Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

SCENARIO/MAP EDITOR (ver1.0): Hosted by tfs99

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

  • SCENARIO/MAP EDITOR (ver1.0): Hosted by tfs99

    From the other forum:

    tfs99:

    A place for those who like to create scenarios and maps to make suggestions. Perhaps also a place for those with ideas on specific scenarios.

    Civ3 n ... Ted S.

    zaz:

    I liked the Civ2 map editor, except we could not make a map larger than 10,000 squares.

  • #2
    Yeah, I want an editor where you don't have to start a game to use it (i.e. SMAC). Something along the lines of CIV II works for me.

    Comment


    • #3
      In addition to the single tile, 2x2, 4x4, 8x8, cross and city-area brush-stamps, also add:

      Replace [terrain-tile] with [terrain-tile] throughout the entire map.

      With above tool the map-designer can replace certain terrain-types globally with a click of a button, without having to search trough the entire map and manually replacing certain tiles one by one.

      Apart from this just make the CIV-3 scenario-editor just as flexible and optional as the SMAC equivalent, and everything is a OK.

      Comment


      • #4
        Yeah, kinda combine SMAC and CIV2 and you've got the perfect map editor.
        -Civ3 Thread Master of OTHER and UNITS.
        "We get the paperwork, you get the game!"

        Comment


        • #5
          The ability to actually edit the effects of city improvements and wonders

          Comment


          • #6
            To expand on Trachmyr's suggestions:

            How about, instead of editing the text files, all customizations should be made through a scenario/map editor. For example, a module similar to ACEdit for editing factions, a tech-tree creator (<gulp> that would be hard), and a rules modifier. Instead of having to copy and replace and back up and other messy stuff to load custom files, there should be a system similar to the following:

            If changes are made to the text files from within the scenario editor, it will require that the scenario be placed in a separate folder. Of course, there would have to be an option to create a new directory from within the editor itself. All the game files would be saved in that directory. This way, when the game loads the scenario, it will load all the custom rules and graphics with it. In addition, a scenario file will no longer be required to make a rules set. Instead, one can select an option "use custom rules from this folder..." to load a custom rules set. This would completely eliminate the hassle of using text files, and instead bundle everything with the scenario/map editor.
            ------------
            evil conquerer
            alphac@flashmail.com
            Co-webmaster of The Arrival
            http://ac.strategy-gaming.com
            "War is the last refuge of the incompetent."
            Salvor Hardin, "Foundation" by Isaac Asimov

            -----BEGIN GEEK CODE BLOCK-----
            Version: 3.12
            GAT/CS/M/TW d- s:-- a---- C++++ UL&gt;++++ P+&gt;++ L&gt;+++ E W+++&gt;$ N+ o? K- w+ O---- M-- V? PS+ PE Y+ PGP- t++&gt;+++ 5 X- R tv-- b+++&gt;++++ DI+ D G&gt;++ e--&gt;++++ h! !r y?
            ------END GEEK CODE BLOCK------

            Wondering what the heck that was? Check out http://www.geekcode.com/.

            Comment


            • #7
              -=*BUMP*=-

              ------------------
              CIV3 DEVELOPMENT LIST COORDINATOR

              **(un)Officially Making Lists for Firaxis Since SMAC Enhancement 3!**
              I've been on these boards for a long time and I still don't know what to think when it comes to you -- FrantzX, December 21, 2001

              "Yin": Your friendly, neighborhood negative cosmic force.

              Comment


              • #8
                I mentioned this before, but I really like the idea and will repeat myself: Civ2 Scenarios should be compatible with Civ3 so that we do not lose all of the great work that so many Civ2 fans and scenario builders have done so far.

                Comment


                • #9
                  Topic up!

                  Comment


                  • #10
                    I don't know if its in CTP but if you could cut and paste would be nice some continents just have a good shape, or if you could zoom in on a region and paste it on another would be nice
                    Formerly known as "E" on Apolyton

                    See me at Civfanatics.com

                    Comment


                    • #11
                      I seem to remember hearing that one of the CivII expansion thingies had a scenario editor with actions triggered by other actions. The Romans will only attack when you capture CityA, for example...

                      Comment


                      • #12
                        I just want to see a REALLY good Lord of The Rings Scenario, that's all I ask.

                        ------------------
                        "Love your enemy, for he teaches you patience!"
                        -Dalai Lama
                        Read "The Third Eye" - T. Lobsang Rampa
                        "mono has crazy flow and can rhyme words that shouldn't, like Eminem"
                        Drake Tungsten
                        "get contacts, get a haircut, get better clothes, and lose some weight"
                        Albert Speer

                        Comment


                        • #13
                          Bigger maps!! Maybe 20000-40000 squares!
                          and more tech, more wonders (but not too powerful wonders, like CIV:CTP, it should be live civ 2 wonders).

                          Comment


                          • #14
                            -=*MOVING THE THREAD UP*=-
                            I've been on these boards for a long time and I still don't know what to think when it comes to you -- FrantzX, December 21, 2001

                            "Yin": Your friendly, neighborhood negative cosmic force.

                            Comment


                            • #15
                              Wow... talk about lack of attention.

                              "Yeah, kinda combine SMAC and CIV2 and you've got the perfect map editor."

                              No!

                              The one biggest thing that dragged SMAC and CivII down was their bad map editor and horrible scenario editor.

                              At least in CivII you had a separate map editor that allowed you to quickly whip up a map. SMAC had no such amenities. You had to use the cheat menu, and do it while in a game. The messiness of that cannot be overstated. Playing with altitude coherently was nigh-on-impossible. Fooling around with technologies took forever. Same with cities, especially making new cities- switch to Civ that gets new city. Give civ colony pod. Build city. Then cheat it some resources, have a turn go by (in which the computer does god knows what with the other factions taht you wanted to hold still), and repeat for other improvements. Are we having fun yet? Making a scenario, not a map, was basically impossible. And a map was not much fun either.

                              SMAC's "editor" was a giant step BACKWARDS from CivII's. With CivII I had enough time to create one scenario, IIRC, and that was derivative of the WWII scenario relieving me of the necessity to actually make the map work. SMAC I just gave up after a half an hour of wrangling with the altitude controls.

                              What I have to give to both SMAC and CivII was their tremendous customizability of rules in both. Keep the rules in .txt files, and add even more things we can edit. That is where I have to take my hat off to both SMAC and CivII. They may not be the best scenario makers, but they sure were able to really customize the standard game to any kind you wanted.

                              Now, for some constructive criticism. If you want to have a good place to start, go to the HOMM III map editor. It has flaws, but only because it has gone so far beyond what most map editors can do you start to see what CAN be done. For those of you that don't have it, you can place anything you want in the editor on a map right away. Fortifications, mountains, forests, cities- you should only have to drag one over from a sidebar and plop it down. Actually, in CivIII, you'd just paint the mountains and forests on, I suppose (like you can with other basic terrain types in HOMM III, like grass, snow, dirt...). You can drag and drop all the irrigations and roads and mines you want, as well, or click "auto-improve" and watch as the civ builds itself up some (every city improves x-2 squares around it, with x equaling the city's population). You should be able to drag events that trigger when a player walks across a patch of ground signaling a message, a gift of gold, a theft of gold, or a battle encounter with some enemies (in Civ's case, these "ground events" would need to be strips of territory, not just one space as in HOMM III). You should be able to click on the city and modify everything that's in it, all it's stats, and set limits on it. If you want a border fort town, that has city walls & barracks already built but has a max population of 3 and cannot build any structures other than the most basic, then you should be able to do that, and outlaw the other buildings and pre-build the buildings. Not to mention plopping down the citizens, armies, etc. You should then be able to go up to a pull down menu on the top and set characteristics for the entire Civ, like in CivII- technology it has, technology forbidden to that Civ, Social engineering, AI personality, etc. You should be able to set timed events for each civ from this scenario editor, with no need of an events.txt file like in CivII. Those timed events should be like the ground events- they tell scenario information and plot twists, they give money, they take money, they give troops to cities, etc. And needless to say, all you should have to do is select a player from a pull-down menu, take a unit, and drag it onto a patch of ground. Plus, you should be able to give the unit orders as well (if it's played by the AI)- hold your ground, patrol 5 squares from here and attack any that get nearby, goto CityX, etc.- and these orders would be followed by the AI, not changed. The possibilities grow exponentially when items like these are added.

                              For instance, the Peaceful kingdom of SnowFire is a well developed civ- but that didn't take long, since I merely placed the cities, quickly checked off a list of improvements built in them, and gave them population, after which I selected "auto-develop SnowFire." However, I put the barbarians of Activision nearby. Their cities are not nearly so built up, but they have been amassing of horde of troops to pour into SnowFire's realm. They all have orders to take certain cities in SF's border, after which the AI, which is set to aggressive and really hates SnowFire, will surely continue to use the units to attack. The barbarians also have several technologies forbidden to them, so they can't take my technologies in the attack. They are also set to anti-technological so they will not waste production building libraries. I, as SnowFire, get the news of this attack in events given to me. I try and quickly build up units to knock back the horde. After stopping them with only a few cities lost, I push them back to their own territory. As my army crosses the isthmus, I get a message saying that barbarians army remnants jump out in ambush and attack. Of course, that event could only be triggered by me, and it's canceled after one use. My remaining army staggers back home to rest and rejuvenate, when I get a message saying that the barbarians are not my true enemy, they were really funded by Evil Lord Death across the seas.... blah blah blah. You get the point.

                              Which reminds me- as in CivII, the scenarios should be able to make use of different rules.txt files than the normal game.

                              I haven't played SMAC in awhile because of the lack of scenarios, while I keep on making new HOMM III maps and play HOMM III a lot more. Coincidence? This must absolutely be fixed in CivIII. To recap:
                              Scenario editor SEPARATE from game. No cheat menu!
                              Easier to whip up maps.
                              More stuff to do with them, made easier.
                              And if you haven't alraedy, get your hands on the HOMM III map editor for what a map editor SHOULD do.
                              All syllogisms have three parts.
                              Therefore this is not a syllogism.

                              Comment

                              Working...
                              X