merijn_v1
Black Belt
Ok, combining the two recent topics here, should Amsterdam (and maybe Rotterdam) be a lagoon tile? I’m not sure, and I assume we don’t want all cities with canals to be lagoons, but Amsterdam is definitely a strong candidate with the Zuiderzee/IJsselmeer next to it. And then the criterion for the delta works could be that the city is on a lagoon. Then it could be built in e.g. Venice, where it would appropriately represent the MOSE project, as well as New Orleans and other cities that are vulnerable to flooding.
I don't think that Amsterdam should be a lagoon tile. I think that this case is comparable to the New York bay. It can be justified to represent the Zuiderzee, but I don't think it fits. The area of Amsterdam is much better represented by a marsh on land than a lagoon tile IMO.
Another thing why I don't like it is that the coastline will look weird. The texture of the lagoon tiles make them look like they belong to the sea. (Only a bit elevated) This often leads to weird graphical coastlines. Making Amsterdam a lagoon tile will create a strange cut in the coastline. Venice, New Orleans (with the river fix) and Tenochtitlan do not have this problem, because they are surrounded by land tiles. But all other locations have strange coastlines because of this.
Yeah, I have a bit of trouble getting a coherent picture of what the lagoon tile should be used for. Outside of obvious situations like Venice, should the tile represent lagoons as geographical features, or cities built on water? My personal feeling is that there should be at least something resembling a geographical lagoon to justify the tile.
On the other hand, I'd like to suggest removing the lagoons in New York, Hong Kong, Porto Alegre, and Maracaibo (if that last one was placed), where we're using the terrain to better mimic the shape of the coastlines, but where I don't think the city's actual geography justifies a lagoon tile. Tenochtitlan, Amsterdam, Venice, New Orleans (perhaps Hamburg and St Petersburg are other good candidates) where all built over water (or at least swamps). I think the bonus (and the graphical use) of lagoons should be restricted to these cities.
I agree. I'm getting the feeling that every coastal city with some kind of waterbody will be turned into a lagoon tile.