With the advent of Civ4: Warlords Expansion, I thought about where civ has been, and thought I'd do a small study to see how civ has evolved, and where it may be headed. I thought I might be able to see which civs Firaxis might put in an expansion based on a the precedent of the prequels.
So, being a history student obsessed with Civilization, I made a comparison chart of all the civilizations in all the civ games, to see how often they made it in, the priority they were given, etc.
I discovered that only a small core of 11 civs have been in every vanilla version of a civ game. These 11 civs are:
Americans
Aztecs
Chinese
Egyptians
English
French
Germans
Greeks
Indians
Romans
Russians
In other words, 5 modern civs likely to play the game, 3 ancient Mediterranean empires, 2 ancient/modern Asian civs, and the Aztecs.
I discovered that there have been 34 civs to ever grace the world of Civilization, though some (e.g. Austria) have barely made their presence known.
Anyway, I'll attach my little study so that you can take a look at how Civs 1, 2, 3, 3's expansions, 4 and a potential Warlords composition stack up to each other.
So, being a history student obsessed with Civilization, I made a comparison chart of all the civilizations in all the civ games, to see how often they made it in, the priority they were given, etc.
I discovered that only a small core of 11 civs have been in every vanilla version of a civ game. These 11 civs are:
Americans
Aztecs
Chinese
Egyptians
English
French
Germans
Greeks
Indians
Romans
Russians
In other words, 5 modern civs likely to play the game, 3 ancient Mediterranean empires, 2 ancient/modern Asian civs, and the Aztecs.
I discovered that there have been 34 civs to ever grace the world of Civilization, though some (e.g. Austria) have barely made their presence known.
Anyway, I'll attach my little study so that you can take a look at how Civs 1, 2, 3, 3's expansions, 4 and a potential Warlords composition stack up to each other.
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