Evie
Pronounced like Eevee
The word blob keeps being thrown around for all the wrong reasons.
A civilization does NOT need to reflect a politically unified organization. The Greeks (outside Macedon) were not politically unified, the Mayans were not, the Sioux were not, the Shoshone were not - I could go on. The idea that if a civilization group multiple polities it's a blob is nonsense ; that's Europa Universalis level of details, not Civilization-level of detail.
What a civilization should have is a good measure of cultural distinctiveness and specificity. Good indicators that a culture is distinct and specific CAN include having their own politically united organization, but can also include having a shared language, or having a self-given name with a clear distinction between the group (to whom that name applies) and the outsiders (to whom it does not).
The Maori are two out of three on that list (they have the language and the demonym) - much like the pre-Macedonian Greeks, who shared a language, and a concept of Greeks as a separate group from other humans, but were never politically united. The Norse are something like 1.5 out of three (it's questionable to what extent they had a self-given demonym, but they did share the language). The Mayans are more of a blob than any of them, though the fact that the game seems to focus on a certain subset of the Maya helps.
The Celts, Native Americans and Polynesians are zero out of three on that list. They never formed a country around that identity, they do not share a common language (they have a bunch of related but separate languages for the Polynesians and Celts, not even that for the Native Americans), and there's no real self-given term (that I know of) for any of them that distinguish them as a group from other humans. They are blobs.
Maori are not a blob in any reasonable sense I would use that word.
A civilization does NOT need to reflect a politically unified organization. The Greeks (outside Macedon) were not politically unified, the Mayans were not, the Sioux were not, the Shoshone were not - I could go on. The idea that if a civilization group multiple polities it's a blob is nonsense ; that's Europa Universalis level of details, not Civilization-level of detail.
What a civilization should have is a good measure of cultural distinctiveness and specificity. Good indicators that a culture is distinct and specific CAN include having their own politically united organization, but can also include having a shared language, or having a self-given name with a clear distinction between the group (to whom that name applies) and the outsiders (to whom it does not).
The Maori are two out of three on that list (they have the language and the demonym) - much like the pre-Macedonian Greeks, who shared a language, and a concept of Greeks as a separate group from other humans, but were never politically united. The Norse are something like 1.5 out of three (it's questionable to what extent they had a self-given demonym, but they did share the language). The Mayans are more of a blob than any of them, though the fact that the game seems to focus on a certain subset of the Maya helps.
The Celts, Native Americans and Polynesians are zero out of three on that list. They never formed a country around that identity, they do not share a common language (they have a bunch of related but separate languages for the Polynesians and Celts, not even that for the Native Americans), and there's no real self-given term (that I know of) for any of them that distinguish them as a group from other humans. They are blobs.
Maori are not a blob in any reasonable sense I would use that word.