return puppeting cities and the advanced city state diplomacy (ie; allies cant attack your allied city states) and gifting units to city states from civ v
my idea for civ vii
> spherical map using same trick as civ iv. minimalistic but realistic art style so the game runs smoother and looks more beautiful with less cartoony leaders.
> two leaders per civ, leaders also have traits that give an era based talent tree. as the game goes on you can...
i could see music from older civ games being a reward for obtaining acheivements:
ie;
beat the game as shaka zulu on deity to gain his civ v war theme on the jukebox
beat the game on settler to gain the civ i main menu theme on the jukebox
What if instead of being a normal unit, the GDR was the Domination Victory version of the Science Victory spaceship? A totally unstoppable world ending robot that is the ultimate expression of your civilization's warrior spirit, which also can launch nukes at cities like a football or stomp them...
If they do a fantasy game it should be a Fall From Heaven game, just like how Beyond Earth was Alpha Centauri and Rise and Fall came from Rhyes and Fall.
This dude making Civ 7 here. I think the most amazing part is that the tribe start effectively overhauls what yields are important to your empire, balancewise the game now scales up in complexity differently. You could easily create many more new systems and have them flow from concepts...
It would feel cool since you get your own globe to spin around and watch the sun rise over, a unique change of perspective compared to the cylindrical earths of V and VI.
Make the map a globe you can spin around by end-game. The main menu shows the map you have revealed in your last save game as a globe similar to the Civ IV main menu's view of Earth, letting you instantly remember where you last left off.
Kind of a crackpot question considering Civ VII is a long ways off, but still worth discussing. Heavy is the head on which the crown of reading tech quotes in a Civ game rests. IV had the legendary Leonard Nimoy, V had a powerful narrator whose name escapes me, and VI of course has Sean Bean...
revised version of my earlier list:
usa: jfk and abe lincoln
arabia: harun al-rashid and saladin
persia: xerxes i and shapur ii
inca: huyana capac and pachacuti
ottomans: mehmed ii and suleiman
india: indira gandhi and chandragupta
china: wu zetian and cao cao
japan: nobunaga and meiji...
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