Interesting tidbit:
The successful German game "The Settlers III" had an "Amazon" faction whose military strength relied much on bee farming.
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Interesting tidbit:
The successful German game "The Settlers III" had an "Amazon" faction whose military strength relied much on bee farming.
News :)
Quote:
Activity has been low these last weeks... Opportunity to work in diplomacy, start armies, traits and ethnicities for the new factions. ~JMRC
Start armies...does this mean the units that each faction begins the game with?
Yep.
Please not before mid-may 2012... got my final school exams then.
You know, I hope it's released on 21/12/12 just to spite you...
:clown:
Only if you don't build enough bars and brothels to balance them out.
Hmm... any news on the latter part?Quote:
Activity has been low these last weeks... Opportunity to work in diplomacy, start armies, traits and ethnicities for the new factions. ~JMRC
do you smell what santa is cookin? :santa:
That's actually on my Christmas wish list, my family didn't get it... :clown:
If you were evil, you could release a 'installer or EB2' for the game that like changes the intro and the menu and nothing else :D
News indeed!Quote:
Working on the temple system and associated traits for the governors. Worshipping the Gods may sometimes give bad traits... ~JMRC
Nice to see more work done about the campaign ^^
Seems like some weak-minded family members might be a bit overinfluenced by ambitious priests. (Well, who wouldn't donate lots of money to the temple if a sheep's liver told the priest you would die?)
News :)
Quote:
On stars and moons, thunder and fertility, male or female, bull or gazelle: reconstructing Arabian pantheons. - Moros
News from twitter :)
andQuote:
Just finished a major overhaul of the generals' religious beliefs, which give pos and neg effects and produce greater immersion. ~JMRC
Quote:
A carthaginian FM became worshipper of a lusitanian deity. He gets a penalty VS barbarians and now is losing loyalty and getting bad traits.
That "lusitanization" sounds very interesting :)
Especially due to the fact that the last years a few literary texts were found shedding some decent light on Sayhad religion, especially Sabaean. For long there was almost nothing but short inscriptions. But especially thanks to the new excavations of the Mahram Bilqis, we've got some decent stuff to work with. Sadly there have been few publications on it. Most what you find is out dated and often even still based on the now dismissed theories by Nielsen, or on Mediterranean centric views on ancient mythology.