Dancing Hoskuld
Deity
Not working in the pedia is the error that needs fixing.I loaded the game with Bohemia and it works now. Does not shows the cities on the pedia though for that particular civ. Besides that it worked.

Not working in the pedia is the error that needs fixing.I loaded the game with Bohemia and it works now. Does not shows the cities on the pedia though for that particular civ. Besides that it worked.
What happened to the mod? I can no longer put it with this new version of C2C.
Not working in the pedia is the error that needs fixing.I have the technology I just need to get to it. It takes less that 2 mins per Civ to fix the basics but I can only do about 5 at a time before going cross-eyed.
What exactly needs to be done with the remaining civs? I have some time to use up, and could lend a hand.Not working in the pedia is the error that needs fixing.I have the technology I just need to get to it. It takes less that 2 mins per Civ to fix the basics but I can only do about 5 at a time before going cross-eyed.
I think Toffer found a problem with a "e acute" character (at least in French that's what it's called). The last 'e' in "Hradec Králové" and the 2nd 'e' in "České Budějovice".The problem with Bohemia is that the pedia is not recognizing some text encoding. I had a thought this morning that may fix the problem, so I am going to try that first. What ever it is should be simple.
edit There are definitely some characters in the civilization infos files that are not of the encoding specified in the XML header. I am changing the header to the other encoding to see if that works. no it didn't fix it. Somewhere in the text (in Civ_Infos) there is a bad characterTracking it down will take forever, mostly due to my dyslexia
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What happens when two civs have the same city name? Prague is in the HRE city list as well. Maybe try changing it to 'Praha'?
Yes and no. This is very confusing, but - as Wikipedia puts it (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carolingian_Empire)Heck, Charlemagne wasn't even Holy Roman, he was Frankish
The Carolingian Empire is considered the first phase in the history of the Holy Roman Empire, which lasted until 1806.
Not really. That would be the https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_Germany which was just a part of the HRE. For most of its time the HRE consisted (in terms of current nations) of Germany, Austria, Switzerland, the Netherlands , Belgium, Luxembourg, the Czech Republic, Slovenia, Liechtenstein, and parts of France, Italy, Poland and Croatia. One of the most important capitals of the HRE was Prague (the HRE had no continuous seat of power, the emperor "ruled" - as much as the emperor was able to rule anyway - from the capital of his principality).since that entity is generally regarded as part of German history
Of course, this only illustrates the problem of having empires of different eras present in the game, which (very often) had overlapping territories - this is almost unavoidable, because these countries tend to be large, and there is only so much space on earth...
I agree though the tech tree presents some problems with this I think. North American Natives did not mine. This wasn't because they didn't see any potential reason to so much as they had a spiritual objection to it. As a result, they never developed past an Ancient Era. However, that is NOT to say that they did not achieve anything in all that time, technologically. I feel that they had continued to master various 'civics' and harmonious ways of working with the land to increase its overall health and capacity to provide agricultural and animal products in ways that our modern society takes for granted that we learned it from them and still fails to master in practice due to a lack of comparable values. In essence, this means they took a different tech path entirely, one more spiritual - not religious - but emotional, EQ focused, one of wisdom over intellect, health over dominance.That isn't really my problem, exactly. It's more that I completely disapprove of how Civ4 decided who gets to be a civ and who doesn't, with HRE, "Vikings" and "Native Americans" being the worst offenders. Personally, I think it should be determined not by dynasties, but by ethno-linguistic and/or ethno-dialectic groups, as that is what our modern understanding of nationality and nationalism correlates best with; I'm one of those weirdos who think indigenous tribes should be given priority over historical empires in terms of representation
I think you contradicted yourself here: You don't like the Native Americans being represented but you would prefer more indigenous tribes.That isn't really my problem, exactly. It's more that I completely disapprove of how Civ4 decided who gets to be a civ and who doesn't, with HRE, "Vikings" and "Native Americans" being the worst offenders. Personally, I think it should be determined not by dynasties, but by ethno-linguistic and/or ethno-dialectic groups, as that is what our modern understanding of nationality and nationalism correlates best with; I'm one of those weirdos who think indigenous tribes should be given priority over historical empires in terms of representation
How much do we even know about the Native Americans pre-extinction event? After about 90 % of them died, of course they had a different outlook than before. And if we include e.g. the Inca - they failed to develop the wheel, which put a stop to their development.In essence, this means they took a different tech path entirely, one more spiritual - not religious - but emotional, EQ focused, one of wisdom over intellect, health over dominance.
They still remember their own histories enough to recount. Tribal elders remember what their elders taught and so on back to the times before their outbreak and yes, they claim they had a LOT more population here long before our researchers were willing to admit that. But they can and do willingly share the values they were given and also insist that these values had been with them for a very long time. Many will tell you not to walk too heavily for you walk upon your mother - respecting the land under your feet as if it were a person was central to their beliefs in many tribes. You get to the Aztecs and south and you see a different set of values emerging entirely, one far more industrial. Even the ancient pueblo were more willing to dig, burrow, and build with stone, leading to the majority of permanent settlement ruins still in the US. You can see a lot of progress they were making with these construction techniques. But they never smelted for metals. Yet the Aztecs collected gold and silver in such great volumes the Spanish simply HAD to take it all from them.How much do we even know about the Native Americans pre-extinction event? After about 90 % of them died, of course they had a different outlook than before.
They would be in neolithic or at best copper age stasis.I agree though the tech tree presents some problems with this I think. North American Natives did not mine. This wasn't because they didn't see any potential reason to so much as they had a spiritual objection to it. As a result, they never developed past an Ancient Era. However, that is NOT to say that they did not achieve anything in all that time, technologically. I feel that they had continued to master various 'civics' and harmonious ways of working with the land to increase its overall health and capacity to provide agricultural and animal products in ways that our modern society takes for granted that we learned it from them and still fails to master in practice due to a lack of comparable values. In essence, this means they took a different tech path entirely, one more spiritual - not religious - but emotional, EQ focused, one of wisdom over intellect, health over dominance.
I have often considered adding a 'spiritual' property (though I think the term needs to be changed to something that doesn't indicate anything religious to anyone), something that represents integrity and wisdom, that if you take the standard European development path you'll have a resultingly horrendous problem with and if you take a less aggressive approach to the game you'll excel at, along with an alternative tech tree that switches at whether you will take this path or the path of industry through mining. It would probably need to be a modmod or option because it would not work for those who want to only have one page worth of tech tree on the y axis. Means to reach some really powerful spiritual stuff would be available down that road, equally as strong, in the end, and perhaps in some ways achieved earlier, as the industrially driven accomplishments of the future eras.
This could be a very long term future design project anyhow. All inspired based on agreement with what you expressed.
Stasis in regards to what we call progress from our modern outlook, but that doesn't mean they weren't getting anywhere - it was just a vastly different somewhere they were heading. It's incredibly arrogant of our society to think they were simply 'stuck' but it's a fairly common outlook.They would be in neolithic or at best copper age stasis.
Middle East and China also were developing until they went into stasis for spiritual/religious reasons at later technological level.
You would end up with optimized pre renaissance civilizations/tribes and nothing else.
Stasis would eventually end somewhere.
There were a lot of factors, that made Europe enter technological/scientific epoch (Renaissance and later eras).
Tibet lasted bit longer (what is 500 years difference, if humans first appeared in America ~15 000 years ago?), and they never had equivalent of Renaissance.Stasis in regards to what we call progress from our modern outlook, but that doesn't mean they weren't getting anywhere - it was just a vastly different somewhere they were heading. It's incredibly arrogant of our society to think they were simply 'stuck' but it's a fairly common outlook.
Even if there's any truth in that view, we have somehow failed to create the game basis reason for this stasis.
I agree I was just using one example and there are many - and nearly all of those alternative examples you give may well have been developing down other routes as well. Largely a lot of what those civs had achieved we either destroyed as we subjugated them or we stole and adopted into our cultures and ways of life with little fanfare. Some survive on despite our best efforts to supress those ways of life and outlooks they earned through generations of focus on different ways of life than ours. Tibet is a GREAT example. Those people knew what it is to be at peace inside themselves and how to act in harmony with one another in ways that we can only imagine. We've learned much from them thankfully, but still our society and the people in it would usually prefer to be competitive than to be happy and go on ignoring the discoveries they made in how to live a blissful life. But of what benefit is that on a tech tree?Tibet lasted bit longer (what is 500 years difference, if humans first appeared in America ~15 000 years ago?), and they never had equivalent of Renaissance.
There were other indigenous tribes in Africa, Asia and Oceania too.
They had way more time here.
Blissful life until getting wrecked by technological civilization << total domination of omniverse (or just solar system) - risk of annihilation during technological (Renaissance - Nanotech) epoch.I agree I was just using one example and there are many - and nearly all of those alternative examples you give may well have been developing down other routes as well. Largely a lot of what those civs had achieved we either destroyed as we subjugated them or we stole and adopted into our cultures and ways of life with little fanfare. Some survive on despite our best efforts to supress those ways of life and outlooks they earned through generations of focus on different ways of life than ours. Tibet is a GREAT example. Those people knew what it is to be at peace inside themselves and how to act in harmony with one another in ways that we can only imagine. We've learned much from them thankfully, but still our society and the people in it would usually prefer to be competitive than to be happy and go on ignoring the discoveries they made in how to live a blissful life. But of what benefit is that on a tech tree?
You might be wrong about that... but then you'd never know it while you maintain that belief.You can't get superpowers just by prayers