It's always been The Celts until Civ6 as far as I recall.Weren't they in Civ 2 as well? Just going off the Civ wiki here.
It's always been The Celts until Civ6 as far as I recall.Weren't they in Civ 2 as well? Just going off the Civ wiki here.
Weren't they in Civ 2 as well? Just going off the Civ wiki here.
That's odd... Ah well, you learn something new every day.It's always been The Celts until Civ6 as far as I recall.
If you look at my chart, it’s because that “niche” is already represented by Hungary, Norway, and Sumeria, respectively
Um...Gran Colombia, Gaul, and Vietnam are all completely new
I think you misread my post. I meant "single DLC" pack, not "single DLC pack." All of the solo civ DLC packs had staple civs.
Well...that’s certainly a very odd specification.
It doesn’t really matter in that sense because it’s all one DLC, technically. Just with optional selection.
Some people purchased them individually. And then have to purchase the rest individually. That's something to take into account with how the DLC is selected and organized. A 6th DLC pack with Portugal indisputably would sell incrementally better than a new civ. The question is whether that increment was worthwhile as compared to saving Portugal for a second season, if one is planned at all...
OK, sure, maybe...
...but now we’re getting away from actual prediction and more into just marketing...there’s some overlap, sure.
My initial comment was in effect responding to a marketing prediction, so, yes...
Given that this thread is about discussing possible new civs, I don't really think it matters what methodology we are using to speculate. Certainly if we had taken a strict marketability stance in predicting NFP, I think everything but Gran Colombia would have been a foregone conclusion...
Which then indicates that taking a strict marketability stance isn't the best approach, as it doesn't comprehensively accounts for the thought process of devs...that I am trying to recreate.
As for having Ayutthaya, its all about nuance. We don't consider Gaul to be Belgium or Rome to be Byzantium or Lhasa to be China or Sumeria to be Babylon. I can't give exact lines, only an approximation based on inclusion.
Interesting enough one of the Relics of the Void was named Hint Guide: Civilization 2, which could have been hinting at Gaul coming in the next pack.Gaul was in Civ 4. The others you're right about.
Edit: Nevermind... They were in Civ 2.
Edit 2: Nevermind... They were called the Celts back then.
The first wave of DLC actually had 5 returning civs, if you count the Aztecs because they technically were a free DLC, and three new civs unlike the expansions which was split 4 and 4.We’re still missing a 3rd female Civ (unless Magnificent Catherine counts?) and a 4th new Civ for the respective “quotas”, so maybe the last pack will be a single new Civ.
Well the Gaesatae, Gaul's UU, weren't from present-day Belgium.And maybe you don't consider Gaul to be Belgium, but I happen to think that Brussels should have been removed with its inclusion.![]()
Well the Gaesatae, Gaul's UU, weren't from present-day Belgium.![]()
And to be honest... I would prefer Belgium under Albert I than Gaul having to represent them.The only 'Belgian' components about Gaul are the leader (Like legit. We ranked Ambiorix 6th or summat on The Greatest Belgians Of All Times list) and the hook of the diplo theme, which was taken from our national anthem. Otherwise, they're pure Gallic, baby.
If Gaul is supposed to represent Belgium, then well... let's just say it does so vicariously through their form, but the overal Civ feels much broader than that.
You've reiterated my point.If Gaul is supposed to represent Belgium, then well... let's just say it does so vicariously through their form, but the overal Civ feels much broader than that.
You've reiterated my point.
If Gaul was supposed to represent Belgium and replaces Brussels, then the Cree should have got Toronto so we could have avoided Canada and got another North American civ.![]()
To be fair, even though I like Scotland, I don't think that both Scotland and Gaul are necessary and would have rather just have one Celtic civ and still get to keep Canada.If this is all we are getting and no Navajo/Cherokee/whatever, I honestly would have preferred this as well. Two Canadian civs in a fifty-civ roster with nothing in the Maghreb, Swahili Coast, or Indosphere outside of India...
Also, gonna mention Scotland in the same breath.
But what Gaul and Scotland have in common despite celtic orgins that makes those Civs mutually exclusive? You can use this argument and come to conclusion why do we need France if we have Rome? Why do we need the Netherlands if we have Germany. Why do we need US if we have England. Oh we have England? We dont need England, we already have Germany... Its nonsense.To be fair, even though I like Scotland, I don't think that both Scotland and Gaul are necessary and would have rather just have one Celtic civ and still get to keep Canada.
Considering Scotland and Canada are both very meme civs I guess it would have to be Scotland.
Funny enough maybe they could get Scottish Enlightenment as there civ ability instead because apparently on a list of the10 famous Canadians three were born in Scotland (Alexander Graham Bell, Sir John A. Macdonald, Tommy Fox).
The Four Faces of Peace could then go to Laurier.
Sorry but this is just a typical Spanish soundbite of the "actually other colonisers were much worse!" type, which is frequently used by the Spanish for the sake of emotional comfort. It lets people feel pride in the accomplishments of their ancestors without having to really question the atrocities committed.
There's similar variants in Portugal and the UK, and I'd guess other countries as well. These were common beliefs during Salazar's and Franco's dictatorship and they persist to this day.
Here's a few other examples:
- "Barbary Pirates did slavery too!" - I've often heard Anglo-Americans using this one with the intent of dismissing African slavery, since Africans enslaved Europeans as well (the logic goes).
- "The Wermacht were honest soldiers! It's the SS who committed the atrocities." - This one used extensively by Germans after the war.
- "The Civil War was about state rights and actually blacks were treated fairly in the South!" - A common American trope.