Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows
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@RogerCooper said in Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows:
I would suggest the following broad categories
Ancient to 476AD
Medieval 477 to 1492
Gunpowder 1493 to 1903
World War 1 1904 to 1932
World War 2 1933 to 1945
Modern 1946 on
Other No specified date or far futureThat is about exactly what you can see at the first post of this topic, except mainly that I split Ancient into Primeval and Ancient (not sure if you consider "Jurassic" as part of Ancient) and WW1 starts in 1914, instead of your 1904 (but I actually considered to include the Russo-Japanese War into WW1).
So, since these divisions are about exactly mine as well, I, of course, agree with them, except that I really don't like the "Gunpowder" and "Modern" labels.
So, it seems that at least for the time periods we have a prevailing consensus here, tho (both because ancient and medieval wars are very similar and because there is very little medieval in TA) I'm now inclined to think that it is better that we have a single age/scenario for anything from the XV century beforehand, thus mainly merging Ancient and Medieval into a same category (do you think that "Antique" would be a decent label for Feral+Primeval+Ancient+Medieval?). -
@Frostion said in Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows:
Modern, in many people's minds, mean now or close to now, not 1492 or something like that.
Well, at least I assume that about everyone at the very least consider WW1 and WW2 "modern wars", so using just modern as meaning after WW2 would not make sense anyways.
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@Cernel i would recommend @RogerCooper list below
The simple reason is many are not historians. Modern etc they don't or will not get with a first glance at the maps list.
jmho
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@prastle Main point is: does anyone have a label for an age spanning from 1492 to 1914 (I think that if the next scenarion is called WW1 it would have to start in 1914 or very shortly beforehand)?
If we are not using "Early Modern", then we have to use something else.
Till now, the only one suggestion has been "Gunpowder", which seems out of place with the other names, to me.
So, does anyone have an alternative to "Early Modern", beside Gunpowder? If using "gunpowder", then I think we should name the other ages all alike, for example "atomic" for all after 1945 (not a fan). -
For 1945 to present I think we can use "Recent".
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As I mentioned before; Colonial or Industrial. I think both would fit circa 1500-1900. Colonial times, from discovering America to the colonization of Asia and Africa. Industrial times from very early masproduction to the industry in the late 1800s.
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@Frostion said in Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows:
As I mentioned before; Colonial or Industrial. I think both would fit circa 1500-1900.
Personally, for 1500-1900, I don't like either Colonial or Industrial.
Industrial makes me think of XIX century to present time, and definitely not the Renaissance, and WW1 and WW2 are surely "industrial" as well. So, the main problem is that "industrial" definitely doesn't stop in 1900.
Colonial is a good term itself, actually, as (as you point out) that age starts with the Spaniards colonising the New World and ends in 1900 when pretty much everything colonisable has been colonised, a lot very recently.
But the problem I have with "Colonial" is that it refers to a specific phenomenon of the time and would be strange to have "Napoleonic Empires" or "The Great Northern War" or "Civil War" called "Colonial".
Maybe a better term for 1500-1900 would be "Revolutional"?
Not very intuitive but, after all, the Renaissance is sort of a revolution, then you have the scientific revolution, the industrial revolution, the French revolution and all the revolutions of the XIX century, so that, in a way, 1500-1900 might be see as the "Age of Revolutions"?
Still not very fitting for, like, "The Great Northern War" or "Civil War", but it might be a decent choice, instead of the disliked "Early Modern"? -
Regarding futuristic and fantasy I'm thinking that they should not be specifically represented. The reason is that it is hard to differentiate and, for example, one could make a map about another fictional world that maybe has no supernatural elements at all, just like a realistic map, but in an alternate world, and I don't think that would rate as "fantasy", would it? So, then, we would need a 3rd, and maybe also a 4th totally fictional category. War of the Relics is actually close to that concept.
So, here it is my new take:
- Antique : dinosaurs to 1492
- Revolutional : 1492-1914
- WW1 : 1914-1929
- WW2 : 1929-1945
- Recent : 1945 today
- Multi-Age : at least two of the above fully covered
- Fantastic : any totally fictional settings or having totally fictional elements
- Abstract : maps not aiming at representing anything
(the perspective is European; thus other realities may shift the timeline)
So, I think the preference is not to have a counterfactual category, and have, for example, "Cold War" as part of "Recent" and "Age of Tribes" as part of "Multi-Age".
The open question is if "Fantastic" should or should not have maps set in a real timeline but having totally fictional elements (meaning something that does not possibly belong to reality); examples:
Steampunk in Fantastic or WW1?
Zombieland in Fantastic or Recent?
My preference is such maps staying in "Fantastic".?
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@Cernel I think what u have missed here is what the word fantastic means ...
It means AWESOME! OR AMAZING! This is why all are saying a new name is needed such as fantasy or whatever
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@prastle And the word Antique is less than ideal.
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https://en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/fantastic
Oxford says that the actual meaning is "Imaginative or fanciful; remote from reality" and it is informally used as meaning extraordinarily good or attractive. But I'll take your word that maybe the basic meaning is so uncommon to be hardly understandable?
Also "epic" is used like that, but it is not that, then, we can't use "epic" to mean what it actually means, I think.Ok, so it looks like that now the remaining issues are only related to the names.
Of course, the more we split up, the better names we can get, but the fact is that we don't want to split up a lot, and ending up with categories with 2 or 3 maps each.Well, always assuming that at some point in the sci-fi future a developer will turn this into something, I might get some help, then:
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We need 1 word for identifying something that has nothing or almost nothing to do with the real world, but can be used for whatever thing not belonging to it, either fantasy, or fictional science, but also an alternative world that maybe it is very similar to our own, but just not our own, or something like Zombieland, that it is our world but with Zombies running around (we definitely don't want to split this concept into 4+ categories).
My other ideas would be "Fictitious" and "Unreal". Are these terrible too? -
We need 1 word for summing up Feral, Primeval, Ancient and Medieval all in one (couldn't find anything better than Antique), in a way that it would not feel out of place if used to define a Medieval setting, which I believe "Ancient" would, as it is normally used to mean a period at the very most until Charlemagne (IX century AC), but I'm not sure, since the French used "ancien régime" to mean feudalish stuff.
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@Cernel The definition for the word fantastic in English is quite a bit different from its common usage. Fantasy is far and away the most common term used to define a category or genre.... while fantastic is predominantly used as a descriptor... ie. "That fantasy game was fantastic".
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@Hepps I think "fantasy" is too much specific, and can be used only for D&D kind of stuff, while fictional is too broad, and can be used also for a "Cold War" or "World War 2010" scenarios, that never happened in reality.
I was thinking "fantastic" was just fine, in its meaning of "remote from reality".
Well, I think I'm out of ideas for the labels. -
To be clear, I wanted a term for something that it is not set in any time in real history, but maybe it is just perfectly realistic, albeit alternative, or it is so fictitious that can't be considered merely counterfactual.
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@Cernel counter factual is so vague i don't even understand .... Counter to what? the game of triplea? the engine?
The map list needs to be easily understood by time line and genre
keep fantasy as dragons etc by itself
futuristic as in star trek etc
pre 1900 maybe iron age? or Frosti's colonialism idea?
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@prastle said in Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows:
@Cernel keep fantasy as dragons etc by itself
futuristic as in star trek etc
The problem if we go for fantasy and futuristic is that, then, we need more and more fictional categories for other things that do not belong to those specific genres nor to realty.
For example, "Steampunk" is not fantasy and not futuristic, or the "Invasion USA" map, and also War of the Relics is hardly fantasy; it is just another medieval world.
And also stuff like this, potentially:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/It_Happened_Here
It Happened Here shows an alternative history where the United Kingdom has been invaded and occupied by Nazi Germany.The point is that the categories should be fitting not only for the current maps, which is already hard, but also for any maps that might be made in the future.
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@Cernel ok
so fantasy is a genre as is futuristic guess ya need a third genre for alternate history like library -
I'd say if we have to define the terms we're using to describe these periods, then the terms probably aren't really functioning the way they should. Really needs to be something anyone can parse at glance. Maybe it would be better to just use combination descriptions if you want to cover multiple eras instead of trying to coin a new name, or resurrect a less familiar one?
Ancient/Classical or something similar would be more recognizable to English speakers than Antique for example. Or you could just give the dates covered. Fantasy/Sci-Fi as a larger umbrella might be easier than trying to give each of those a separate entry. When you leave them together there is less need to carve out a specific slot for space games vs sword and sorcery type stuff, aliens, time travel or whatever.I do like the idea of the abstract or mini games being cordoned off. Still don't know how much value we get out of carving it up too much though. I mean, unless we're pushing a dozen maps that fit into the category, it's probably too nuanced.
I prefer the suggestion voiced earlier about Tags/filters. Sometimes the map names are very descriptive other times less so, and tags might help people to see what's what at a glance. Dont think we need to anticipate everything in advance, but the more games that end up in the catalog, the more useful something like this will prove in the future. So it would be cool to see something put together. Good call
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@Black_Elk good ideas
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@Black_Elk said in Map Scenario Categories In Download Windows:
Ancient/Classical or something similar would be more recognizable to English speakers than Antique for example.
Well, Classical is a subset of Ancient, thus there Ancient alone would be already fine. The matter is that Antique is meant to mean "before Modernity", that is "before Renaissance", that is, as I said, the "Feral" age plus the "Primeval" age plus the "Ancient" age plus the "Medieval" age.
So, if we would use recognisable terms summed up, it should be called "Feral/Primeval/Ancient/Medieval".
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