Thenewwwguy
Deity
fair enoughBarely.
fair enoughBarely.
Soon. 21st of May I think.
Thx. I thought that there is preorder or sth.
i’ve heard a lot of Dihya for the Berbers talk
Barely.
i’d like to see something about uniting city states. We missed out on it with Maya but Hawaii could still do it bcs Kamehameha I united the four major islesI just want Hawai’i with kamekameha
they could have some cool volcano abilities and a war canoe uu
I agree with most of this, but honestly, I’m glad georgia and colombia are in.
Colombia will probably serve as a conduit for Bolivar’s cult-of-personality, which is fine given Colombia is relatively historically influential beyond simply Gran Colombia (see: panama canal)
Georgia, while perhaps not the best choice, under Tamar, was a caucasus powerhouse, and while that may have been better represented by Armenia, Georgia isn’t a bad choice.
I think it's a bit myopic to presume that VI needs to adhere to some sort of "tradition,
" especially when it has clearly been bucking some civ traditions. We now have the HRE represented under Germany,
and Carthage blobbed into the broader Phoenician culture.
If the game actually cared about "tradition," we wouldn't have Canada or Scotland or Australia or Georgia or Hungary because those "weren't empires."
Wasn’t Gran Colombia’s capital Bogota and not Caracas? *just checked wikipedia, yes it is*Colombia isn't the same state as Gran Colombia. Gran Colombia was, in essence, a Venezuelan empire that incorporated what are now Colombia and Ecuador. There isn't even a clear reason they couldn't have called the civ Venezuela and used Bolivar as the leader, but Gran Colombia is the name the community has tended to adopt.
I'm not arguing that either state is necessarily a bad choice, but neither would have been on the developers' radar as civs to add ahead of many that are missing if not for a fan community pushing them.
Other than the marketing needs of a brand name, there's no reason other than tradition to have a Civ series at all. Civ VI is no closer mechanically to Civ I than games like Humankind are - maps are different, resources are different, factions have distinct rules they never did in earlier versions, there are entirely novel systems and resources, and basic elements of the first game like caravans are missing. All it has in common are things that are staples of this type of gameplay - tech progression, growth and production resources, and settling cities on a map. The only purpose of calling the game 'Civilization VI' is the existence of an established fanbase with expectations for what a "Civilization game" is based on common threads running through the series - i.e. tradition.
You could remove builder units altogether, as some similar games do. You could remove micromanagement of settlement by taking the Stellaris approach of having set colonisable sites (in that case planets, but Endless games do the same with provinces on maps based on a single world) on which you can click a 'build colony ship' button to settle. etc. etc. The only real reasons not to do those things are traditions that define what Civilization is as a series. The head designer of the card game Magic the Gathering has often given a talk in which he explains that the reason the game repeats so many of its effects and reprints cards routinely in every set is to provide a through-line that makes the game 'feel' like Magic.
Exactly the same applies to Civ, and is among other things why we always have Aztecs and Zulu rather than having them take a break every edition or two. It's why Gandhi is always the Indian leader, not to mention why he usually has a penchant for nuclear weapons.
Civ IV is the only Civ game that has ever treated the HRE as separate from Germany - that was bucking the trend. Germany has always included the HRE in every other incarnation. Civ V had the Landsknecht as a German unique unit, and Germany was led by Frederick II in Civ II. The HRE has never been revisited as a separate civ likely due to fan pushback precisely because it was an unnecessary departure from the rest of the series.
Less blobbing it than simply renaming Carthage and expanding its city list. I agree it's an odd choice, given that for the most part recent Civ games have 'deblobbed' existing blobs and the city state mechanic worked well for representing the Phoenician city states in Civ V, but it's no more a departure from tradition than renaming 'The Vikings' Denmark in Civ V and Norway in Civ VI. It's the same long-established inclusion in the series under a new name.
Sumeria isn't Babylon renamed - Sumeria and Babylon have coexisted in three versions of the game to date.
Having factions in the game that weren't empires is, in fact, a Civ tradition stretching back to the first game - see my comments on the Zulu. Adding new civs does nothing to run against the game's tradition, and you aren't doing anything very novel by having 11 civs from Civilization in the game instead of 12. Developers' energies are better-spent in exploring novelty in gameplay. In practical terms calling a civ Civ X rather than Civ Y makes no gameplay difference to anything - the sole reason to name civs and leaders is to appeal to fan desires and expectations. Babylon is an expectation there's no good reason to defy.
Wasn’t Gran Colombia’s capital Bogota and not Caracas? *just checked wikipedia, yes it is*
I was going by the fact that Bolivar was Venezuelan and that Venezuela was created before the other states, and the base from which Gran Colombia expanded - Bolivar created Gran Colombia from a Venezuelan base. That he then relocated the capital I don't think is particularly significant - that prompted the modern Colombian state to treat Bogota as its capital, but then Indonesia adopting Dutch Batavia as its capital Jakarta doesn't make Indonesia a direct successor to the Netherlands.
I was going by the fact that Bolivar was Venezuelan and that Venezuela was created before the other states, and the base from which Gran Colombia expanded - Bolivar created Gran Colombia from a Venezuelan base. That he then relocated the capital I don't think is particularly significant - that prompted the modern Colombian state to treat Bogota as its capital, but then Indonesia adopting Dutch Batavia as its capital Jakarta doesn't make Indonesia a direct successor to the Netherlands.
At the end of the Maya first look. Are they actually aware that some of us would like to, but can't?
Spoiler :
This is why I have a problem with Civ6 portraying him as a devious, backstabbing villain.
actually a very good point. they could’ve focused more on his governance than his war stuff though. there’s enough military focused early game civsI mean he's known for his benevolence to the people he lead. Not necessarily to the rival leaders he conquered (outside of politically convenient occasions). Him being devious and backstabbing is directed towards the other leaders. Occupied cities getting no penalties is the representation of his manage/respect of the people he conquered.
I agree they could have done more emphasis with the later aspect, but I don't know that there's as big of a gulf between Cyrus and his in game portrayal as say Gandhi or Poundmaker.
To be honest it needs a complete redesign from the ground up, as does Gilgamesh the Ridiculous, so...I'm not hopeful.Hopefully the next time Sumer appears in Civ it 1) gets called Sumer, 2) gets a better-attested leader like Gudea, and 3) actually gets some research put into it instead of just "Epic of Gilgamesh lol."
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I doubt we are going to see another Polynesian Civ, the Maori already has the wayfinding ability. But if they give that ability exclusively to the war canoes it could work out.I just want Hawai’i with kamekameha
they could have some cool volcano abilities and a war canoe uu
Well actually the state then was called Colombia. It's just that historians today use the term "Gran Colombia" to differentiate the two. So there is more precedence for calling the civ Colombia instead of Venezuela.Colombia isn't the same state as Gran Colombia. Gran Colombia was, in essence, a Venezuelan empire that incorporated what are now Colombia and Ecuador. There isn't even a clear reason they couldn't have called the civ Venezuela and used Bolivar as the leader, but Gran Colombia is the name the community has tended to adopt.
Less blobbing it than simply renaming Carthage and expanding its city list. I agree it's an odd choice, given that for the most part recent Civ games have 'deblobbed' existing blobs and the city state mechanic worked well for representing the Phoenician city states in Civ V, but it's no more a departure from tradition than renaming 'The Vikings' Denmark in Civ V and Norway in Civ VI. It's the same long-established inclusion in the series under a new name.
Sumeria isn't Babylon renamed - Sumeria and Babylon have coexisted in three versions of the game to date.
Having factions in the game that weren't empires is, in fact, a Civ tradition stretching back to the first game - see my comments on the Zulu. Adding new civs does nothing to run against the game's tradition, and you aren't doing anything very novel by having 11 civs from Civilization in the game instead of 12. Developers' energies are better-spent in exploring novelty in gameplay. In practical terms calling a civ Civ X rather than Civ Y makes no gameplay difference to anything - the sole reason to name civs and leaders is to appeal to fan desires and expectations. The Maya civ we've just seen could as easily have been Babylon - it even has a unique unit appropriate to the era - with cosmetic differences but the same ruleset. Babylon is an expectation there's no good reason to defy.
You can't subscribe to their YT channel?
This is clearly not "subscribing to their YouTube channel". Don't be dense. It is tied very specifically to the New Frontier Pass; or if I've got that wrong, maybe the Civ.com website.
I'd say that's almost definitely a call to action for people to subscribe to their YouTube channel considering the Subscribe Now text is right below the subscribe button. Besides, the New Frontier Pass is not a subscription, it's a thing you pay full price for straight away (or buy the DLC as it comes out, but that's still not subscribing).