Boris Gudenuf
Deity
Militaristic would fit the popular view of either Prussia or Germany in t he Modern Age.For any prediction fans, this makes the likelihood of a Militaristic Prussia near certain. I wonder what the other attribute will be? General mechanics wise, we are currently missing a pure domination rush Civ like Persia or Mongolia, and I'd rather Prussia is hit with that than the Mughals...
Expansionist really fits only Frederich II, with his obsession with adding Silesia to his (relatively) tiny realm compared with the opposing French, Austrian and Russian states. Other than him, the other Prussian leaders or even the Imperial German ones don't really fit - Germany under and after Bismarck tried for a few overseas colonies because that was What You Did as a major European late-19th century state, but Bismarck's wars were all about adding German territory to Prussia/Germany, not conquering elsewhere.
So, they could double down on the Leader (Fred) by making Prussia the pure domination rush Militaristic - Expansionist.
But, a better combination I think would be Militaristic - Scientific, representing the Prussian/German emphasis on the technical and scientific progress: 19th century Germany was the pioneer in metallurgy (cast steel, armor plate alloys, early aluminum processing), chemical engineering (aspirin, artificial fertilizer, manufactured nitrates for both fertilizer and smokeless powder), early motorization (Daimler and Diesel are the names to know) - Germany was a scientific powerhouse for almost a century in the Modern Age of the game.
On the other hand, the game might achieve some of the same emphasis by giving Prussia a set of German scientific Great People: just in the Modern Age, they could start with Humboldt, Wöhler, Alfred Krupp (Industrialist, but also pioneered cast steel for cannon and railroad machinery and inaugurated things like workers aid, widow's and orphan's support, worker's housing and other 'socialist' works later adopted by Bismarck for the entire State), Daimler, Roentgen, Diesel, Haber, Planck, Einstein, Gropius, Heisenberg - not a complete list, but long enough to show trhe variety that could be provided just in the rather narrow field of Scientific/Technological processes and advances.
Last edited:

