There's been discussion that a lot of the UHVs are really easy. I thought I'd test out my own variant of the English UHV to see if it was possible; it was not only possible but downright easy. (At least, on Monarch, it's just after 1500, and I'm Very Solid and outteching everyone although I just started to pull away.)
So, for the first English UHV:
Control (you have at least one city and no one else does) the British Isles, Normandy, Brittany, Aquitaine and Ile-de-France in 1500 (not 1600).
The definitions of Normandy, Brittany, Aquitaine and Ile-de-France are on the map below. People have been complaining about the English game being boring; in this model, you get a nice, long war with France and some pretty heavy obligations on the continent that can't just be abandoned through liberation once you've gotten the UHV. Also, 1450 wouldn't be particularly hard for a date, either, and it would be a bit more accurate historically per the Hundred Years War.
Also, it might be a good idea to separate out Scotland and Ireland. Right now, you don't need to control any cities in either for the UHV, you just need to raze the cities that are already there (although why you would is beyond me).
So, for the first English UHV:
Control (you have at least one city and no one else does) the British Isles, Normandy, Brittany, Aquitaine and Ile-de-France in 1500 (not 1600).
The definitions of Normandy, Brittany, Aquitaine and Ile-de-France are on the map below. People have been complaining about the English game being boring; in this model, you get a nice, long war with France and some pretty heavy obligations on the continent that can't just be abandoned through liberation once you've gotten the UHV. Also, 1450 wouldn't be particularly hard for a date, either, and it would be a bit more accurate historically per the Hundred Years War.
Also, it might be a good idea to separate out Scotland and Ireland. Right now, you don't need to control any cities in either for the UHV, you just need to raze the cities that are already there (although why you would is beyond me).

