Henri Christophe
L'empereur
Suleiman the Magnificent leading the Eastern RomeI didn't know we considered Empires Leaders now.![]()
Suleiman the Magnificent leading the Eastern RomeI didn't know we considered Empires Leaders now.![]()
would be a horrible idea and WILL trigger Greeks.Suleiman the Magnificent leading the Eastern Rome
would be a horrible idea and WILL trigger Greeks.
heck Yuan isn't the first time we had non-han Chinese Empire.Meanwhile, China wasn't depicted as specifically. Instead, it was always seen as that country that goes througth rise and decline but still here for 2 millenias straight. That's why the franchise had put Qin and Mao as leaders, as the first rise and the ultimate decline of the dynastic China.
So, even though both the Western and Eastern emperors both acknowledged each other as legitimate emperors and the political capital of the entire empire had been in the east since the reign of Diocletian the Eastern emperors lose all credibility to you as soon as the Western empire falls even though the Eastern half still stands? Am I misunderstanding something?
Sorry if that's the impression I gave, but that's not what I was going for. I just think it would be more interesting (and arguably more accurate) to see Byzantine emperors combined with "regular" Rome. Or alternatively, different takes on Chinese empires in game instead of the monolith as it is now, similar to the Roman vs. Byzantine split we haveBecause not a history simulator. No offense but this really doesnt matter. A change isnt going to impact the game one way or another nor does the way they currently have it.
They can be more less specific on what civ the leaders *actually* rule over but who cares. Sounds more like a history flex nitpicking technicalities than meaningful concern.
Sounds more like a history flex nitpicking technicalities than meaningful concern.
Now that I think about it, could've been really interesting to have the Manchu in the role Scythia currently hasThe way the Civ series depicts them Rome is an empire that rose and then fell, whereas China is a continuous culture with peaks and valleys. That's not to say that the arguments in either direction are wrong. I like the idea of depicting the continuity and change of culture in a game and that's why I'm very excited for Humankind. The Civ series, however, has been trending towards "de-blobbing" the civs it represents and so having multiple Chinese dynasties in the game as separate civs could make sense, but to me it feels wrong. This is most likely just my bias as Westerner.
or have Timur the lameNow that I think about it, could've been really interesting to have the Manchu in the role Scythia currently has
That describes like 90% of the posts in this forum. Well said.
Sorry if that's the impression I gave, but that's not what I was going for. I just think it would be more interesting (and arguably more accurate) to see Byzantine emperors combined with "regular" Rome. Or alternatively, different takes on Chinese empires in game instead of the monolith as it is now, similar to the Roman vs. Byzantine split we have
I was responding to the question of why the "western empire" had more legitimacy to call themselves "Roman". The simple answer is that the empire was born in Rome and that for a very long time, Rome was it's cultural and political capitol. Hence, Roman. It's quite simple.
And regardless of whether both parts of the empire were unified at one time, they eventually did split, and the eastern part survived another 1000 years. To say that the surviving part of the empire is "just still the Roman Empire" is nonsensical. There's value in identifying it as something else because that makes it easier to talk about. Hence, Byzantium. That doesn't mean that the people weren't "Roman" (though they really weren't in most ways).
I mean, this idea that the two entities must be one because of an unbroken line of rulers is bizarre. First, because Rome had a ton of breaks in the chain. Like, lots. Second, because nobody is applying that logic elsewhere. Is Brazil really just Portugal?
Otoman Empire should also be an alt leader of the Roman Empire![]()
That's definitely why there is no way to please everybody.There is, however, something to be said for representing the continuity of Chinese culture through the Mandate of Heaven. The name of China's ability, "Dynastic Cycle," hints at this, but the gameplay fails to follow up in any way. There was, I remember, a really cool mod someone made for Civ V where you start as the Xia dynasty and your capital and names (I think) change as you progress. I'd say, in the next Civ, either do something dynamic like that with China, or split it into a few dynasties. (If the later happens, we'll argue about which should be included!)
Or so many of ancient Chinese kingdoms...Either they keep China as one civ, or they split it but into who? You could easily do Han, Yuan, and Qing. But then somebody will definitely complain why there is no Ming civ.![]()
This is just bizarrely literal to me. Like you can only call yourself Roman if the city of Rome is located inside your political borders completely ignores how Romans of the imperial period, both before and after 467, saw themselves.
To me, this is like saying any state that wasn't part of the original 13 colonies isn't part of America. Everything changes over time, even the Roman Empire pre-467. Like Constantine adopting Christianity is a bigger break than anything the Eastern Empire did after 476 but that's not considered the end of the Roman Empire. The Eastern Empire saw themselves Roman, because they were and therefore are. What being "Roman" changed over the course of time, the founders of the Republic wouldn't recognize the Roman of Augustus's heyday and Augustus wouldn't recognize a lot of Rome of Theodosius's reign but that doesn't anyone of them less Roman.
Yet the Roman Empire didn't end with the Year of The Four Emperors, the Year of the Five Emperors or the Crisis of the Third century. Pretty much every European political polity since the Roman Empire had a break in the chain but England didn't stop being considered England because it was not longer ruled by the House of Wessex or France under the Bourbons considered an entirely new political entity. New dynasties came and went all the time in Western Europe yet you probably wouldn't question like France or whatever tracing their political lineage back to like Charlemagne. The Eastern Emperor in 476, Zeno, rule until 491 and soon after his dynasty was replaced by Justinian's and his was eventually replaced as well, just it had always been. The first real break in continuity post-476 is the Fourth Crusade, which happened like 250 years after Basil II's reign.
Lots of people saw themselves as "Roman". Greeks in Ottoman territory after the fall of Byzantium continued to call themselves Romans, too. That doesn't mean that they were.
One thousand years.
They use the term Byzantine Empire to distinguish that successor state from the original Roman Empire.
so if America fell like 2000 years later then dose that mean Americans now aren't American because there is no America 2000 years later?Lots of people saw themselves as "Roman". Greeks in Ottoman territory after the fall of Byzantium continued to call themselves Romans, too. That doesn't mean that they were. I answered a silly question with a literal answer.