PhoenicianGold
Emperor
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2018
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Between the recent conversations of how Celtic tribes might be implemented and the atrocities committed by Canada against the Cree, this very prolific and marginalized, yet remarkably homogenous European culture sprang to mind.
There is one more eery thing I would like to make note of. India no longer uses the Wheel of Asoka for its symbol. Why would they replace what was already the perfect symbol to represent the Mauryan Empire and the Republic of India? One reason, I admit, is because we have a lot of "wheel-ish" symbols already in Macedon, India, and arguably Sumer; but differentiation is an odd argument to make when we also have "flower" symbols in Japan and France. Another reason could be that they are freeing design space for this:
- Taboo? Would this, like Eritrea/Aksum, Tibet, and Jerusalem be too controversial for Firaxis to even touch? Or would they take a Cree-like approach in shedding light on past atrocities? Are they controversial for a completely different reason, like say because the parallels to African Americans or Untouchables are stronger than to the Cree or Mapuche?
- Design? Would a civilization like this even be feasible without an apparent leader or capital? How could they fudge the rules to include it like they did with the Huns or Venice? Would this be an acceptably blobby way of representing Hungary, Bulgaria, Romania, and other wanted civs? Too blobby?They do at least have settlements for city names.
- Merit? Does it even deserve to be a civ? I would argue yes, in the same sense that Vatican City as the head of the largest corporation and homogenous religious sect in the world is influential enough to deserve consideration. But there are plenty who think that Vatican City is a quintessential City-State, or that it, like other racial/religious states, is too scattered of an idea to ever be included.
There is one more eery thing I would like to make note of. India no longer uses the Wheel of Asoka for its symbol. Why would they replace what was already the perfect symbol to represent the Mauryan Empire and the Republic of India? One reason, I admit, is because we have a lot of "wheel-ish" symbols already in Macedon, India, and arguably Sumer; but differentiation is an odd argument to make when we also have "flower" symbols in Japan and France. Another reason could be that they are freeing design space for this:

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