Well, with America in there is a 100% guarantee they will be around four millenia before time.navman74 said:Tacfun, still trying to knock my country out of the game..uggghhh
I still dont see why it is more realistic to have a Byzantium in 4000BC or a Sumeria in 2000AD than to have America, but to each their own Glad you came back anyway.
The terrain getting better as time goes on is with invisible resources that become available in the mid Medieval era, and the American horses are just like any other type of horse, with the exception that it appears with Military Tradition as opposed to The Wheel - horses weren't native to the Americas, so they appear later, when Cavalry are made available. And, technically, there are two different horse resources - one for America, and one for the rest of the world. They look the same, they just appear at different times, and since they're technically different resources they are required for two different units - the American horses are required for American Cavalry and the normal horses are required for normal Cavalry. Of course, American Cavalry and normal Cavalry have the same exact stats.navman74 said:Quick question Rhye or anyone..
As I mentioned before I am in the early stage of making a mod, but as you may have seen by my question, I am a total novice at the game-code type parts of it. A very great idea I have seen only(I think) in RoC mod is the invisible resources where the player can't necessarily tell right away that say their LM terrain is different from the norm, as well as the horses that suddenly appear in America when they should...How??? is my question. I *think* the appearing horses probably were set up just like oil,etc where they can only be "discovered" with another advance, but how did you make terrain the player cannot tell..I love it.
Ron
Three_Crowns said:About the Hanging Gardens. I can understand that you have chosen wine as a prerequisite. But looking at the other wonders and the map, this makes it sort of an European wonder instead of an Middle Eastern. Also, I am not sure if it actually contained any vines, as it is from the 6th century bc and as far as I know, wine was first introduced to the region by Alexander the Great in the 4th century bc.