Moderator Action: Enough!beats me. He accused them of using the far right eugenics i think
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Moderator Action: Enough!beats me. He accused them of using the far right eugenics i think
I would prefer they use the term “civilization” to “empire” anyway. When the game talks about the Georgian, Maori or Canadian empires, it just feels goofy.
According to Wikipedia at least, the name Georgian Empire is synonymous with the medieval Kingdom of Georgia, though I have yet to find that name anywhere else. It talks about it being a pan-Caucasian empire.1) Almost-empire kingdoms (Kongo, Georgia, Phoenicia)
I think the main complaint would be that they picked another European Civ from the British Isles, which could be considered part of Victoria's "United Kingdom" civ along with Scotland.If they released Ireland, players would then be complaining why one small kingdom got in while Switzerland, Belgium, Finland, and Bohemia were passed over. The more they can keep the standard within some definition of "large," they don't have to deal with the backlash of failing to please everyone.)
I mean, India is also part of Victoria's United Kingdom under the same terms as Ireland.I think the main complaint would be that they picked another European Civ from the British Isles, which could be considered part of Victoria's "United Kingdom" civ along with Scotland.
Even discounting Carthage, Tyre had an empire of overseas colonies like Kition on Crete, various Mediterranean islands (including Sicily and Corsica), Gader (modern Cadiz, Spain), and, of course, Carthage (which continued to pay tribute to Tyre long after it became the more important city).Phoenicia is close enough with Carthage similarities.
I agree. It wouldn't be my complaint but I have seen others bring it up with Scotland. Barring Scotland, she does say she's Queen of Ireland in her introduction.I mean, India is also part of Victoria's United Kingdom under the same terms as Ireland.Plus I'm pretty certain the Ireland most people want is Medieval Ireland, before it was conquered by successive Danish, Norman, and English invaders.
robert the bruce would’ve been a good medieval scottish leader had the rest of scotland’s design been medieval.I agree. It wouldn't be my complaint but I have seen others bring it up with Scotland. Barring Scotland, she does say she's Queen of Ireland in her introduction.
I think most people wanted Medieval Scotland too. We sort of did but only with Robert the Bruce, as the leader.
In that case they should reconcile us with Ethiopia.
Give us a modern leader and make the Civ ability, UU, and unique infrastructure all from different time periods.
According to Wikipedia at least, the name Georgian Empire is synonymous with the medieval Kingdom of Georgia, though I have yet to find that name anywhere else. It talks about it being a pan-Caucasian empire.
Phoenicia is close enough with Carthage similarities.
I think the main complaint would be that they picked another European Civ from the British Isles, which could be considered part of Victoria's "United Kingdom" civ along with Scotland.
Though if they were based on more Celtic influences that would make people happy.
The islands--whether the Hebrides or the Northern Isles--were economically and administratively a rather unimportant part of Scotland and I wouldn't want a civ designed around them, but the Norse-Gaelic culture that developed there is really cool. There we go: let's have Norwegian Vikings again in Civ7, but make Thorfinn the Mighty the ruler.very little of scotland past 1100 was particularly celtic to begin with, just the highlands, and islands
it was never the best replacement for the celts. I’d rather have Ireland than any of those civs, specifically Medieval, Brian-led Ireland
that would be good hope for the gauls or irelandAnd I’m still hoping that Scotland wasn’t really intended to replace the Celts at all...![]()
it was never the best replacement for the celts. I’d rather have Ireland than any of those civs, specifically Medieval, Brian-led Ireland
I wouldn't say it's anachronistic. While there are a few linguists who disagree and while there is no agreement about the details, there is general academic consensus that Goidelic and Brythonic are related to Gaulish and Hispano-Celtic. It's only anachronistic if they have the Medieval rulers call themselves Celts, as the modern Celtic nations didn't start calling themselves Celtic (or rather start being called Celtic) until the 18th century.It was a fine replacement for the Celts once you recognise what the devs' priorities are: they don't particularly care about representing ancient European tribal groups, they care about representing the modern non-English demographics in the British Isles, people who collectively use the label "Celts" even though it's historically anachronistic.
I agree with your assessment, but I think it's unfortunate. Of the Medieval Celtic nations, only Ireland is all that interesting; the Welsh were absorbed by England really quickly, the Scots were more Anglo-Norman than Irish (the Highlands and the Isles were considered a wild frontier far from the center of power), and the Bretons would be more French than Celtic (though a prime candidate for an Arthurian-flavored civ, by which I mean a civ suffused with Arthurian-style chivalry and poetry, not one led by Arthur). Man doesn't even come into the discussion; it was an Irish colony.People who start from the view that Firaxis wants the Celts (i.e. the ancient civ) in the game and decided to use a single country to represent them, as they did with the Vikings, are looking at it backwards. They didn't put the Scots in the game because they wanted to represent the Celts
Reasonably then, the best ways to represent celts in civ would be Ireland or the GaulsI wouldn't say it's anachronistic. While there are a few linguists who disagree and while there is no agreement about the details, there is general academic consensus that Goidelic and Brythonic are related to Gaulish and Hispano-Celtic. It's only anachronistic if they have the Medieval rulers call themselves Celts, as the modern Celtic nations didn't start calling themselves Celtic (or rather start being called Celtic) until the 18th century.
I agree with your assessment, but I think it's unfortunate. Of the Medieval Celtic nations, only Ireland is all that interesting; the Welsh were absorbed by England really quickly, the Scots were more Anglo-Norman than Irish (the Highlands and the Isles were considered a wild frontier far from the center of power), and the Bretons would be more French than Celtic (though a prime candidate for an Arthurian-flavored civ, by which I mean a civ suffused with Arthurian-style chivalry and poetry, not one led by Arthur). Man doesn't even come into the discussion; it was an Irish colony.
I wouldn't say it's anachronistic. While there are a few linguists who disagree and while there is no agreement about the details, there is general academic consensus that Goidelic and Brythonic are related to Gaulish and Hispano-Celtic. It's only anachronistic if they have the Medieval rulers call themselves Celts, as the modern Celtic nations didn't start calling themselves Celtic (or rather start being called Celtic) until the 18th century.
I agree with your assessment, but I think it's unfortunate. Of the Medieval Celtic nations, only Ireland is all that interesting; the Welsh were absorbed by England really quickly, the Scots were more Anglo-Norman than Irish (the Highlands and the Isles were considered a wild frontier far from the center of power), and the Bretons would be more French than Celtic (though a prime candidate for an Arthurian-flavored civ, by which I mean a civ suffused with Arthurian-style chivalry and poetry, not one led by Arthur). Man doesn't even come into the discussion; it was an Irish colony.
No, calling the Scots/Irish/Welsh "Celts" was an Enlightenment thing. It was initially meant as derogatory, but it got picked up by romantic nationalists on one side and sentimental romantics (looking for the "Noble Savage") on the other. That being said, the Gaels and Britons recognized that their languages were related certainly no later than the High Middle Ages; the term Celtic just wasn't in use yet.Didn't the Medieval English kings and lords use terms like "the Celtic <insert derogative for rabble> on the Frontiers of the Realm," and such, or is that just in Hollywood and British cinema?
That they never revisited the Civ III Gallic Celts in later games speaks volumes.
I would skip Florence and go with Dandolo and di Campofregoso. If we are still sticking to leaders as representing "empires" or "leagues", then the Venetian and Genoese empires should take priority over Florence.
Also, we have enough Medicis in the game.
Even though the Navajo seem more likely, the one thing that the Apache do have over them is a big personality in Geronimo.Brian Boru (Ireland), Menelik II (Ethiopia) Timur (Timurids), both Rajaraja and Rajendra Chola (Chola), Akbar and Nur Jahan (Mughals), Sabuktigin and Mahmud of Ghazna (Ghaznavids), Dihya (Berbers), Mathilda of Tuscany (Italy), Manuelito (Navajo), Tecumseh (Shawnee), Chief Seattle (Seattle), Sharjah Al-Durr (Arabia), Arwa al-Sulayhi (Yemen), al-Hasan ibn Suleiman (Swahili), personally come to mind as ‘big personality leaders’ that I personally think would be good fits
UA Antichi Stati Italiani
Holy Site, Campus, Harbor, Commercial Hub, Theater Square, and Harbor can only be built in your capital city. Cannot recruit Great Generals. Non-capital cities can only be built on your home continent but produce +2 science +2 faith +2 culture +2 production +1 Diplomatic Favor.
I would prefer they use the term “civilization” to “empire” anyway. When the game talks about the Georgian, Maori or Canadian empires, it just feels goofy.