God of Kings
Ruler of all heads of state
According to Steam, Canada is the country with the most Civ players not already fully represented as a civ.
Canada would not be last. From a marketing perspective they will announce all of the Civs that will get people to buy or preorder based on their marketability or intrest. Korea and the Netherlands have a huge player base and were announced first. If Canada is due for release they will not leave them last, they will make sure Canadians are aware of their inclusion to preorder. My bet is that Mongolia will be the last Civ announced and the alt leader will be the week after. (Just like Russia then Gorgo)
The fact that we knew Korea and Mongolia will be in this expansion means they will hit off with one of them was also no surprise and turned out true. And the fact Korea has such a huge player base compared to Mongolia which I cannot imagine is that big (sorry if I am sterotyping) I would imagine that Mongolia will be the nice tidy reassurance on the end.
The fact that for the base game they started of with the 2 biggest markets; United States/America and the United Kingdom/England followed by Japan, China, France then Brazil with the occasional "reasurances" of Egypt inserted (also because Cleopatra as the first leader we had confirmation of so there was no reason to continue to hide her), Scythia for "newness reassurance" and then Germany for Gamescom(?) and then trailing off to eventually end up at Russia then "Surprise Gorgo".
Reading into it, I don't think Mongolia will definitely be last, but I do think it will be a Civ that is not hugely marketable on nationally alone.
(In otherwords, Canada won't be last; if they are to be included they will either be next or the one after or not at all.)
To clarify, Canada is third overall for number of Civ players after the United States (first) and the United Kingdom (second).According to Steam, Canada is the country with the most Civ players not already fully represented as a civ.
I'm definitely in the later category as well. I'm a history geek who happens to live in the U.S. that prefers European history especially classical era Greece and Rome as well as East Asia after taking a course over it in college. That being said I have played as America but gameplay wise I find many others more enjoyable and that peak my interests more. I also agree that many people here do not limit themselves to their own country, if able.I do wonder what percentage of players really like playing as their own country (and that being a motivator towards purchase) vs are mainly interested in the game mechanics and civs based on other factors (historical importance, interest, civ standards, etc.). I'm in the later category, but that's probably the case for a lot people on these boards. A significant amount of the broader gaming community is presumably in the former. I wonder if we will eventually have the top 20 of this list:
https://newzoo.com/insights/rankings/top-100-countries-by-game-revenues/ (though I think said list might be skewed by phone game revenues a decent bit)
It may be a factor in the more 'creative' leader choices as well - in that their hands are fairly tied about what countries are in (i.e. a lot slots are taken by market share requirements as well as standard and historical requirements) so they have to shake up the leaders to help keep the game feel fresh and pull in interest from that vector.
I do wonder what percentage of players really like playing as their own country (and that being a motivator towards purchase) vs are mainly interested in the game mechanics and civs based on other factors (historical importance, interest, civ standards, etc.). I'm in the later category, but that's probably the case for a lot people on these boards. A significant amount of the broader gaming community is presumably in the former. I wonder if we will eventually have the top 20 of this list:
https://newzoo.com/insights/rankings/top-100-countries-by-game-revenues/ (though I think said list might be skewed by phone game revenues a decent bit)
I do wonder what percentage of players really like playing as their own country (and that being a motivator towards purchase) vs are mainly interested in the game mechanics and civs based on other factors (historical importance, interest, civ standards, etc.). I'm in the later category, but that's probably the case for a lot people on these boards. A significant amount of the broader gaming community is presumably in the former.
So my next question is; with the Netherlands and Korea out of the way, who is next? I think Mongolia is pretty sure confirmed, but any other civ is still kind of up in the air as to what it could be, right?
Mongolia is nearly confirmed.So my next question is; with the Netherlands and Korea out of the way, who is next? I think Mongolia is pretty sure confirmed, but any other civ is still kind of up in the air as to what it could be, right?
Yes, that's what they usually do. So, "Sid Meier leads Genghis in Rise and Fall Civilization: Mongols" or something like this next week.I'd say the first three civs that were going to be revealed were put in an obvious position in the trailer. The other civilizations, I think, they want to be surprises, and thus didn't hint at in the trailer, or hinted more subtly in the trailer.
???Incas are expected due to their wonder.
Oops, sorry. My memory failed me.
1. Korea
2. Netherlands
3. Canada or NA tribe
4. Ottomans
5. Portugal
6. Mali
7. Inca or Maya
8. Mongolia
9. Isabella of Spain or Constantine of Rome or Bismark of Germany.
they could put emir muhammad kiwabi as a leader with a governor bonus since he was a governor that took power and became sultan, that would be amazingIf the wonder Kilwa Kisiwani is an indicator of a civ, Kilwa Sultanate is possible to be in this expansion, eliminating the chance for a Swahili civ and possible removal of Zanzibar as a city state.
Kilwa sultanate fits also in the rise and fall theme, if we are to look at this Wikipedia reference: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kilwa_Sultanate#Decline_and_Fall