Moderator: Cartographers
VicFontaine wrote:Even if the map doesn't even have all the gameplay elements? In other words: if only 80% of the gameplay elementsānot talking about graphics hereāare there, I should post it anyway? Okie dokie.
Lemme see how I can remember to do that here...eh....uh...
VicFontaine wrote:POSTED THE UPDATED IMAGE!
PLEASE SEE THE FIRST POST OF THIS THREAD ON PAGE 1, then return for comments.
VicFontaine wrote:WHAT STILL MUST BE DONE:
1) Some fonts are hard to read.
2) Some cultural treasures' images are not on the map next to their names, which are on the map.
3) Some cities are in the wrong place.
4) There is no legend/explanation of gameplay, nor are the connecting dotted lines showing attack paths that are needed in some areas (e.g., Steamboats, cities connecting to their universities)
5) The universities are not on the map, though Ole Miss is represented by a Cap (which will change)
6) There is one missing highway around the Oxford/Ole Miss area. It's absence joins two named territories that need to be divided (highways are all the black lines that act as territory dividers. Interstates are obvious and not the same as highways.)
7) Some of the coloring is still a tad off.
I'd still like one more Cultural Treasure, "Hunting," on the map. It has neither name nor image at present.
9) The possibility of an objective win: I like this. Don't know what it would be, but perhaps holding the Universities or all the Cultural treasures, plus the Capitol of Jackson.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:the font under the steamboats are hard to read. and being a red/green color blind person i can say the ones on the coast are near impossible to do so. it would help to change the color on those, and maybe make the flared edges a bit bigger on all of them.
edit; also it looks as though Florida is gone. not sure if that's intentional but Mississippians and Floridians are pretty good friends. you may want to include them as well.
what is black r. ?
natty dread wrote:Winona is also a really uncomfortable shape for a territory... I think you should make it slightly larger so it's at least clearer what it borders.
VicFontaine wrote:"Black R.," and all terts labeled with a "R.," next to it, are RIVER terts. Because Mississippi has great rivers and great counties, I blended both for naming purposes. Some terts, like my own County of "Rankin," are, more-or-less relative to that counties' location in reality. Same with the rivers. "Black R.," is "Black River" rather than a county name. That is, the actual waterway "Black River" flows through that general location in Mississippi.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:VicFontaine wrote:"Black R.," and all terts labeled with a "R.," next to it, are RIVER terts. Because Mississippi has great rivers and great counties, I blended both for naming purposes. Some terts, like my own County of "Rankin," are, more-or-less relative to that counties' location in reality. Same with the rivers. "Black R.," is "Black River" rather than a county name. That is, the actual waterway "Black River" flows through that general location in Mississippi.
oh, i was assuming you were talking about "black creek" and was going to be a stickler and suggest you make it that. after further research though, i've learned there is actually a "black river" in ms as well.
VicFontaine wrote:WILLIAMS5232 wrote:VicFontaine wrote:"Black R.," and all terts labeled with a "R.," next to it, are RIVER terts. Because Mississippi has great rivers and great counties, I blended both for naming purposes. Some terts, like my own County of "Rankin," are, more-or-less relative to that counties' location in reality. Same with the rivers. "Black R.," is "Black River" rather than a county name. That is, the actual waterway "Black River" flows through that general location in Mississippi.
oh, i was assuming you were talking about "black creek" and was going to be a stickler and suggest you make it that. after further research though, i've learned there is actually a "black river" in ms as well.
You're one of the ones Haley Barbour booted from the state, no doubt. SHEESH.
Yes, there is a Black River.
WILLIAMS5232 wrote:VicFontaine wrote:WILLIAMS5232 wrote:VicFontaine wrote:"Black R.," and all terts labeled with a "R.," next to it, are RIVER terts. Because Mississippi has great rivers and great counties, I blended both for naming purposes. Some terts, like my own County of "Rankin," are, more-or-less relative to that counties' location in reality. Same with the rivers. "Black R.," is "Black River" rather than a county name. That is, the actual waterway "Black River" flows through that general location in Mississippi.
oh, i was assuming you were talking about "black creek" and was going to be a stickler and suggest you make it that. after further research though, i've learned there is actually a "black river" in ms as well.
You're one of the ones Haley Barbour booted from the state, no doubt. SHEESH.
Yes, there is a Black River.
easy there vic, if you want to get technical the black river runs into the mississippi at vicksburg. so for me to think that you put black river in black creeks general location is not too far off. and also since we're on topic, you may also note that the although the leaf river and the pascagula river are the same, where you have it placed would be more of the pascagula rivers location. it's just that's the areas i'm from. when i go home i still float the black and red creeks and fish in the pascagula river swamp. it's all the same vicinity. i'm from mchenry area. near wiggins. i know they have tvs and all in jackson, so i would have figured you knew that. and dang, you got biloxi set up in moss point. biloxi and gulfport actually border each other.
you must be one of the ones haley barbour kept and educated.
i'm just kidding. i was educated there too. don't take it so hard
macbone wrote:You know, for a Native America cultural treasure, you could use an Indian Mound, as in Faulkner's short story.
The Legend has a lot of text. It looks a bit cluttered there, but if I were playing the map, I'd want to know how everything worked. Could you make the information more concise?
I'm not sure which territories attack which other territories.
At first glance, it's difficult to tell which territories are the Cultural treasures (although the icons are helpful). Could you move the territory locations a bit so that they're closer to the treasures?
macbone wrote:You know, for a Native America cultural treasure, you could use an Indian Mound, as in Faulkner's short story.
macbone wrote:The Legend has a lot of text. It looks a bit cluttered there, but if I were playing the map, I'd want to know how everything worked. Could you make the information more concise?
macbone wrote:I'm not sure which territories attack which other territories.
macbone wrote:At first glance, it's difficult to tell which territories are the Cultural treasures (although the icons are helpful). Could you move the territory locations a bit so that they're closer to the treasures?
Flapcake wrote:I need to add to this: you got some 4 way borders as well, you will have to slice them apart to tell who can attack whom.
Flapcake wrote:Graphics looks uber
VicFontaine wrote:I don't think this is necessary, actually.
VicFontaine wrote:Just as in reality: if you were standing at Four Corners in the US, you could attack any of the three spots upon which you do not stand.
natty dread wrote:VicFontaine wrote:I don't think this is necessary, actually.
Actually, it is. 4-way borders are forbidden, as they are ambiguous to players. It's just not good gameplay design.VicFontaine wrote:Just as in reality: if you were standing at Four Corners in the US, you could attack any of the three spots upon which you do not stand.
But, CC is not reality. It's a game. In reality battles are not decided by dice either, but in CC they are. You can't think of making CC maps in real world terms, gameplay clarity needs to come first always.
natty dread wrote:You could place a small impassable in the corner so that the cornering territories won't touch. This way you wouldn't have to change the real-world borders, and you'd eliminate any problems with clarity.
woopintroysbutt wrote:Nice Map Vic. I have lived in the South most of my life and it's nice to see a map that has the "Southern" flavor.
My eyesight is not particularly great, but I have a real hard time reading a few of the names. One that is difficult, because of color, is under the Regional Bonuses. The Yellow used for Gulf Coast +2 is very hard to read.
The other ones I have problem with are the one below Hattiesburg and the one above Starkville (Miss State). Both of them have a blueish tint and I really can't read them very well.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users