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spiesr wrote:jnd94 wrote:spiesr wrote:I dislike the way the whole map is on an angle...
but that is wat makes it different from all the other maps!
If that is the only thing it has to make it unique, then it should die...
rollercoaster375 wrote:Okay, so, I think this map looks really cool, however I disagree with the "Syracuse" title. Syracuse isn't really even the largest city in the area. Albany also appears to be in the area.
As for "Watertown"... I've spent years worth of my life in the Adirondacks, and I've never once been to Watertown. I think "Adirondacks" is a very reasonable title, as the entire area really doesn't come down to a single town (And in fact, there really isn't one.)
Saginaw does not have shoreline and an arrow pointing into erie so it cannot attackMolacole wrote:ok only thing I can come up with at the moment is...
can lake erie attack saginaw?
st. ignace - mackinac arrows
st. ignace - sault st. maria
windsor - buffalo arrows
look like they seperate the two bodies of water. So I was wondering if
windsor - detroit is suppossed to be the seperation or if lake erie can attack siginaw.
I guess I really don't see how people can't understand the lakes. There are 5. Only 1 lake borders three others, Huron. Lake Ontario is connected to Erie. Erie to Huron. Huron to Superior and Michigan. There are no borders because there is no need.wiggybowler wrote:I really like this map and can not wait to get to play it but not sure exactly where each lake ends.
ruthlessontogeny wrote:rollercoaster375 wrote:Okay, so, I think this map looks really cool, however I disagree with the "Syracuse" title. Syracuse isn't really even the largest city in the area. Albany also appears to be in the area.
As for "Watertown"... I've spent years worth of my life in the Adirondacks, and I've never once been to Watertown. I think "Adirondacks" is a very reasonable title, as the entire area really doesn't come down to a single town (And in fact, there really isn't one.)
In the central new york region (i.e., not new york city or buffalo), syracuse is the largest city. rochester lies in the "buffalo" district on the map, albany lies in "new york city" (and is smaller than syr regardless--95k compared to 147k), and binghamton, utica, rome, oswego, and ithaca are all considerably smaller than syracuse. check wikipedia if you doubt it either the location or population statistics.
re: watertown vs. adirondacks, again, the debate centers around whether one sticks to a municipal theme. the rest of the map names territories based on major cities within that territory. going with that criteria, watertown is the largest city in northern new york state.
WidowMakers wrote:Saginaw does not have shoreline and an arrow pointing into erie so it cannot attackMolacole wrote:ok only thing I can come up with at the moment is...
can lake erie attack saginaw?
st. ignace - mackinac arrows
st. ignace - sault st. maria
windsor - buffalo arrows
look like they seperate the two bodies of water. So I was wondering if
windsor - detroit is suppossed to be the seperation or if lake erie can attack siginaw.
OK, really? Do you see where the lakes get really skinny? Those are called rivers or straits, not lakes. Therefore, the lake ends there. Which one was it that is confusing you?wiggybowler wrote:I really like this map and can not wait to get to play it but not sure exactly where each lake ends.
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