Lazy sweeper
Mooooo Cra Chirp Fssss Miaouw is a game of words
How would you imagine Civ VII tech tree?
I was just watching a yt HK play, and I find it ridiculous that it's possible to see fusion reactor tech whilst still in industrial era.
CIV VII Tech tree should have a sort of fog of war, locking the view to one's era.
Research could dispel some tech fog of war (more appropriate name needed) and reveal certain techs for the era that than could be studied.
So I would imagine a cultural division of citizens, with philosophers alike, that would produce a civ culture, and that could be spent to disperse the fog of techs.
Scientist, scribes, mathematicians, etc, would then produce science, that could be invested in learning techs.
Sharing books, papyrus, maybe even discovering them by sending trade expeditions or exploring, could help boost some techs, and precisely that would come with the papyrus subject.
New mechanic: Important books and papyruses to add alike great leaders (...)
We know that untill book press invention, books were extremely rare, however, AFTER the press, invention spread because of books...
In early times, romans and greeks produced an enormous amount of technical books, Egypt , Babylon, India and China also. Be it in Papyrus, tablets, or oral tradition still ( Inca Warehouses , bridge making, agriculture). Oral tradition would produce Hymns , music and poems, with a similar value to a book, however, scribe wont' work fro preservation, instead Alphabetism is important... under a certain global percantage some Hymns could be lost, and under a certain threshold, new oral copies could not be produced...
Books and Papyrus can boost a civ culture but must be mantained, transcribed, protected from worms, fires.
If lost, a civ culture would dwindle. If a Masonry roman book would be lost, a whole set of techs could go dark...
Transcription would be essential in mantaining knowledge through time. And without book trading (I would never trade the only copy, but could produce copies)
Fog dispersal should be slow, and with scrambled results, always....
The name of these books could be real or ficticious (Roman De Nature is known to have some herb formulae, but not mortar composition)
But a complete list would be essential to produce with respect to various branch of tech.
Mathematic
Astronomy
Philosophy
Agriculture
Medicine
Language (Alphabetism to play an important role in cultural production, a dynamic nature)
but also could be
Sea science
Earth science
Wood science
Fire science
Metal science
bringing same results but with an eastern approach....
I was just watching a yt HK play, and I find it ridiculous that it's possible to see fusion reactor tech whilst still in industrial era.
CIV VII Tech tree should have a sort of fog of war, locking the view to one's era.
Research could dispel some tech fog of war (more appropriate name needed) and reveal certain techs for the era that than could be studied.
So I would imagine a cultural division of citizens, with philosophers alike, that would produce a civ culture, and that could be spent to disperse the fog of techs.
Scientist, scribes, mathematicians, etc, would then produce science, that could be invested in learning techs.
Sharing books, papyrus, maybe even discovering them by sending trade expeditions or exploring, could help boost some techs, and precisely that would come with the papyrus subject.
New mechanic: Important books and papyruses to add alike great leaders (...)
We know that untill book press invention, books were extremely rare, however, AFTER the press, invention spread because of books...
In early times, romans and greeks produced an enormous amount of technical books, Egypt , Babylon, India and China also. Be it in Papyrus, tablets, or oral tradition still ( Inca Warehouses , bridge making, agriculture). Oral tradition would produce Hymns , music and poems, with a similar value to a book, however, scribe wont' work fro preservation, instead Alphabetism is important... under a certain global percantage some Hymns could be lost, and under a certain threshold, new oral copies could not be produced...
Books and Papyrus can boost a civ culture but must be mantained, transcribed, protected from worms, fires.
If lost, a civ culture would dwindle. If a Masonry roman book would be lost, a whole set of techs could go dark...
Transcription would be essential in mantaining knowledge through time. And without book trading (I would never trade the only copy, but could produce copies)
Fog dispersal should be slow, and with scrambled results, always....
The name of these books could be real or ficticious (Roman De Nature is known to have some herb formulae, but not mortar composition)
But a complete list would be essential to produce with respect to various branch of tech.
Mathematic
Astronomy
Philosophy
Agriculture
Medicine
Language (Alphabetism to play an important role in cultural production, a dynamic nature)
but also could be
Sea science
Earth science
Wood science
Fire science
Metal science
bringing same results but with an eastern approach....