The Altera Centauri collection has been brought up to date by Darsnan. It comprises every decent scenario he's been able to find anywhere on the web, going back over 20 years.
25 themes/skins/styles are now available to members. Check the select drop-down at the bottom-left of each page.
Call To Power 2 Cradle 3+ mod in progress: https://apolyton.net/forum/other-games/call-to-power-2/ctp2-creation/9437883-making-cradle-3-fully-compatible-with-the-apolyton-edition
I wouldn't be so sure about the Kosala. They were annexed by the Magadhans, but a revolt could be realistic.
And about China: It's a "what if?"! Even if one thing would have happened differently it could have triggered thousands of other things! If Pericles wouldn't have gone out on the streets one day, perhaps the Pelopponesian War would have never happened! If a Frenchman wouldn't have lost a bullet at Verdun, Hitler wouldn't have rose to power in 1933! You've got to use your imagination!
Oh yes, and my Grandfather would hate me if he read what I wrote about India. I'm sure!
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Follow the masses!
30,000 lemmings can't be wrong!
Mighty Carthage fought three wars:
It was still mighty after the first one, still inhabitable
after the second one;
It could not be found after the third one.
-Bert Brecht
I know, i know... But i still think Alexander to be defeated...
"Io non volgo le spalle dinnanzi al nemico!!!" - il Conte di San Sebastiano al messo del comandante in capo, battaglia dell'Assietta
"E' più facile far passare un cammello per la cruna di un ago che un pensiero nel cervello di Bush!!!" - Zelig
"Live fire, and not cold steel, now resolve battles" - Marshall de Puysegur
Oh blast...you're doing this better than I am
Especially since real life has gotten in the way.
If anyone's interested in making this, I'll send you all my files.
Otherwise, I'll finish it when real life gets out of the way, which does not seem particularly likely at this moment (blast school!)
Though to be fair, I also have to blame micronations a little...
Something possessed me to actually finish this. It is now ready for playtesting. I'll mail a copy to anyone who is interested, but I'll warn you, I'm sure it still has a few bugs. (to quote someone, saying it has "a few bugs" is like saying the Pacific Ocean is "damp")
You mean Blood and Iron. I got it about 1/2 done, then I started working on Warlords of China (1917-1950) which is about 2/3 done, then I stared working on Indochina War, which is about 3/4 done.
You had to ask!
[This message has been edited by techumseh (edited February 02, 2001).]
Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios
But before, the canal of Necho and Dareios the Great between the Nile and the Red Sea is being reconstructed, and the navy sails along the coast, to Leptis Magna.
Actually that canal is impractical due to the irregular winds in the northern Red Sea.
P.S. Send the scen over:
petrazi@sprint.ca
stleo@sidgames.com
Ships can't "sail" through canals, because they are so narrow that tacking is impossible. Any pure sailing ship (no reliance on oars) would either never pass through ANY canal, or would be dragged through by her crew. Most ships of the era were oared, however (don't be fooled by the sails), and wind direction would be meaningless to them also.
To La Fayette, as fine a gentleman as ever trod the Halls of Apolyton
From what I understand of that Civ game of yours, it's all about launching one's own spaceship before the others do. So this is no big news after all: my father just beat you all to the stars once more. - Philippe Baise
BTW, I loved your Xerxes scen! It quickly became one of my favourites! Would you mind if I would, in that utopic world where I'll update my homepage, post it?
Follow the masses!
30,000 lemmings can't be wrong!
Necho begun that canal between the Red Sea and the Nile in 604, but for nearly a century, the work was abandoned. A Graeco-Persian explorer named Skylax who sailed around the Arab penninsula encouraged his king, Dareios the Great to complete the work on the channel (it was sometime between 520 and 512 BC). Whilst Dareios was very interested to keep things like these running, but I think the canal became useless after the reign of Dareios II. (423-404 BC), but on the other hand, it could be the Egyptians destroyed it themselves as a rebellious act against the Persian opression (maybe between 401 and 343 BC)
Follow the masses!
30,000 lemmings can't be wrong!
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