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Balsiefen wrote:Thank you, i may try out some army shadows now.
Does any-one know the ideal dimentions for the shadows? I know its been put somwhare but i'm not sure whare
Balsiefen wrote:Lone.prophet wrote:Colors, try pastels which are pleasant on the eye
I'm trying to make the map in colours that have a scottish feel, meanig slate blues and greens. but i may lighten them a bit
Balsiefen wrote:-Mountains look low quality maybe ask some people how they done there mountains
good idea, Good map makers, how do you do your mountains- remember i havn't got photoshop.
So, are you Scottish, Balsiefen? Does your family have a tartan? If so, use your tartan for your color palette. Or better yet, make each region's background a different tartan - that would blow people's kilt hose off.
jako wrote:y does the border's bonus only get a +3 for holding 4 terrs and defending 4 borders, while the grampian bonus also gets a +3 for holding 4 terrs but only defending 3 borders? shouldnt the border's bonus get a +4?
jako wrote:just a quick question (plz note i have not read the entire thread, so this may be redundant).
y does the border's bonus only get a +3 for holding 4 terrs and defending 4 borders, while the grampian bonus also gets a +3 for holding 4 terrs but only defending 3 borders? shouldnt the border's bonus get a +4?
oaktown wrote:Right, I've been pondering some of the bonuses myself... strathclyde, the islands and the highlands are of similar size, yet considerably different bonuses - 7, 3, and 5.
Somebody once came up with a formula for how to assign a bonus... (# terits + # boders) / x = y, that sort of thing. Does anybody know where that is?
More thoughts... for starters, the basic info needs to be included in the first post: number of territories, bonuses, map size, etc. By my count there are eight bonus regions, plus a bonus for holding the cities, on a map with 37 total territories.
My first concern is that with 37 territories there won't be a game played without at least one neutral, as 37 isn't divisible by, well, anything. 36 or 42 make for cleaner starts.
Next, 37 territories and 8 bonus regions - that's a lot of small bonuses, which wouldn't be so bad if they weren't all clustered together. Every game will start the same, with players scrambling for the easy bonuses in the east. The west and north is going to become a dead area in most games, as the Islands, Highlands, and Strathclyde will each be nearly impossible to land and hold early on. Most games will be decided by placement and dice in the first four rounds.
The cities have different names than the territories they are in - this has potential to cause confusion, but i think it can be worked out if we put the city titles in a completely different style. I'm more worried about how crowded the Edinburgh territory is going to be with a city name, territory name, city graphic, and army shadow.
How were the bonus regions divided, Bals? I assume the territories are counties, but are they contemporary political counties or are these historical divisions? My understanding is that the counties have changed over time
Balsiefen wrote:oaktown wrote:How were the bonus regions divided, Bals? I assume the territories are counties, but are they contemporary political counties or are these historical divisions? My understanding is that the counties have changed over time
they were divides as sort of a mix. It seems every map on scotland contredicts the last
Here are some of my scources
http://www.dunfermlineweb.com/images/scotmap.jpg
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/map/scotland.gif
http://www.britainexpress.com/images/scotland/scotland-map2.gif
oaktown wrote:Balsiefen wrote:oaktown wrote:How were the bonus regions divided, Bals? I assume the territories are counties, but are they contemporary political counties or are these historical divisions? My understanding is that the counties have changed over time
they were divides as sort of a mix. It seems every map on scotland contredicts the last
Here are some of my scources
http://www.dunfermlineweb.com/images/scotmap.jpg
http://users.ox.ac.uk/~peter/workhouse/map/scotland.gif
http://www.britainexpress.com/images/scotland/scotland-map2.gif
From my end it would be ideal if you could settle on one source for the territory divisions - perhaps find a map from a certain year and stick with it. Then there would be a focus for the look... a 16th century map of scotland would have a considerably different feel than a 19th or 21st century map. It would also alter which cities are key strategic points - Sterling would be a key city on a historical map, but not on a contemporary map. Personally, I think it'd be more fun to do something historical.
Balsiefen wrote:Okay, This is the map i used for the territories. I'm afraid it is extreamly innacurate in some ways which led to early mistakes. I think it is around victorian but the names of the general reagions have been pretty consistent from the 15th cent
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