Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Civs included. Just the facts madam 2.

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • KrazyHorse,
    Well, if you think Beijing isn't an important city, I guess you might be right Conquered cities like Samarkand, Bokhara, Baghdad, Kiev, etc. indeed played an important role in Mongol history but cities actually founded by the Mongols themselves were at least as important, probably more important (Karakorum, Ta-tu/Cambulac/Beijing, Shang-tu, Sarai Batu, Sarai Berke, etc). The Mongol empire was much more than just a military empire: trade, science and diplomacy have always been important factors as well. The most obvious example of this is that many Chinese inventions reached Europe during the rule of the Mongols: gunpowder, compass, printing, to name but a few. These and many other advances were also exploited by the Mongols themselves once they had come in contact with them (most notably siege warfare). Caravans could travel freely and unrestricted through the vast Mongol empire (something which isn't as trivial as it may seem, just look at France, Germany and Greece). The Mongols also maintained diplomatic relationships with all major and many minor Eurasian nations, many more than any nation before them AFAIK.

    They were no more or less unified then the Greeks. Not even Alexander the Great ruled over all Greeks, many Greek colonies in Spain, Italy, France, Northern Africa and at Cremea remained independent from Alexander. And apart from Alexander, when were the Greeks ever united under one ruler? Greece consisted of many city-states who almost always remained independent from each other, though they felt they were part of the same culture and were often allied. The same is the case with the Mongols: the Yuan dynasty, the Golden Horde, the Il-Khanid dynasty, the Chagatai and to a lesser extend the Moghul dynasty and other smaller khanates, they all had a fairly high degree of independence but they were all Mongols and in that sense united and most of the time allied with each other. Contrary to the Greeks though, most of the time the Mongols *did* have a single 'supreme' leader, and Genghis and Kublai (among others) both held this position for most of their lives.

    Your point about Kublai reigning over the Chinese makes no sense. When the Romans conquered Gaul, Gaul became a Roman province and Roman laws and culture were enforced on the Celts living there, even though the Romans tolerated Celts who wanted to maintain their own livestyle, as long as they payed taxes and accepted Roman rule. The same was the case in China: when Kublai had conquered China, it became part of the Mongol empire and Mongol rule, laws and culture were enforced on the Chinese, while the Mongols kept much of their own culture and customs. The Chinese were allowed to continue to speak their own language and maintain their old lifestyle, but they had to accept Mongol rule, pay taxes and accept a new social hierarchy in which the Mongols were on top of the social ladder and the South-Chinese at the bottom. Important government functions were for a good part in the hands of Mongol aristocrats (though they hired many Chinese advisors because they simply didn't have the necessary experience to rule a vast empire themselves). It's true that the Mongols adapted themselves to and were even assimilated by the nations they conquered but again, the same was true for the Romans (think Greece or Christianity, for example). Like the Romans, the Mongols never lost their identity over it, they always remembered who they were and where they came from.

    Your two most important arguments against the Mongols counting as a civilization seem to be that they didn't rule for long enough and that they were nomadic warriors rather than settled-down rulers. I did a little research and even the most 'pessimitic' historians say the Mongol empire ruled the Eurasian continent for 185 years (other sources and I myself disagree and add a few centuries to that). This is from the rise of Genghis Khan to the (almost simultaneous) decline of the Il-Khanid, the Yuan and the Golden Horde. If we go back 185 years and look at the state of the USA in the early 19th century we have to conclude that the Mongols were a significant worldpower longer than the Americans were, yet noone disputes them being a 'valid' civ. So IMHO your first argument doesn't hold. As far as the second argument goes, yes, the Mongols' traditional lifestyle has been one of nomadic existance, but the Mongols have also always had fixed settlements. In order to be able to support trade, warfare and other social, political and cultural systems, it's simply necessary to have at least some fixed settlements. Also, Mongol aristocrats have always prefered the luxury and comfort of palaces and houses over the uncomfortable and primitive life in yurts. Long before and long after Genghis Khan & Co came around the Mongols have lived in towns, cities and other fixed settlements. It may not have been the most characteristic part of Mongol culture, but it did happen. Add to that the great cities that the Mongols founded and inhabited in the time of their (first) 185 years of supremacy (the names of which I mentioned earlier in this post) and I think your second argument a weak one to say the least.

    If you consider the enormous impact they had on the history of mankind, I think you can't dismiss the Mongols off-hand as a possibility for a civilization in Civ3, esp. not since they *were* indeed a civilization by any definition I can come up with for that word. IMHO they are even a must-have civ but that's just my personal opinion, whether or not Firaxis agrees with that is something that only time will tell (but they did think so in the past).

    FireDragoon,
    We've discussed this extensively before but I'll explain it again. A number of those previews specifically stated that 16 is the total number of civs, not the number of civs per game. Some of these previews even mentioned that the number of civs per game was 7 or 8, but others haven't said anything about this (only 1 preview so far claimed that the number of civs per game is 16). I have not seen the number 32 anywhere before, so unless you can give me a more or less reliable source for that number I have to assume that it's sheer speculation, not based on any facts. And again, this thread is about facts, not about speculation. (In fact, even numbers from previews are speculation, only Firaxis can give us the real numbers, but these previews could be a good indication of what the real numbers will be.)

    hetairoi22,
    You're right, I read that about the English too somewhere, I'll add that to the list. As far as the Zulu cities are concerned, we already knew of those for a very long time but apparently no-one remembered to add them to the list. I'll add that to the list after all. Thanks for the heads up on these issues!


    So far, based on our evidence, we know that:

    100% CONFIRMED. These civs ARE in CIV 3:

    1. AMERICANS - Leader (Abraham Lincoln; 100% confirmed), city names, Unique Unit (F15)
    2. GERMANS - Unique Unit (Panzer). Multiple text references, video reference
    3. CHINESE - Leader (Mao Zedong; 100% confirmed)
    4. ROMANS - Leader (C. Julius Ceasar, city name (capital), unique unit (Legion), video reference
    5. FRENCH - Leader (Joan of Arc(?); 100% confirmed), dialogue window of the French (Unique Unit: Musketeer?)
    6. RUSSIANS - Unique Unit (MiG)
    7. ZULUS - Unique Unit (Impi), city names
    8. ENGLISH - Leader (Elisabeth I; 100% confirmed)[color=red], (Unique Unit: Man-at-Arms?)[color=red]
    9. EGYPTIANS - Leader (100% pharaoh, does anyone know who this is?), definite text reference
    10. INDIANS - Leader (Mahatma Ghandi; 100% confirmed)
    11. MONGOLS (50%)- or JAPANESE?(50%) Leader * (see civ 18, Japanese), possibly Japanese Unique Unit
    12. IROQUOIS - Leader (100% Native American, any ideas on who? Hiawatha?), city names, text references Unique Unit (75% Native American Unique Unit - 25% Military Leader) ** (see below)
    13. GREEKS - Leader (Alexander the Great; City name (capital), possible Unique Unit (Hoplites) *** (see below), text referenc, video reference.

    ** There are two clues that this Native American civ in fact isn't the Iroquois: the houses behind the leader picture are small and round rather than long and square and the unit is a horseman while the Iroquois lived in woods and didn't rely heavily on horses. All other clues (text references, hair cut, city names) point to Iroquois.
    *** In the screenshot Athens is building Hoplites. In greek «OPLITES» means "men-at-arms". This word is still in use today in Greece and it still means the same thing as it did in Ancient Greece.


    EVIDENCE ABOUT OTHER CIVS (which means they could be in or not):

    14. PERSIANS - City names (capital)
    15. SPANISH - City name: Salamanca (which historically was once a Roman city)
    16. BABYLONIANS - City name
    17. AZTECS - City names
    18. JAPANESE - instead of the Mongols; open for debate, please see the Samurai(?) unit here
    * Also see this picture: Gheghis Chan of the Mongols or a Japanese leader? (Most votes go to Genghis)


    SUGGESTIONS BASED ON CLUES (weak clues but we report them):

    19. VIKINGS (?) Very weak clues. See above mention URL for the boat: Viking Longboat?
    20. ISRAELIS. Apolytoner Eli has pointed out that according to a israeli site, Israel is in.
    21. CANADIANS. City name (Montreal). The city name is NOT on the map, but on a civ 3 window.
    22. CONFEDERATES. As refered to in a swedish article, a Great Military Leader in Civ 3 could be Stonewell Jackson. Apolytoner Arator argued that this leader is impossible to be in the same civ as Lincoln (=100% confirmed leader of the Americans). Many other Apolytoners disagree though, arguing that he's more likely to be an American, among other reasons because (as joseph1944 pointed out) he served for the American Army before joinging the Confederates.
    23. PHOENICIANS. Based on a single text reference in a preview.


    --------------------------------------------------------
    The evidence is categorized as such:

    Leader= We have a picture of the leader of the corresponting civ.
    Unique Unit= We know that the particular unique unit belongs to the corresponding civ
    Text reference= The civ has been mentioned by Firaxis in their web site or in interviews by their CEO
    Video reference= The civ was seen in Firaxis demo movie from E3.
    City names= The names of cities that clearly belong to the corresponding civ are included in scrrenshots of the game
    All other clues= All other clues are reported next to the civ name.

    -------------------------CIV FACTS-----------------------

    + Firaxis said the made NO official announcement regarding the number of civs that may or may not be included in the game.
    + In a Gamespot article its says that civs will be 16.
    + An israeli site says that civs will be 16
    + In an IGN preview it says that there will be 16 civs.
    + By now, many other sources have also claimed that the total number of civs in Civ3 will be 16.

    --------------------------POINTERS-------------------------

    * The city names in the screen shots can be from an extra city names list or could have been arbitrarily written be members of Firaxis. So city names in screenshots doesn't guarantee that a civ will be in. Examples: Kerplakistan & Huntsville, possibly others.
    * Another problem could be scenarios. Though city names alone are not enough evidence to include a civ on the 100% certain list and scenario-specific graphics are not likely to be made public until the game is in late beta (if they even exist at all), it's quite possible that some of the evidence we used in this list is based on scenario specific information and not be valid for the regular game.
    Last edited by Locutus; June 24, 2001, 11:27.
    Administrator of WePlayCiv -- Civ5 Info Centre | Forum | Gallery

    Comment


    • Whatever. I'm going to stop this whole "are the Mongols going to be in civ III" sub-thread, because whenever Locutus and I respond it takes up half a page. Let it just be said that the question of Mongols vs. Japanese is still unresolved.
      12-17-10 Mohamed Bouazizi NEVER FORGET
      Stadtluft Macht Frei
      Killing it is the new killing it
      Ultima Ratio Regum

      Comment


      • After a while, we have new facts about Civ included in games: new PC Zone screenshots mention Iroquis (on diplomatic table) and French (one of the main map screenshoot).

        The Iroquis leader seems called "Hiawatha" (I have no hint about Iroquis history ).
        Last edited by Adm.Naismith; July 11, 2001, 11:36.
        "We are reducing all the complexity of billions of people over 6000 years into a Civ box. Let me say: That's not only a PkZip effort....it's a real 'picture to Jpeg heavy loss in translation' kind of thing."
        - Admiral Naismith

        Comment


        • Wow! Lot's of new info out I see, haven't had much time yet to process all of it but I too spotted those things, Adm. Naismith & Gramphos.

          The diplomacy screen is hard evidence of the Native Americans being Iroquois, as we already suspected all along. Hiawatha is one of two more or less famous Iroquois leaders, him being the more famous of the two (forgot the name of the other).

          I saw all those cities too, plus one or perhaps even two Greek city names (Miletos).


          So far, based on our evidence, we know that:

          100% CONFIRMED. These civs ARE in CIV 3:

          1. AMERICANS - Leader (Abraham Lincoln; 100% confirmed), city names (capital), Unique Unit (F15)
          2. GERMANS - Unique Unit (Panzer), city names (capital), multiple text references, video reference
          3. CHINESE - Leader (Mao Zedong; 100% confirmed), city names
          4. ROMANS - Leader (C. Julius Ceasar), city name (capital), Unique Unit (Legion), video reference
          5. FRENCH - Leader (Joan of Arc(?); 100% confirmed), city names (capital), dialogue window of the French (Unique Unit: Musketeer?)
          6. RUSSIANS - Unique Unit (MiG), city names
          7. ZULUS - Unique Unit (Impi), city names
          8. ENGLISH - Leader (Elisabeth I; 100% confirmed), (Unique Unit: Man-at-Arms?)
          9. EGYPTIANS - Leader (100% pharaoh, does anyone know who this is?), definite text reference, city names (capital)
          10. INDIANS - Leader (Mahatma Ghandi; 100% confirmed)
          11. MONGOLS (50%)- or JAPANESE?(50%) Leader * (see civ 18, Japanese), possibly Japanese Unique Unit
          12. IROQUOIS - Leader (Hiawatha; 100% confirmed), city names, text references, Unique Unit (75% Unique Unit - 25% Military Leader)
          13. GREEKS - Leader (Alexander the Great; City names (capital), possible Unique Unit (Hoplites) *** (see below), text referenc, video reference.

          [...]
          *** In the screenshot Athens is building Hoplites. In greek «OPLITES» means "men-at-arms". This word is still in use today in Greece and it still means the same thing as it did in Ancient Greece.


          EVIDENCE ABOUT OTHER CIVS (which means they could be in or not):

          14. PERSIANS - City names (capital)
          15. SPANISH - City name: Salamanca (which historically was once a Roman city)
          16. BABYLONIANS - City name
          17. AZTECS - City names
          18. JAPANESE - instead of the Mongols; open for debate, please see the Samurai(?) unit here
          * Also see this picture: Gheghis Chan of the Mongols or a Japanese leader? (Most votes go to Genghis)


          SUGGESTIONS BASED ON CLUES (weak clues but we report them):

          19. VIKINGS (?) Very weak clues. See above mention URL for the boat: Viking Longboat?
          20. ISRAELIS. Apolytoner Eli has pointed out that according to a israeli site, Israel is in.
          21. CANADIANS. City name (Montreal). The city name is NOT on the map, but on a civ 3 window.
          22. CONFEDERATES. As refered to in a swedish article, a Great Military Leader in Civ 3 could be Stonewell Jackson. Apolytoner Arator argued that this leader is impossible to be in the same civ as Lincoln (=100% confirmed leader of the Americans). Many other Apolytoners disagree though, arguing that he's more likely to be an American, among other reasons because (as joseph1944 pointed out) he served for the American Army before joinging the Confederates.
          23. PHOENICIANS. Based on a single text reference in a preview.


          --------------------------------------------------------
          The evidence is categorized as such:

          Leader= We have a picture of the leader of the corresponting civ.
          Unique Unit= We know that the particular unique unit belongs to the corresponding civ
          Text reference= The civ has been mentioned by Firaxis in their web site or in interviews by their CEO
          Video reference= The civ was seen in Firaxis demo movie from E3.
          City names= The names of cities that clearly belong to the corresponding civ are included in scrrenshots of the game
          All other clues= All other clues are reported next to the civ name.

          -------------------------CIV FACTS-----------------------

          + Firaxis said the made NO official announcement regarding the number of civs that may or may not be included in the game.
          + In a Gamespot article its says that civs will be 16.
          + An israeli site says that civs will be 16
          + In an IGN preview it says that there will be 16 civs.
          + By now, many other sources have also claimed that the total number of civs in Civ3 will be 16.

          --------------------------POINTERS-------------------------

          * The city names in the screen shots can be from an extra city names list or could have been arbitrarily written be members of Firaxis. So city names in screenshots doesn't guarantee that a civ will be in. Examples: Kerplakistan & Huntsville, possibly others.
          * Another problem could be scenarios. Though city names alone are not enough evidence to include a civ on the 100% certain list and scenario-specific graphics are not likely to be made public until the game is in late beta (if they even exist at all), it's quite possible that some of the evidence we used in this list is based on scenario specific information and not be valid for the regular game.
          Administrator of WePlayCiv -- Civ5 Info Centre | Forum | Gallery

          Comment


          • You should add City Names to Germans, Chinese, French, Russian and Egyptian. As the city names has been in various Screenshots.
            Creator of the Civ3MultiTool

            Comment


            • There have been Russian and Egyptian City Names in older screens, I just didn't want to comment them as the Civs already were listed to be in.
              Creator of the Civ3MultiTool

              Comment


              • Originally posted by KrazyHorse
                Let it just be said that the question of Mongols vs. Japanese is still unresolved.
                I think the Mongols qualify: a) it was a civilization - the fact that it did not concentrate around cities for most of its existence does not negate its importance in history, though it makes its power difficult to simulate in Civ, given the focus on cities; and b) it was HUGELY significant. In fact, if we include in the "Mongol" tribe all the turkic-speaking, steppe-dwelling peoples, the Mongols played a crucial role several times in history.

                On the subject of who the Asian dude is, I disagree that he is Genghis Khan. The surrounding landscape IS too East Asian, and he bears a striking resemblance to Tokugawa Ieyasu, the founder of the Tokugawa Shogunate, which made Edo (now Tokyo) its capital. I've attached a picture of Ieyasu below, which shows him wearing the same head-dress as the CIII screenshot.

                KH, of the two pictures you show, the first is obviously a European representation and probably inaccurate, the second is much more likely to represent GK's likeness.

                Two bits of (fairly) useless trivia here:

                first, Genghis Khan's real name was Temujin; "Genghis Khan" was actually his title, meaning Great, or Supreme, Leader. Genghis Khan assumed this title when he united the Mongol tribes under his control, "Khan" being the head of a Mongol tribe.

                second, for those who don't know, his name was pronounced more like Chinggis (the "ch" as in chicken).
                Attached Files
                Diplomacy is the continuation of war by other means.

                Comment


                • The reason Firaxis made it 16 civs instead of 21 is quite simple: 16 is a big round number in binary (1000) and in hexadecimal (10), so it makes it a lot easier to program the names, leaders etc. and maybe include 16 colors to account for each civ and let any combination play in the same game.

                  They could have raised it to 32, also a round number in bin and hex, but that would be expensive and offer little reward if there's a customize civ option. I would have liked to see the Celts (pronounced KELTS, not SELTS!) back, but it doesn't look like that will be happening.
                  "Proletarier aller Länder, vereinigt euch!" -- Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels
                  "If you expect a kick in the balls and get a slap in the face, that's a victory." -- Irish proverb

                  Proud member of the Pink Knights of the Roundtable!

                  Comment


                  • These are the civs I expect to show up, based on the sketchy evidence:

                    Americans, Aztecs, Chinese, Egyptians, English, French, Germans, Greek, Indians, Iroquois, Japanese, Persians, Romans, Russians, Zulus
                    "Proletarier aller Länder, vereinigt euch!" -- Karl Marx & Friedrich Engels
                    "If you expect a kick in the balls and get a slap in the face, that's a victory." -- Irish proverb

                    Proud member of the Pink Knights of the Roundtable!

                    Comment


                    • I am sure I like this. Israel, Aztecs and Egyptians are my primary civs for whom I wish to play. If these 3 are in, I won't care as much for the others, but I hope to see more than 16 in.
                      Solver, WePlayCiv Co-Administrator
                      Contact: solver-at-weplayciv-dot-com
                      I can kill you whenever I please... but not today. - The Cigarette Smoking Man

                      Comment


                      • Detective Skills needed

                        Now I’ve had a closer look at the new video, and I have found one interesting thing.

                        In the attached image I’ve combined two screens from the video. The first screen is a City window with the name Salamanca. That alone says nothing, as we already had seen this name and taken it for a Spanish city, but if you compare the terrain with the screen below you’ll find that they match. As the bottom screen shows a part of Iroquois Despotism Salamanca seem to be an Iroquois City. I don’t know if they ever had any City named Salamanca. They might have captured it, but I can’t find any proof of battle. Locutus, I need your detective skills now . Is it possible that the Iroquois had a city named Salamanca, or have they captured it?
                        Attached Files
                        Creator of the Civ3MultiTool

                        Comment


                        • Dunno how to make captions but I froze the video on full screen mode. Looks like its 870 AD and there are already tanks rambling around. Stupid little red circles mark the units. Terrain looks a tad better than on jpg's posted on PC Zone and it kinda looks like there are hills rolling into mountain ridges (still, every peak for itself, you can see tiles patched together).

                          Comment


                          • The reason Firaxis made it 16 civs instead of 21 is quite simple: 16 is a big round number in binary (1000) and in hexadecimal (10), so it makes it a lot easier to program the names, leaders etc. and maybe include 16 colors to account for each civ and let any combination play in the same game.
                            No, I'm sorry you are wrong. Firaxis has stated that they wanted to have lesser civs so they could make each more unique. They wanted to be able to spend more time on each individual civ. Instead of making a few more civs with the quality of each civ lessened.
                            However, it is difficult to believe that 2 times 2 does not equal 4; does that make it true? On the other hand, is it really so difficult simply to accept everything that one has been brought up on and that has gradually struck deep roots – what is considered truth in the circle of moreover, really comforts and elevates man? Is that more difficult than to strike new paths, fighting the habitual, experiencing the insecurity of independence and the frequent wavering of one’s feelings and even one’s conscience, proceeding often without any consolation, but ever with the eternal goal of the true, the beautiful, and the good? - F.N.

                            Comment


                            • No, I'm sorry you are wrong. Firaxis has stated that they wanted to have lesser civs so they could make each more unique. They wanted to be able to spend more time on each individual civ. Instead of making a few more civs with the quality of each civ lessened.
                              That may be the reason why there are less of them. But why exactly 16? I think the answer about binar/hexadecimal coding is quite plausible.
                              The problem with leadership is inevitably: Who will play God?
                              - Frank Herbert

                              Comment


                              • Kenobi's right on the money

                                Kenobi's right about the 'Asian dude.'

                                It is not Genghis Khan.

                                The fellow is wearing indigineous Japanese attire. The hat and robes are worn by a religious order in Japan, which still exists, centred around one of the spiritual mountain sites there (the name of the mountain I cannot recall, but they have dozens of temples there).

                                Hirohito and the Emperors of Japan have worn this sort of garb for centuries.

                                I think Firaxis has been pretty good with its research, so there's no way it's a representation of good old Genghis.

                                I'd say Japan is in for sure, but I'm not sure which guy from Japanese history he is. Might be Toyotomi Hideyoshi.



                                Phutnote

                                Comment

                                Working...
                                X