Moderator: Cartographers

Realistic, no. Is there a possibility, yes.natty dread wrote:Ok, about the interstate bonuses... do you realistically expect any of those to ever be held?
You could bump them up to a 100 each, but they still wouldn't be any more feasible to hold... When the smallest one is 7 regions in a line, and you know strings of regions in a straight line with each region being a border are the hardest type of bonuses to hold on any map - you lose one region in between, and your supply chain is cut, you can't fort from one side to the other until you retake it...isaiah40 wrote:I could bump them up a bit more to make them a tad more desirable, or I could say +2 for every 3 cities on an interstate.

I kinda think it should be dependent on the interstate... so that if some interstate makes a certain area too strong it could be reduced, and vice versa...isaiah40 wrote:Think +2 for every 3 is good?

Kid-Tested, Sully-Approved.isaiah40 wrote:V18
- Finished connecting New England
- Removed Cherry Hill from New Jersey
- Reduced New Jersey bonus to +1
- Reduced New England bonus to +23
True, but Dayton is there because I needed a city where I70 & I75 cross, and Dayton fit the bill perfectly. S Dayton will stay.The Bison King wrote:WHOA! What is Dayton doing on Ohio instead of Cincinnati??? That doesn't make a shred of sense. You should change that, Cincinnati is WAY bigger than Dayton.
I think in this case the graphical correctness is not as important as having well known cities on the map. I'd rather conquer Cincinnati than Daytonisaiah40 wrote:True, but Dayton is there because I needed a city where I70 & I75 cross, and Dayton fit the bill perfectly. S Dayton will stay.The Bison King wrote:WHOA! What is Dayton doing on Ohio instead of Cincinnati??? That doesn't make a shred of sense. You should change that, Cincinnati is WAY bigger than Dayton.
But Dayton is well known!!! How could anyone forget that the Wright Brothers lived there, built the first airplane, owned and operated an airplane factory and ran the world's first flight school. Dayton also had the first military airfield, the first emergency parachute jump, and WACO's dominance of civilian aircraft production between the World Wars.Gillipig wrote:I think in this case the graphical correctness is not as important as having well known cities on the map. I'd rather conquer Cincinnati than Dayton!
Okay, not a major issueisaiah40 wrote:But Dayton is well known!!! How could anyone forget that the Wright Brothers lived there, built the first airplane, owned and operated an airplane factory and ran the world's first flight school. Dayton also had the first military airfield, the first emergency parachute jump, and WACO's dominance of civilian aircraft production between the World Wars.Gillipig wrote:I think in this case the graphical correctness is not as important as having well known cities on the map. I'd rather conquer Cincinnati than Dayton!
You see, Dayton is well known!! Like I said Dayton will stay.

Gillipig wrote:Okay, not a major issueisaiah40 wrote:But Dayton is well known!!! How could anyone forget that the Wright Brothers lived there, built the first airplane, owned and operated an airplane factory and ran the world's first flight school. Dayton also had the first military airfield, the first emergency parachute jump, and WACO's dominance of civilian aircraft production between the World Wars.Gillipig wrote:I think in this case the graphical correctness is not as important as having well known cities on the map. I'd rather conquer Cincinnati than Dayton!
You see, Dayton is well known!! Like I said Dayton will stay.! Why is Texas green btw? I've never been to Texas but I can't imagine green would be the best colour to describe that area! Because of the heat I think red would be better for that region. And green would better describe the "D.C"-Detroit area!
Edit: It would also look better to have red between the two yellow regions and green between the two blue. It would be more of a natural way to transcend from one colour to the other.
True but nothing has happened there since then. That's fine though, I don't have a problem with Dayton Staying so long as you add Cincinnati. It just doesn't make sense considering the city has a bigger pop. than Cambridge and Dayton combined. plus it's one of the 3 big C's. Cincinnati, Columbus, and Cleveland.isaiah40 wrote:But Dayton is well known!!! How could anyone forget that the Wright Brothers lived there, built the first airplane, owned and operated an airplane factory and ran the world's first flight school. Dayton also had the first military airfield, the first emergency parachute jump, and WACO's dominance of civilian aircraft production between the World Wars.Gillipig wrote:I think in this case the graphical correctness is not as important as having well known cities on the map. I'd rather conquer Cincinnati than Dayton!
You see, Dayton is well known!! Like I said Dayton will stay.
It really doesn't have to be. Just move Dayton up (closer to where it should be anway) and you'll be all Peachy Keen. I did this in like 3 minutes and I don't even have the source file.isaiah40 wrote:Nah, sorry, but I will not be adding Cincinnati, it will be way too crowded then.

Look at the original map packs, and you will see most of the small out of the way towns represented. I changed some of the names for clarity sake (make it less cluttered). Have you ever been through Green River Utah? It's population is only around 933 (as of 2009) and is considered by many to be a hole in the wall.If you're going to do a mega map of the USA you should do it RIGHT. That means not omitting important/relevant cities because of artificial problems like lack of room, when you've made plenty of room for places that no ones ever even heard of, Kirksville, Dyer, Jonesboro, to name a few (no offense to those who might live there I'm sure they're lovely places).
Since I am doing a Mega USA map, do you think that we should include both large cities as well as the smaller ones? Do you think that this will represent the USA in a broader light? I want small town USA represented here as well.If you're going to do a mega map of the USA you should do it RIGHT.
natty dread wrote:I think you need to make all the state colours lighter than the background. You still have a few that are darker or about the same lightness as it (OK, NE, MT, LA, OH, ME, NJ) and since you have a minimap anyway, I don't see any reason why each state would require an unique colour. It'd be much better to have them all be consistently lighter than the background.

So basically you've picked cities for completely arbitrary reasons and you wont add Cincinnati because you don't care or feel like it.isaiah40 wrote:While I agree on just about every point you've made in this thread, I will have to disagree on this:Look at the original map packs, and you will see most of the small out of the way towns represented. I changed some of the names for clarity sake (make it less cluttered). Have you ever been through Green River Utah? It's population is only around 933 (as of 2009) and is considered by many to be a hole in the wall.If you're going to do a mega map of the USA you should do it RIGHT. That means not omitting important/relevant cities because of artificial problems like lack of room, when you've made plenty of room for places that no ones ever even heard of, Kirksville, Dyer, Jonesboro, to name a few (no offense to those who might live there I'm sure they're lovely places).Since I am doing a Mega USA map, do you think that we should include both large cities as well as the smaller ones? Do you think that this will represent the USA in a broader light? I want small town USA represented here as well.If you're going to do a mega map of the USA you should do it RIGHT.
As for Cincinnati, I will still leave it out, because if I start to add more cities because you deem them as mandatory to have have them included, this map will be really cluttered, especially when you have all the numbers on it.
I'd like to hear your take on the colour scheme.Gillipig wrote:Why is Texas green btw? I've never been to Texas but I can't imagine green would be the best colour to describe that area! Because of the heat I think red would be better for that region. And green would better describe the "D.C"-Detroit area!
Edit: It would also look better to have red between the two yellow regions and green between the two blue. It would be more of a natural way to transcend from one colour to the other.