MooFreaky is right, the archrivals of Byzantium were the Persians long before the Turks ever left Central Asia. The Islamic conquest was only possible because the Byzantines and Persians had exhausted themselves in drawn out conflict, and because their citizens were grateful to be rescued from the insane taxes both sides were levying to support their war effort. Also, saying Byzantium is Greece is as or more disingenuous than saying that Byzantium is Rome. The Byzantines were a distinct culture, but they were more Roman than Greek (culturally and politically, not ethnically). "Byzantine" is term coined by modern historians for convenience; in their own time they were simply known as the Roman Empire (at least, once the Roman Empire in the west ceased to function). Also, as a friendly suggestion, your raving over Byzantium and vilifying of the Turks reeks of nationalism. Also worth pointing out, you're conflating two different civilizations: the Seljuk Turks, who controlled a handful of petty states in Anatolia and the Levant, and the Ottoman Turks, who centuries later conquered Byzantium, the Balkans, and the bulk of the Middle East from Egypt to Mesopotamia--excluding Persia and Arabia proper. The Ottomans were a major political power in the region for nearly five hundred years, and both the Crimean War and (partially) World War I were fought by Western European powers squabbling over the wealth of the declining Ottomans, so dismissing them out of hand shows a serious lack of understanding of their place in history.Right, most of what the Turks learned about CIVILIZATION, science and culture, was from the BYZANTINES, a nation they'd just conquered.
The people you're defending fought without HONOR. Fleeing away from BYZANTINE troops en masse, while shooting their arrows at them! They would not give the Byzantines a proper battle!
Only after the bled/tired/hungry/thirsty Byzantines were exhausted, "glorious" Turkish warriors would attack them. (the only ones among the Byzantine ranks fleeing from the Turkish attacks were predominantly the well paid French/Frankish mercenary-knights, while the Varangs fought to the last man standing).
Read about the battles between the two, you will learn more about actual facts, before raising your voice at me.
BYZANTIUM does not equal (=) ROME!
So don't give me that! Byzantium was Greek dominated, not Roman. The official language of the country was Greek! LEARN YOUR FACTS!
Turks fought the already weakened Byzantines the best way they could and it was successful. Their tactics were spot on, no denying that! But were they honorable?
You are defending a nation that conquered (in a very bloody way) a civilized empire and built their own empire in its place! Turkey is not an original nation! It's made out of conquest of already pre-existing GREAT NATION.
And another thing:
Check the facts about how many of the great Turkish scientists and such were actually GREEKS - forced to convert to ISLAM! - in order to keep themselves (and their families) alive and prosper in the new (Turkish/Muslim) society.
Sorry, but Turks were invaders, far inferior culturallly! as compared to the Byzantines, they conquered the lands of a great empire, with fire and sword, for that there's not denying, and built their own on the ruins of BYZANTIUM.
It's called a "Parthian shot" and is actually a maneuver that requires an extraordinary amount of skill. Could you shoot a bow from a galloping horse and hope to hit a target?THIS IS A TYPICAL TURKISH "KNIGHT"
SEE THE WAY THE HORSE IS HEADED AND THE WAY THE "BRAVE" HORSE ARCHER'S SHOOTING? (conquest of Byzantium: let them (the Byzantines) pursue, we'll bleed them and then massacre them)
Right, most of what the Turks learned about CIVILIZATION, science and culture, was from the BYZANTINES, a nation they'd just conquered.
The people you're defending fought without HONOR. Fleeing away from BYZANTINE troops en masse, while shooting their arrows at them! They would not give the Byzantines a proper battle!
Only after the bled/tired/hungry/thirsty Byzantines were exhausted, "glorious" Turkish warriors would attack them. (the only ones among the Byzantine ranks fleeing from the Turkish attacks were predominantly the well paid French/Frankish mercenary-knights, while the Varangs fought to the last man standing).
Read about the battles between the two, you will learn more about actual facts, before raising your voice at me.
BYZANTIUM does not equal (=) ROME!
So don't give me that! Byzantium was Greek dominated, not Roman. The official language of the country was Greek! LEARN YOUR FACTS!
Turks fought the already weakened Byzantines the best way they could and it was successful. Their tactics were spot on, no denying that! But were they honorable?
You are defending a nation that conquered (in a very bloody way) a civilized empire and built their own empire in its place! Turkey is not an original nation! It's made out of conquest of already pre-existing GREAT NATION.
And another thing:
Check the facts about how many of the great Turkish scientists and such were actually GREEKS - forced to convert to ISLAM! - in order to keep themselves (and their families) alive and prosper in the new (Turkish/Muslim) society.
Sorry, but Turks were invaders, far inferior culturallly! as compared to the Byzantines, they conquered the lands of a great empire, with fire and sword, for that there's not denying, and built their own on the ruins of BYZANTIUM.
True that.
What would make me really happy is a South East Asia pack that as well as Vietnam and Khmer included either Siam and/or Myanmar (maybe in the form of the Pagan empire with Bagan as the capital). That would be awesome. Indonesia making an appearance again would be welcome too. Basically...I want more South East Asian civs!!!!
...especially one with a unique campus.i dont care what they call it but civ 6 needs a science and industry civ. science bonuses seem to be lacking among the current civs.
I admit I'm less familiar with the Sassanid period, but I have to say that Achaemenid Persia has some fantastic big personalities to choose from. Darius may or may not have invented the script for writing Old Persian (his claim is supported by the fact that the earliest inscriptions date to his reign and are attributed to him) and based on his inscriptions seemed to have a very high opinion of himself; his inscriptions are also the earliest references to Zoroastrianism outside of the Avesta. Then there's Cyrus II, who Darius borderline deified and seems to have been a very noble conqueror (based both on Darius's inscriptions and on the Biblical accounts of him). And who can forget crazy Xerxes I, who had the Hellespont whipped when he lost a naval battle?Persia-another Achaemenid leader would be boring to me, how about a Sassanid ruler instead?
I admit I'm less familiar with the Sassanid period, but I have to say that Achaemenid Persia has some fantastic big personalities to choose from. Darius may or may not have invented the script for writing Old Persian (his claim is supported by the fact that the earliest inscriptions date to his reign and are attributed to him) and based on his inscriptions seemed to have a very high opinion of himself; his inscriptions are also the earliest references to Zoroastrianism outside of the Avesta. Then there's Cyrus II, who Darius borderline deified and seems to have been a very noble conqueror (based both on Darius's inscriptions and on the Biblical accounts of him). And who can forget crazy Xerxes I, who had the Hellespont whipped when he lost a naval battle?And of course, aside from being a little mentally unstable, Xerxes did rule Achaemenid Persia at its greatest territorial extent, like Trajan and Rome.
Personally, if I were choosing Persia's ruler, I'd go with Darius I and/or Xerxes I, plus a Sassanid emperor like Shapur II as a second ruler.
A shame, too, as of the three Darius strikes me as the "biggest personality." I personally hope for Xerxes I because he's more "unexpected" so to speak than Cyrus II, he ruled the empire at its territorial apex (along with Darius), and he just strikes me as a better representative of Achaemenid Persia than the more humanitarian Cyrus. Plus we have contemporary records and chronicles* on Xerxes--most of what we know about Cyrus comes from Darius, who was definitely establishing the cult of Cyrus to cement his own rule. Plus the game could use a little more crazy; at the moment we only have Qin Shi Huang, Gandhi, and Tomyris.I think Firaxis will avoid having Darius I as the Persian leader, since he was in Civ5,
Cyrus or Xerxes will probably be chosen instead.
Khosrau is also another good choice for a Sassanid leader
I bet you were a fan of El Dorado and the Fountain of Youth in 5 then...*Or, you know, we could just go the Sumeria route and make crap up despite have reams of records.No, I'm never going to forgive them for that...
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Atlantis is already in Civ VI...I bet you were a fan of El Dorado and the Fountain of Youth in 5 then...
We can only hope they add Atlantis and Camelot as city states. Or they could have Valhalla as a natural wonder!
I actually never encountered them in Civ5, probably because I virtually always played on either the Earth map or the Scrambled Earth map.I bet you were a fan of El Dorado and the Fountain of Youth in 5 then...