Civ'ed
I ain't gotta explain a thing
I'm working on an IOT which takes place in the Western Indian ocean, I have a map and a significant concept part of rules already.
Tell me what you think, it's still very rough.
Spoiler Map :
Spoiler Part of Rules :
Provinces and Regions
A Region corresponds with a modern country's borders and is marked with a WHITE LINE. A Province is marked with a black line. This accounts for Naval Regions too.
Government choice
You can't choose any old government just for the sake of it - different provinces allow different governments. For example, all Iraq's provinces allow dictatorships and anarchistic states. The whole of India and Pakistan allows democracies. Somalia allows anarchistic states, but a few provinces in Somaliland allow democracies.
Kinds of Government and some pros and cons
Anarchistic State: You have no real government, everyone in the nation is at war with everyone in the nation. Pros: 1 extra army at start, 1 army every turn. Cons: Defcon doesn't matter as everyone may try and restore order, constant rebellion.
Democracies: A rare sight in the Western Indian Ocean area. Voting is allowed. Pros: US support: at war means 1 army every turn. Can build battleships and Jet fighters. Cons: No US support if fighting Democracies or Anarchistic States - the Democracies should be on your side and the US is busy with the anarchists. Armies half in size.
Dictatorships: you lead your nation, probably with some US support. Pros: light US support: 1 Extra gold every turn, 1 1/2 extra if fighting anarchists. Can claim 4 provinces. Cons: Rebellions more often. Can only form alliance with other Dictatorships.
Rebellions
every turn, there is a 4 in 10 chance of rebellion in democracies, a 5 in 10 chance of rebellion in dictatorships and a 9 in ten chance of rebellion in Anarchistic states. If a rebellion occupies all your provinces you will lose 10% income for the next turn. There will be a 5 in 10 chance your government changes from Anarchistic state to Dictatorship and vice versa, a 2 in ten chance a Democracy changes to an Anarchistic State and vice versa, and a 3 in ten chance a Dictatorship becomes democratic and vice versa.
A Region corresponds with a modern country's borders and is marked with a WHITE LINE. A Province is marked with a black line. This accounts for Naval Regions too.
Government choice
You can't choose any old government just for the sake of it - different provinces allow different governments. For example, all Iraq's provinces allow dictatorships and anarchistic states. The whole of India and Pakistan allows democracies. Somalia allows anarchistic states, but a few provinces in Somaliland allow democracies.
Kinds of Government and some pros and cons
Anarchistic State: You have no real government, everyone in the nation is at war with everyone in the nation. Pros: 1 extra army at start, 1 army every turn. Cons: Defcon doesn't matter as everyone may try and restore order, constant rebellion.
Democracies: A rare sight in the Western Indian Ocean area. Voting is allowed. Pros: US support: at war means 1 army every turn. Can build battleships and Jet fighters. Cons: No US support if fighting Democracies or Anarchistic States - the Democracies should be on your side and the US is busy with the anarchists. Armies half in size.
Dictatorships: you lead your nation, probably with some US support. Pros: light US support: 1 Extra gold every turn, 1 1/2 extra if fighting anarchists. Can claim 4 provinces. Cons: Rebellions more often. Can only form alliance with other Dictatorships.
Rebellions
every turn, there is a 4 in 10 chance of rebellion in democracies, a 5 in 10 chance of rebellion in dictatorships and a 9 in ten chance of rebellion in Anarchistic states. If a rebellion occupies all your provinces you will lose 10% income for the next turn. There will be a 5 in 10 chance your government changes from Anarchistic state to Dictatorship and vice versa, a 2 in ten chance a Democracy changes to an Anarchistic State and vice versa, and a 3 in ten chance a Dictatorship becomes democratic and vice versa.
Tell me what you think, it's still very rough.