- Joined
- Dec 1, 2017
- Messages
- 914
With all due respect, it's your position that doesn't make sense because the HK leaders have nothing in common with what we saw from Civ VII. I mean, superficially, perhaps, but if you look at it more than 5 minutes, you'll see jarring difference.This doesn't make sense because you could literally create your own leaders and create historical figures for the AI in Humankind if you wanted. Civ VII's mix and match philosphy to both historical leaders and civilizations swapping is going to lead to the same dissonance problem encountered in Humankind.
And it comes to characterization. @Boris Gudenuf made very good points about psychology, but I dabbled a little in storytelling, and let me tell you that what has been shown about the leaders in the Civ VII previews is already much more memorable than whatever I could encounter in my hundreds of hours of Humankind. Nothing truly made HK avatars distinguishable. They were all more or less standing the same, talking in a quite similar tone of voice, and acting in similar manners. They were barely interacting in diplomacy. How they were created (through a character creation screen) made it so they had to have some sort of genericity to it.
On the other hand, even only by seeing Hatchepsut and Augustus interacting, you had a thousands times more life in those five seconds of gameplay that I ever encountered in HK. Each leader is made individually, with their own personality, their own quirks. They're made to interact, not just quite passively say: "Very good!". Augustus with his scepter is already just something that will make you remember the guy.
Quite example: do you remember the names of some of the leaders against whom you played in Humankind? You might have a decent memory, but in mine, it's all fuzzy. I recall Gilgamesh, I think, but I don't even remember what kind of personality he had. As for the rest, they're all blurry in my mind. Civ VII had launched a trailer just a few days ago and we already have in our heads the atrocious looks of the leaders already revealed. We might complain, but even hideous as they are, they have more life and personality in them.
Firaxis always had the mentality of using Big Faces for their leaders rather than actual, real, important leaders. They wanted leaders we might recognize, we might laugh at, we might befriend or hate, but never stay indifferent. That's why we have Gilgamesh and Dido, because they're mythical; that's why we had Kristina over Gustavus Adolphus, because despite having abdicated by herself, she was such a character storytelling-wise.
I mean, people make fancomics about Civ VI leaders, and sometimes even Civ V leaders. Who has ever made a comic representing the Humankind avatars? Nobody I could think of, it'd be too niche to interest people, because those avatars are not interesting, they're bland and generic. Civ VII leaders promise to be more interesting just by what they showed and by how Firaxis proved in the past that pretty much all their leaders are memorable. So, what @Boris Gudenuf said still stands: the main thing that can help continuity are the leaders, and not the civs themselves. Like, for example, if I was playing a Civ VI game against Chandragupta, and suddenly the civ was led by Gandhi, I wouldn't have the feel of playing against the same opponent, but against a new one. However, if FrEleanor suddenly became EnglEanor, I would consider her the same opponent with different bonuses, but I know how she would react and what her strategy would be. I see less differences between FrEleanor and EnglEanor than between, say, FrEleanor and Catherine de Medici or EnglEanor and Victoria or Elizabeth. Because the civ is nice, but wouldn't you say that your opponent is mostly the leader? They're the ones you see first, they're the ones you interact with. People hate the Dutch not because of the Dutch but because of Wilhemina, and people like the Sumerians because of Gilgamesh. And, as I said, if you encouter India in the first turns of your game, you'd react quite differently if it's lead by Chandragupta or Gandhi, and the difference of reactions would be bigger than the one between meeting both Eleanors.