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koontz1973 wrote:isaiah40, please continue. I know that the map pack is not the best work, I know they are not the best in gameplay, but that new update is looking freaking awesome. The mini map is looking good.
Do you have any ideas on how you will deal with Alaska and Hawaii on how they connect.
I understand why you'd use a small city like Tok based on the geography, but shouldn't Juneau connect to the mainland? It's further south than Tok. Perhaps connect Juneau to Bellingham or Seattle via ferry? Then connect Tok to Great Falls or Post Falls? You could also then add Barrow or Nome as a 5th interior Alaskan city since the northern part of the state would be empty.isaiah40 wrote:Alaska Cities:1. Anchorage
Tok will connect to Great Falls Montana (MT) and Bellingham Washington (WA)
2. Fairbanks
3. Juneau
4. Tok
Peter Gibbons wrote:I understand why you'd use a small city like Tok based on the geography, but shouldn't Juneau connect to the mainland? It's further south than Tok. Perhaps connect Juneau to Bellingham or Seattle via ferry? Then connect Tok to Great Falls or Post Falls? You could also then add Barrow or Nome as a 5th interior Alaskan city since the northern part of the state would be empty.
EDIT: I see you just added Alaska so this isn't that far down the road after all! Seeing how it's been placed, I'm even more convinced now of this suggestion. In fact, given the spacing, I might advocate adding Nome and Barrow. Alaska is mighty big, after all.
And alternative idea, by the way, is making only one land/ferry connection to Alaska and then making Honolulu and Anchorage connected via plane. Not one I prefer, but just throwing it out there.
MarshalNey wrote:Juneau is landlocked- surrounded by mountains, at least it was when I visited as a kid. One can only reasonably get there by air or sea, so an overland route doesn't make as much sense. However it might be nice to have a sea route from there to Washington state (that is, Seattle- which incidentally shouldn't be inland at all... being an international port. Not to make a fuss but it's very odd, I lived there for 6 months and it's very much connected to the sea).
-- Marshal Ney
Peter Gibbons wrote:My thoughts on the issues raised above...
1) I understand the fact that Nome (and Barrow, if that's in the discussion) cannot be reached via normal roads and that this is supposed to be a map based on road travel. But with Hawai'i, you are allowing inter-island travel so I think the same sort of exception should be applied to Alaska. You don't have to say how (it could be a snowmobile route), but I don't think anyone would have any complaints if Nome or Barrow were connected. I'd argue for both, with an increase in the bonus value.
2) Looking at both your map and how the geography works, I understand the Tok-Great Falls connection and agree with it. I think the other connection should be Juneau-to-Seattle (either via ferry or air). That would allow for at least 2 entry points into Alaska and wouldn't create a bottleneck in Tok.
3) I would only advocate the Honolulu-Anchorage air route if you grow the size of Alaska and feel the need for it to have a third entry point. It's certainly not an idea I'm wedded to and I completely understand the reluctance to add too many air routes. In fact, if you do add such a connection, it might make sense to remove the Honolulu-San Francisco connection, as California certainly already has enough entry points and Hawai'i doesn't really need three. But again, this issue is one I'm more ambivalent on compared to the others.
Flapcake wrote:Hi Isaiah
Where is the most famous route in the world? route 66
I think it deserves a place on your beautiful map, there are people who travel from the other side of the world only to follow Route 66 across the U.S.
Flap.
isaiah40 wrote:For a total of a WHOPPING 70 bonuses that you can choose from - I believe this is the most of any CC map in play.
Gilligan wrote:How come you changed some of the territory names?
DiM wrote:isaiah40 wrote:For a total of a WHOPPING 70 bonuses that you can choose from - I believe this is the most of any CC map in play.
i don't think it's anywhere near.
i'm not sure about other maps but on AoM or AoR the bonus combinations far exceed 70.
isaiah40 wrote:DiM wrote:isaiah40 wrote:For a total of a WHOPPING 70 bonuses that you can choose from - I believe this is the most of any CC map in play.
i don't think it's anywhere near.
i'm not sure about other maps but on AoM or AoR the bonus combinations far exceed 70.
I didn't go and start counting bonuses on those maps, that is why I said "I believe". Can anyone say for sure how many bonuses are on thos emaps?
isaiah40 wrote:Good points. I think these will work out better in the long run.
Instead of Barrow, how about if I put in Prudhoe Bay? it may be smaller, but to me I;ve heard of Prudhoe Bay more than Barrow, and there is a road that runs from Fairbanks to Prudhoe Bay.
To differentiate the connections between Honolulu/Anchorage/Los Angeles and either Fairbanks/Nome or Anchorage/Nome, I think a heliport would be good.
I'm leaning towards the Fairbanks/Nome connection.
If it's not too crowded in the north, sure. But wouldn't that make 4 of them connected by heliport? You would need Fairbanks as a base to go north, then you'd have Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Barrow. That's 4 heliports in Alaska (and that's ignoring my Tok-to-Great Falls suggestion). That might be too many. Maybe just put heliports in Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Fairbanks and allow them all to attack each other. Then connect Fairbanks to Anchorage and Tok via road.Now that I think about it, I can add in Barrow as well. That will give us 7 cities in Alaska, 3 connected by heliport. Sound good?
Peter Gibbons wrote:If it's not too crowded in the north, sure. But wouldn't that make 4 of them connected by heliport? You would need Fairbanks as a base to go north, then you'd have Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Barrow. That's 4 heliports in Alaska (and that's ignoring my Tok-to-Great Falls suggestion). That might be too many. Maybe just put heliports in Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Fairbanks and allow them all to attack each other. Then connect Fairbanks to Anchorage and Tok via road.
Makes sense.isaiah40 wrote:Peter Gibbons wrote:If it's not too crowded in the north, sure. But wouldn't that make 4 of them connected by heliport? You would need Fairbanks as a base to go north, then you'd have Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Barrow. That's 4 heliports in Alaska (and that's ignoring my Tok-to-Great Falls suggestion). That might be too many. Maybe just put heliports in Nome, Prudhoe Bay and Fairbanks and allow them all to attack each other. Then connect Fairbanks to Anchorage and Tok via road.
The heliports will only connect Fairbanks with Nome and Barrows as Fairbanks - Prudhoe Bay will a connection by road.
Peter Gibbons wrote:For Prudhoe Bay, Fairbanks and Barrow, do you plan to have any of them connect to each other, or will all three just feed into Fairbanks? If you care about real-life accuracy, it looks like Barrow and Prudhoe Bay have a regular air connection:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Barrow,_Al ... sportation
Peter Gibbons wrote:I think all of that looks good. My only question at this point is whether or not the Tok-to-Great Falls connection is even necessary any longer?
If you can get in via Juneau and Anchorage and if you can make it from Seattle, Los Angeles and Honolulu, it might be something that could be sacrificed (plus it's a 2,100m journey, which I think would easily make it the longest road connection on the board)
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