Johan and Podcat have indicated that future Paradox titles wont have the distinctive "start at any date" feature because they aren't worth the research time. Feedback indicates that most people just start at the earliest date. So it makes more sense to just have a few dates and save on research time, like they did for Victoria instead of scripting for changes in timeline like in CKII and EUIV.
It's sound logic but I think there is a chance that there is an unfortunate feedback loop at play. The late game starts are less interesting because 4X elements are dominating gameplay and the less interesting the lategame is, the more attention the 4X elements get. For instance in EUIV a big part of long term planning is choosing national ideas to reflect a long term strategy and starting in the lategame means that a bunch of suboptimal picks are made already. This means national ideas in turn reflect the balance of coring costs much more then say the balance of Europe around the Seven Years War. Maybe Paradox could experiment by releasing a DLC that tries to reverse this trend? Instead of focusing on something that is balanced for a 400 year Grand Campaign, make a DLC that does justice to an interesting period of history.
I think Napoleonic France would be a good candidate. I think it's the most famous and interesting era in the EUIV timeline but the game mechanics dont make it feel any different at all from earlier gameplay. There are coalitions but they dont reflect the various coalitions against France. There is nothing to reflect the way that Napoleon could intimidate the crowns of Spain, Austria and Prussia into cooperation but how unreliable his "allies" were. We can't see things like the creation of a Polish client state, the continental system and the blockade, the conflicts between smaller forces in the Americans.
So maybe a DLC could try focusing on just the French revolution and the wars that revolved around it. I think it would allow for something that starting in 1444 wouldn't allow, a balance of power between France and the coalitions. France can win victories but wouldn't start snowballing, coalitions kept forming year after year after year. Instead of annexing territory, it's a question of both sides trying to cement a long term situation in Europe. Can France get all of the continent into the fold or will the old order be restored? And the DLC wouldn't need to waste research times on every far flung corner of the world. 1803 wasn't a particularly interesting year in Chinese or Indian history. So just make the gameplay interesting to play France or play against France.
I'm suggesting an EUIV DLC just because Nappy is such a perfect example of an interesting lategame struggle but CKII could also support lategame expansions like the creation of the crusader kingdoms instead of European kings blobbing into the middle east.
But if P'dox does change over to the few startdate model, I think lategame expansions like this will be too much work to happen. It wouldn't be possible to do an expansion for Napoleonic France in EU5 because then history would need to be written for the entire world even though most of that is pointless effort.
tl;dr: lategame expansions might make the timeline worth it?
It's sound logic but I think there is a chance that there is an unfortunate feedback loop at play. The late game starts are less interesting because 4X elements are dominating gameplay and the less interesting the lategame is, the more attention the 4X elements get. For instance in EUIV a big part of long term planning is choosing national ideas to reflect a long term strategy and starting in the lategame means that a bunch of suboptimal picks are made already. This means national ideas in turn reflect the balance of coring costs much more then say the balance of Europe around the Seven Years War. Maybe Paradox could experiment by releasing a DLC that tries to reverse this trend? Instead of focusing on something that is balanced for a 400 year Grand Campaign, make a DLC that does justice to an interesting period of history.
I think Napoleonic France would be a good candidate. I think it's the most famous and interesting era in the EUIV timeline but the game mechanics dont make it feel any different at all from earlier gameplay. There are coalitions but they dont reflect the various coalitions against France. There is nothing to reflect the way that Napoleon could intimidate the crowns of Spain, Austria and Prussia into cooperation but how unreliable his "allies" were. We can't see things like the creation of a Polish client state, the continental system and the blockade, the conflicts between smaller forces in the Americans.
So maybe a DLC could try focusing on just the French revolution and the wars that revolved around it. I think it would allow for something that starting in 1444 wouldn't allow, a balance of power between France and the coalitions. France can win victories but wouldn't start snowballing, coalitions kept forming year after year after year. Instead of annexing territory, it's a question of both sides trying to cement a long term situation in Europe. Can France get all of the continent into the fold or will the old order be restored? And the DLC wouldn't need to waste research times on every far flung corner of the world. 1803 wasn't a particularly interesting year in Chinese or Indian history. So just make the gameplay interesting to play France or play against France.
I'm suggesting an EUIV DLC just because Nappy is such a perfect example of an interesting lategame struggle but CKII could also support lategame expansions like the creation of the crusader kingdoms instead of European kings blobbing into the middle east.
But if P'dox does change over to the few startdate model, I think lategame expansions like this will be too much work to happen. It wouldn't be possible to do an expansion for Napoleonic France in EU5 because then history would need to be written for the entire world even though most of that is pointless effort.
tl;dr: lategame expansions might make the timeline worth it?
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