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Posts
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Joined
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Days Won
291
Everything posted by Lion.Kanzen
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I've been here a decade, a little more, but the only people I've seen were from India and South Asia. 70% of the people here were Europeans or North Americans or Anglo-Saxons if we count those from Oceania who were British.(Common wealth). Some Latin Americans like me.
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That's why I want river boats.
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The team must include more ships( river ships) and resize current ships. @wowgetoffyourcellphone He gave an interesting proposal.
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23 Century?
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Ok, sometimes I imagine that everyone here is Western. It's probably the years I've been here.
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I like the idea of movement speed, but not the values. It should be able to move and cost 1 population. even 2
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Yo hablo español si tienes más consultas.
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Possible Mod Idea: Nabataeans/Lihyanites
Lion.Kanzen replied to Atenmeses52's topic in Rise of the East
these were the first ideas for mods and the origin of the Council of modders. -
Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
There are some videos uploaded here of (Forum) simple changes. -
Compared to the European Union(actual), the CCP looks like a utopia. The world is not perfect. The Chinese have known how to be pragmatic.
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who eats crocodiles?
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Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
This. -
Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
more than all the capacity of the engine. and to modding the game. An example. -
Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
we should have a focused video. you know in the engine. I kind video trailer of possibilities. -
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Saracen Ptolemy's 2nd-century work, Geography, describes Sarakēnḗ (Ancient Greek: Σαρακηνή) as a region in the northern Sinai Peninsula.[2][3] Ptolemy also mentions a people called the Sarakēnoí (Ancient Greek: οἱ Σαρακηνοί) living in the northwestern Arabian Peninsula (near neighbor to the Sinai).[2][3] Eusebius in his Ecclesiastical history narrates an account wherein Pope Dionysius of Alexandria mentions Saracens in a letter while describing the persecution of Christians by the Roman emperor Decius: "Many were, in the Arabian mountain, enslaved by the barbarous 'sarkenoi'."[2][3] The Augustan History also refers to an attack by Saraceni on Pescennius Niger's army in Egypt in 193, but provides little information as to identifying them.[13]
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Saracens (Lat. Sarraceni, Fr. Sarrasins) was used in the period of the crusades as an indiscriminate term for Muslims. Originally designating one ethnic group in the Arabian Peninsula, by late antiquity it had become a synonym for Arabs, and it was employed by Latin chroniclers of the eighth and ninth centuries to describe the Muslim Arab invaders in the Mediterranean region. In the twelfth century, chroniclers of the First Crusade (1096-1099) and poets of the chansons de geste (Old French epic poems) applied the term to Turks, Arabs, and other Muslims, creating a colorful and wildly inaccurate portrait of Saracens who worshipped pantheon idols, the chief among them Mahomet. At the same time, theologians offered polemical refutations of the Lex Sarracenorum (Law of the Saracens), as they generally called Islam. The travel narratives and romances of the later Middle Ages often blend literary topoi of pagan Saracens with more realistic depictions of Islam. The term Saracen gradually fell into disuse by the seventeenth century, to be replaced by Turk, Mohammedan, and Moslem. The origins of the Latin word Sarracenus are obscure; the hypothesis of its derivation from the Arabic sharqiyyin (the plural of sharql, “Easterner”) is not universally accepted. Roman writers used the term to designate one ethnic group in eastern Arabia. By the third century, the term designated all of the nomadic Arabs of the peninsula. Some authors affirmed that the Saracens worshiped idols of stone. The theologian Jerome asserted that the Saracens were the descendants of Abraham through his handmaid Hagar and their son, the “wild man” Ishmael (Genesis 16:12); they thus should be properly called Hagarenes or Ishmaelites, but they falsely called themselves Saracens, claiming to be the descendants of Abraham’s legitimate wife Sarah. This etymology was taken up by Isidore of Seville and many subsequent Latin authors. It no doubt seemed to fit the experience of those who chronicled the conquests and raids of the Sar- raceni in the seventh and eighth centuries. Very few chroniclers showed any interest in the religion of these invaders, and those who did showed little awareness of the rise of Islam; they contented themselves with repeating what they found in Jerome and Isidore. https://erenow.net/postclassical/crusades/834.php?s_pt=source2
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they and the Europeans called them Ismahelites. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ishmaelites The definition is older. From early Iron age.
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Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
That's what I told Stan, that we should promote mods or modding. -
Modding and Game Design
Lion.Kanzen replied to myou5e's topic in Game Development & Technical Discussion
usually goes off topic. -
@wackyserious I need a hand with the units camouflage.
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Even peasants? It's what I've heard on some podcasts.
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we should put a stand with a logo made in wood.
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Excellent.