavarian leader, I would rather give him the traits aggressive and expansive.

Strauss himself might not have been philosophical, but shouldn't the traits reflect the influence that a leader had on the civilization? Strauss might have been aggressive as a person, but if he was running an unprepared army then aggressive would be a BAD trait for him.

I chose philisophical based on this section in the Wikipedia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Franz-Josef_Strauss#Legacy
Which says he "managed to transform Bavaria from the once-agrarian state to one of the centers of technology in Germany that it is today."

He might have been a die-hard reactionary, but like it or not, die-hard reactionary is a philosophy. He is often seen as the philosophical father of the modern CSU, too.

Strauss is too close to our time to be anything but a controversal choice, and I accept that. The game's leaders seem to be a generation older than Strauss at the youngest. I don't like his politics, but he is quite admired in Bavaria.

abethebrewer
Jan 01, 2006, 11:50 PM
Andrea Hofer would be a good Bavarian leader.

I don't know that an Austrian would be appropriate; especially one that lead anti-Bavarian uprisings!

Italicus
Jan 02, 2006, 12:29 AM
I don't know that an Austrian would be appropriate; especially one that lead anti-Bavarian uprisings!

Yes... But Hofer was of Bavarian origin like all the German High Atesinians.
For this reason I have proposed he.

Anima Croatorum
Jan 02, 2006, 05:39 AM
What about Elisabeth von Wittelsbach?

Also, sound theme: Vengaboys - Shalalala, or the jingle from the Erdinger beer commercial.

abethebrewer
Jan 02, 2006, 12:38 PM
I think maybe Alois Hingerl would be better -- he does after all have a letter with advice straight from God on how the Bavarian State should be run.

Missrevolver
Jan 04, 2006, 07:53 AM
Yeah! But for Bavarians. :D

Pope Benedict XVI:king: is a Bavarian. :mischief:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benedict_XVI

Thats why I mentioned him because I thought he'd be the perfect spiritual leader for Bavaria especially since Germany as a whole hasn't had the papacy in centuries... :)

Skanderbeg
Jan 24, 2006, 07:15 AM
sounds great:)

some suggestions:

unique National Wonder: Neuschwanstein Castle (replaces Shakespears Theatre)

monastery brewery: replacees cathedral, every brewery needs three monasteries instead of temples, double building speed with wheat.

Great Wonder "Oktoberfest" replacing Broadway, giving 7 pieces of the happiness ressource "Beer".

jkline3
Jan 27, 2006, 02:14 PM
As long as we're headed down the Oktoberfest path, how about "Ein Prosit" as the anthem?