The Europa Universalis series of games are of course Euro-centric, but to what extent does/will AGCEEP/For the Glory remove this bias?
Of the thousands of events to be included in For the Glory, roughly what percentage of them will be Euro-centric? Will there be good coverage for the rest of the world?
Will For the Glory play best from the default start date (1420 IIRC)? Or will it play equally well from any arbitrary later start date?
In other words
To give a specific example, if I choose to play China, say, beginning in 1700, would such a game tend to be generic? Or would the game have plenty of China and East Asian historical flavor events written for that time period?
I'd find this sort of game appealing: One where I could play any country from any arbitrary start date and still have a rich, event-filled, historically flavored gaming experience.
Will For the Glory be that kind of game?
Of the thousands of events to be included in For the Glory, roughly what percentage of them will be Euro-centric? Will there be good coverage for the rest of the world?
Will For the Glory play best from the default start date (1420 IIRC)? Or will it play equally well from any arbitrary later start date?
In other words
- Will For the Glory events cluster around Europe, with very few pertaining to the rest of the world?
- Will For the Glory events cluster around earlier centuries, with fewer and fewer events written toward game's end?
To give a specific example, if I choose to play China, say, beginning in 1700, would such a game tend to be generic? Or would the game have plenty of China and East Asian historical flavor events written for that time period?
I'd find this sort of game appealing: One where I could play any country from any arbitrary start date and still have a rich, event-filled, historically flavored gaming experience.
Will For the Glory be that kind of game?