Hmmm...
Forgive me...
But Alexander was a great general - both strategically and tactically. If you have a chance, read some books about the Hellenestic age, or better yet, try Arrian's primary source material. Here are a few of the juicy tidbits you might discover.
1. Alexander was Macedonian. His father Phillip II was Macedonian. Phillip's father actually paid tribute to the strongest of the Illyrian tribes, the Antariatae, around the 4th century B.C.E. Unfortunately, I haven't found a date for this Mod anywhere...I'm assuming around 500-300 BC?
2. There was a decided difference between Macedonians and Greeks. Different religions, different culture. Different methods for choosing leaders. Different styles of warfare. (They both used the hoplite, but Alex's cavalry were FAR superior to the almost useless Greek cavalry.) Moreover, their world-views were fundamentally different. I understand why Firaxis grouped them together, but that doesn't mean we have to. I mean, If we have Medes and Persians.....
3. Re: Macedonia's influence. It was Phillip who conquered much of Greece - and Macedonia remained more influential - militarily and politically - then Greece up to the invasion of the Balkans by Rome.
4. Alexander's reign was short because he died, and was never able to consolidate his gains. Rather than being only a mere general, Alexander sought to unite his Macedonian heritage with the ways of the East. Arrian is full of examples of this (such as adopting Eastern dress, accepting the eastern oligarchy into his ranks, and forcing his men to marry eastern women, thereby creating a mixed upper class.). Had he had the time, I believe he would have succeeded.
5. Alexander's cities. Actually, Arrian and others cite over 800 cities founded by Alexander. While this number may seem high, take a look at the size of the empire he conquered. Like the Romans, Alexander planted veterans and founded towns from which to govern his new domains. Moreover, Alexandria was perhaps the greatest city in the ancient world. All texts entering its ports were recorded, leading to the greatest library in the history of the world. Too bad the early Roman Christians (ie: the post Council of Nicea ones who 'decided' what Christianity would be) decided that such a store of knowledge might be dangerous for them (as it would reveal the true events of history) and burned the library to the ground.
(This last bit is not entirely proven, but I can direct you to sources if you want.)
Either way, we can't add Macedonia to the game without adding a bigger map. I would like to advocate placing a few extra cities for the 'big' nations, and making settlers more expensive in general, which should slow down tribes like the Iberians.
Perhaps we should start a seperate thread for discussions like this? I don't know about everyone else, but I think that debates of this type tend to clog a Mod's forum. Maybe we should us PM's instead?
What do you think Thamis? Maybe a final say might help...