Thlayli
Le Pétit Prince
As a general question, do people think it's a good idea to have the map "zoomed-in" during a time period where only a portion of the map is relevant?
It seems like blown up maps would increase level of detail, generally a good thing, especially since it allows smaller nations to be logistically visible. This seems particularly relevant in the Middle Ages, when you have free cities, feudals and hundreds of other minor powers squabbling for dominance. It's just impossible to cram them into a normal sized map of Europe.
Another example might be Venice, whose Italian holdings and colonial territories are rarely executed accurately. Even the smallest "enclave" that can be drawn on a traditional world map is still larger than it should technically be. It also seems that larger maps are better for military planning and detail, especially if accurate geographic features are superimposed or included on an alternate map, something that's difficult to do on a traditional size.
I know that Symphony has created several maps larger than the traditional 1:1 scale, but we haven't yet seen many NESes operating on a continental scale or greater that have used them, yet. Would it be a good idea to experiment?
It seems like blown up maps would increase level of detail, generally a good thing, especially since it allows smaller nations to be logistically visible. This seems particularly relevant in the Middle Ages, when you have free cities, feudals and hundreds of other minor powers squabbling for dominance. It's just impossible to cram them into a normal sized map of Europe.
Another example might be Venice, whose Italian holdings and colonial territories are rarely executed accurately. Even the smallest "enclave" that can be drawn on a traditional world map is still larger than it should technically be. It also seems that larger maps are better for military planning and detail, especially if accurate geographic features are superimposed or included on an alternate map, something that's difficult to do on a traditional size.
I know that Symphony has created several maps larger than the traditional 1:1 scale, but we haven't yet seen many NESes operating on a continental scale or greater that have used them, yet. Would it be a good idea to experiment?