Still, that's harder because of what Kuserab mentioned... Even the link of Peleset - Sea Peoples - Philistines (or Persians) is rather frail, not to say about the overall Sea Peoples. So, thinking of other uniques and a leader might be quite hard.
@orikos: Well, for now nothings planned (except for Judeah as a Pro-Civ Israel civ), so I'm open to suggestions. Just remember Patria Grande is still my main project so this one advances quite slower.
@Maklohi Vai: yeah, still trying to figure out how to code some things though:
UA: Mishkeh Feast: Whenever a city is conquered or a new luxury resource is connected to the empire, the first 5 cities receive an instant ammount of Faith and Gold. (dependant on era)
UU: Peleset: Replacement for Spearman. May embark and starts with the Amphibious promotion with an extra move while embarked. Earn Gold upon attacking a city (like Privateers).
UB: Brewery: Replacement for Colosseum. +2 Happiness. +1 Faith and Gold on Wine and Wheat. Units trained on a city with a Brewery receive a special promotion that grants them a free move while the empire is happy.
then I'd like to suggest a definitive Hittite civilization (you could even use the items from the Ancient Wonders DLC)
I think you need to do a hittite civ (like someone siad)
Doesn't Tomatekh have a really well done Hittite mod?
Yes he did, I forgot this. But I think it won't harm if Leugi will do a different Hittite civ.
No one likes my Hittite civ
No problem; there's plenty of other biblical civs that haven't had a look-in.Honestly, I really like Tomatekh's Hittite uniques, so I wouldn't really do another one.
I do!! I'm actually now using your Hittite leader for my Hittite civ and am using the Oman leaderhead for Ugarit. It's not really right, but it's a great leaderhead and I probably can get away with it .
-don't change the current version of Israel. I like how it represents all parts of the civilization.
- Last, I think I really think a Palestine civ should be done. Israel is represented, the other side also should be represented.
Palestine wasn't a biblical civ. It's right that Yehuda Hanasi's Judea is not biblical, but it is closer to the biblical period rather the palestines, who came to Israel in the Ottoman rule. In the modern age the Palestines are "the other side of the coin", but in the biblical period the other side was mostly the Philistines.