Moderator: Cartographers
Starting Positions will help to have less neutral on the map but doing that, in all 4p games each player will start with 12 territories.Victor Sullivan wrote:Perhaps I code the cities as starting positions? This would solve the issue. Thoughts, TBK?swimmerdude99 wrote:I really dislike the amount of nuetrals in a one on one setting, makes the drop LITERALLY decide the game. No dice even effect it.
-Sully
hmm... I don't think they are necessary because:thenobodies80 wrote:So? TBK what's your thoughts on this?
and:ender516 wrote:Yes, you have to remember when you play 1v1, the drop is essentially a 1v1v1 drop, with one player being neutral. (Starting positions will alter the math here a bit since they are divided between the two real players, but I don't think this map has any.)
I guess my point is that many neutrals are annoying (and ever present in 1V1s) but they don't affect the final outcome of the match. We could add in the start positions but I don't think it would serve much of a point.Victor Sullivan wrote:There are 52 territories with 9 coded neutral cities. If the cities switch to starting positions and code them so that each player starts with one, it would solve the problem, but, of course, it doesn't do as much for 1v1s. I would certainly set the max at 2, no higher, to avoid dropped city bonuses. I'm fine with either solution.
-Sully


It's Cool Mrbenn is from a frozen rainy wasteland, he can actually only speculate on what a warm Mediterranean clime is like.ender516 wrote:Google Doodle honouring the discoverer of vitamin C; all that fruit looks very Californian; I see where MrBenn is coming from.
I've never been to Siberia.The Bison King wrote:It's Cool Mrbenn is from a frozen rainy wasteland, he can actually only speculate on what a warm Mediterranean clime isender516 wrote:Google Doodle honouring the discoverer of vitamin C; all that fruit looks very Californian; I see where MrBenn is coming from.

MrBenn wrote:I've never been to Siberia.The Bison King wrote:It's Cool Mrbenn is from a frozen rainy wasteland, he can actually only speculate on what a warm Mediterranean clime isender516 wrote:Google Doodle honouring the discoverer of vitamin C; all that fruit looks very Californian; I see where MrBenn is coming from.
Yes but every year this happens:ender516 wrote:The U.K. may be rainy, but frozen it ain't, and sitting at the end of the Gulf Stream, it's a lot more moderate than most locales at its latitude.

Wait Wait! one more!thenobodies80 wrote:That was 7 January (http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/in_depth/8447758.stm), it's called winter. All europe is in that way...(http://www.socialdust.com/images/neve-italia-2010.jpg)
Anyways, we can go back on topic before this thread becomes a weather forecast topic?

Are you joking? You've never been to California, have you?Vlasov wrote:The name changes look good to me.
I have a somewhat radical suggestion: How about switching the colors of the Central Valley and Sierra Nevada regions? The Central San Joaquin Valley is fertile and rich in agriculture, and might look better in Green.



WORDMrBenn wrote:
.... just saying....
FYI, the blue territory in the Bay Area legend still says Napa Valley instead of Santa Rosa.The Bison King wrote:Right right, I guess thats enough about the weather:
Here's the changes I'm proposing
Richmond=>Napa Valley
Napa Valley=>Santa Rosa
Morro Bay=>Pismo Beach
Elderado=>Jackson(really not sure about that one if people have any suggestions for a better name there)