Originally posted by Kal-el
This is a beautiful idea. I love the idea of handicapping the Africans, Aztecs and Iroquois. Although I think that I will play with the Aztecs and the Iroquois in the game. There were tribes here when the Europeans got here after all.
Well that's your choice, but I don't really agree. By the way, I've just reached America first as the Germans (actually my settlers were mostly built in Britain and France so it's really the British and the French who are colonising America's east coast), and I'm having a hard time settling there.
After thousands of years the barbarians have built up into significant numbers and my early settlements are being hammered by wave after wave of barbarian horsemen. Washington has been sacked a number of times, my workers and explorers are afraid to leave the settlements and many of my settlers are still waiting on galleons anchored just off the coast while the remainder of my fleet is racing back for reinforcements. Britain and France are desperately churning out more galleons to get troops over there as quickly as possible.
It seems I underestimated the barbarian (Red Indians) threat. I should have taken an army over there first to clear some space before taking the settlers (I did take some troops with them but not enough).
I'm guessing that if I'd played with the Iroquois in the game, they'd have dealt with the barbs as and when they'd appeared and the whole area would now be covered with small cities and few, if any, barbs.
Attacking any of these cities would constitute war (not good for a republic, soon to be a democracy) and it would be a war against a whole civilisation rather than just scattered tribes. So far I think the barbarian idea is working very well. I shall have to see how it pans out.
I am currently working on my own modification of the Singer map. I have concetrated on making certain areas of the map look more like their actual earth counterparts. To this end I have redone Italy, Sicily, and Corsica. I have modifed England in order give the Brits some more room to work with. I reworked Greenland, placing mostly mountains with a touch of grassland around the southern and southeastern edges. I have reworked the Great Lakes Region of the United States.
Great Lakes: very good, I like it, much better.
Italy: Mm.. maybe.
Britain: I think you've overdone it a bit, it may be a slightly better shape but I don't think the size of Britain should be overemphasised. There definitely shouldn't be any plains there, it's all rich green grassland. And if you're going to put oil there, it should be in Aberdeen (north-east coast) because that where it arrives from the North Sea Oil Rigs.
Spain: Sorry, but I don't like the shape of this at all, I think Marla's was much better. And what happened to the Pyrenees? There's a major mountain range separating Spain from France.
Japan: You haven't changed the shape of the land much, you mainly seem to have added more resources, especially whales. I like it.
I realize that in some places i have put plains when others might think that grassland would be more appropriate but I was really going more for asthetics. There isn't that much of a difference between the two in the game, but the appearance on the map is amazingly different.
I think there's a big diffence in the game. Grassland allows for fast growth and big cities, plains are better for mining resources, and are more difficult to get food from. Mined grassland is the same as irrigated plains, but irrigated grassland and mined plains are very different.
I'll be honest, I think Marla's map is pretty definitive in that it was copied square by square from an actual map. I think that altering the shape of things here and there in a localised way is a bit dubious, and doesn't necessarily fit well with the overall design philosophy.
It's impossible to design a truly realistic world map, so much depends upon the projection used and the way features are interpreted by the designer. I don't think anyone is really right or wrong about how an area should be represented, it's all down to personal intepretation, and we all have different ideas about that.
I personally think that much of Southern Europe (Mediterranean climate) should be represented by plains rather than grassland, since the soil is thinner and drier than northern Europe.
Paul