- Location
- Europe
I'm ok with that. Means that I have to invest less time in discussing votes.
I'm ok with that. Means that I have to invest less time in discussing votes.
Yeah, less reason for me to feel down or frustrated when I can at least enjoy the cool lessons that come along with the quest!I'm ok with that. Means that I have to invest less time in discussing votes.
Thanks for the tally, but yikes that's clunky to read. Approval voting works best with 'task' voting, but currently, people voting for multiple plans are treated as though their vote is for an entirely new plan, so their votes aren't counted under either of the plans they support. We'll need to adjust the tally manually to figure out the accurate numbers.
You realize every time you post things like this it just makes people like me want another quest. Though I can't even imagine how an Etruscan Quest would even work.
You realize every time you post things like this it just makes people like me want another quest. Though I can't even imagine how an Etruscan Quest would even work.
Also I think running a Rome civ quest would make me contractually obligated to fight Cetashwayo in single combat to the death, Highlander-style.
There can only be one.
Thank you for the info, and sorry. I thought task voting only worked when you preface a vote with [example]. I will do so in the future.Thanks for the tally, but yikes that's clunky to read. Approval voting works best with 'task' voting, but currently, people voting for multiple plans are treated as though their vote is for an entirely new plan, so their votes aren't counted under either of the plans they support. We'll need to adjust the tally manually to figure out the accurate numbers.
Oh I can absolutely understand why, you got plenty of sources and interesting personalities to work with plus a lot of documentation on things worked. If you did something like the Etruscans, or Minoans or Mycenaeans you'd be having to make up both people and entire aspects of culture up whole cloth and you wouldn't have people like Sulla, Cicero, Caesar and Pompey to work with either.Res Publica was literally three seconds away from being a Rome civ quest, but then I realized I really wanted to write about Caesar and Cicero.
Also I think running a Rome civ quest would make me contractually obligated to fight Cetashwayo in single combat to the death, Highlander-style.
There can only be one.
My method gives me this:Thanks for the tally, but yikes that's clunky to read. Approval voting works best with 'task' voting, but currently, people voting for multiple plans are treated as though their vote is for an entirely new plan, so their votes aren't counted under either of the plans they support. We'll need to adjust the tally manually to figure out the accurate numbers.
At the moment, here's the correct vote count:
Plan Publicola - 12
Plan Love of the Legion and various Studies - 8
Plan Firm Foundations - 5
Plan Publicola Plus - 3
Plan Off with the gloves - 3
Plan Make Connections and Study v2 - 2
Plan The Power Of Friendship - 1
Plan Destiny - 1
Plan Conquer the Sea - 1
Plan Carpe Legium et Potestatem - 1
Plan Publicola(Proserpina Edition) - 1
i love your greek city quests thank you for your writing(sorry off topic)The late republic is probably the most well-sourced and clear period of antiquity. By comparison my quest set in the classical period requires me to make shit up or rely on little more than a name or an archaeological record as the basis of entire storylines outside the Peloponnesian War where we rely on Thucydides. Both freeing and quite frustrating as I would prefer to preserve the flavor of the era but sometimes the record itself can only offer a bland narrative.
both are unique it brings out the story and makes it really hard to take from your mind as it brings things to life as you read it to yourself.Personally I feel like the quests do two different things. Telamon is writing a wonderful immersive narrative set in a more familiar era, but with an intense attention to especially character detail which puts it a cut above. My main focus tends to be more societal as a civ quest, but I also focus much more on obscure or lesser known regions or peoples of antiquity and which zooms in intensely to what I think is a more authentic image of the classical Mediterranean than what people are used to.
Don't tell me you are changing patrons. Didn't we just go over this?i love your greek city quests thank you for your writing(sorry off topic)
i love your greek city quests thank you for your writing(sorry off topic)
Personally I feel like the quests do two different things. Telamon is writing a wonderful immersive narrative set in a more familiar era, but with an intense attention to especially character detail which puts it a cut above. My main focus tends to be more societal as a civ quest, but I also focus much more on obscure or lesser known regions or peoples of antiquity and zoom in intensely to what I think is a more authentic image of the classical Mediterranean than what people are used to.
The weeping Virgin claimed that she had been visited by Mars himself, the red-handed god of war, and he had lain with her. The children in her womb were of no mortal seed, but the heirs of a god.