Think I'm the one to blame for those plains Sorry!
I don't know why it would have an effect on global warming, but I recall the argument being twofold: natural realism (the Amazon doesn't have good soil despite a ton of rainfall, and that's why slash and burn farming practices are used on it since it can't support permanent farming due to the loss of nutrients) and historical realism (the Inca/Aztecs shouldn't be able to build up a 12-city empire capable of world domination since in reality that did not happen, and their lands should be ripe for colonization once the Renaissance hits).
I don't think the historical realism argument is completely valid if everyone starts at the same place in 4000BC, but it makes the game more interesting, especially for the land-hungry T1/2 players. I'm also thinking that hacking through a few dozen jungle tiles is growth stalling enough in itself, so maybe the Inca wouldn't have run away with it anyway. Good luck with that, HC.
I don't know why it would have an effect on global warming, but I recall the argument being twofold: natural realism (the Amazon doesn't have good soil despite a ton of rainfall, and that's why slash and burn farming practices are used on it since it can't support permanent farming due to the loss of nutrients) and historical realism (the Inca/Aztecs shouldn't be able to build up a 12-city empire capable of world domination since in reality that did not happen, and their lands should be ripe for colonization once the Renaissance hits).
I don't think the historical realism argument is completely valid if everyone starts at the same place in 4000BC, but it makes the game more interesting, especially for the land-hungry T1/2 players. I'm also thinking that hacking through a few dozen jungle tiles is growth stalling enough in itself, so maybe the Inca wouldn't have run away with it anyway. Good luck with that, HC.
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