I'm a bit baffled why it's so horrible to refer to Enrico Dandolo as Henry when nobody bats an eye when people are talking about Catherine of Russia and Charles V ofSpainthe HRE without batting an eye.
Wikipedia said:Enrico Dandolo (1107? 21 June 1205) anglicised as Henry Dandolo and Latinized as Henricus Dandulus was the 42nd Doge of Venice from 1192 until his death.
I would assume it's because the latter carries colonial connotations while the former doesn't.Me too. Also, why do Dutch people not care when English speakers refer to "The Hague" (instead of Den Haag), but some Indians get mad about "Bombay" and "Calcutta"?
I'm a bit baffled why it's so horrible to refer to Enrico Dandolo as Henry when nobody bats an eye when people are talking about Catherine of Russia and Charles V ofSpainthe HRE without batting an eye.
Yeah, I vaguely recall reading through a thread which proposed the inclusion of a Boer civ a while back, who would be located inland in order to not cause issues with coastal European colonies.
Enrico Dandolo really had an eye for pulling for crazy stuff.Well, I am a Veniceophile, Italian dual citizen, and have family from the Venice area, so that's my only reason. Also, Charles V is sometimes referred to as Carlos V, but Enrico Dandolo is always referred to as Enrico Dandolo when he is mentioned.
Also, Venice was a very important trading power and maritime empire in Europe until the Portuguese took away Egypt's trade routes to India. I'm still in support of an Italy overhaul where Venice is added as a playable civ and Italy's spawn date gets pushed back to 1415 at Turin.
I thought the Boer idea was very well thought out and is a much better idea than a Zulu civ.
I would assume it's because the latter carries colonial connotations while the former doesn't.
I think it's because unlike the other two, Enrico Dandolo never had any political dealings with England or English speaking countries during his lifetime. He is mostly known by his Italian or Latin names because those are the languages spoken by his contemporary associates and acquaintances.I'm a bit baffled why it's so horrible to refer to Enrico Dandolo as Henry when nobody bats an eye when people are talking about Catherine of Russia and Charles V ofSpainthe HRE without batting an eye.
In fact, Leoreth, maybe the Seljuk "Unique Barbarian" concept can be generalized even more to represent various unplayable but important civilizations. You could reuse only a few (I'd say 2 is enough) player slots to represent a series of different civilizations (using your respawn mechanism to give them different colors if you wish).
== Slot 1 ==
Ancient: Hitties (1500 BC - 1100 BC)
Classical: Scythia (600 BC - 400 AD)
Medieval: Seljuks (1000 AD - 1300 AD)
== Slot 2 ==
Classical: Xiongnu (200 BC - 400 AD)
Medieval: Jurchens (1000 AD - 1200 AD)
Renaissance: Manchus (1600 AD - 1800 AD)
The difference between these and regular barbs is the same as the Seljuks's case
(1) You can give them UUs and UPs (and even UBs) to let them have a bigger impact on the course of the game, like they did in history.
(2) You can give them proper tech levels so that the cities they conquer don't fall into complete ruin like with regular Barbs, which makes reconquering those cities more worthwhile.
(3) Players at war with these special Barbs will actually gain GG points from combat, which rewards the player more for engaging them.
In SoI there are tons of civs like this, unplayable, but detailed. They add a lot of fun without slowing down the game too much, IMO.