![]() I feel like the kid at the arcade who has a game monitor flash with the message on the screen "Insert another quarter to continue playing" Only to realize, there is no slot to insert a quarter to keep playing Imperator. Provinces from previous Paradox titles, the smallest part of the map, are called cities in Imperator: Rome, while a province is comprised of groups of several cities. A simple tool tip at the start of a new game would suffice. The Imperator: Rome world map is said to be 'the biggest and most detailed map' in a Paradox game. I am most upset by the fact that this information, regarding the end date of the game, was not clearly revealed in the first place. I am not sure I will change my review or not. Whether one is religious or not, the birth of Christ and the subsequent advent of Christianity is one of the single most influential events in history, regardless of one's beliefs. (and I am not so convinced of that, honestly I think it was rather just a lazy way of handling the question of the birth of chirstianism and roman conversion to it)Īnd if Paradox is afraid to deal with the issue of Christianity because it might offend some people, then they truly don't care as much about being historically accurate as I once thought. Originally posted by Captain_Narol:Roman history didn't end with Augustus, so most players expected to be abble to play the game until 476 AD, the end date that they learnt at school (even if it's not really a true ending, as the Eastern Roman Empire survived much longer and was still truely roman at start).įrom a commercial standpoint, it was a mistake to restrict the game to such a short timeline, even if made sense in terms of gameplay.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |