Ender Wiggin
Junior Member
We started in Crusader King's, then converted to Europa Universalis III, and are now finally in Victoria: Revolutions with your lovable host, Ender Wiggin, as the great nation of China! Gollevainen is Finland/Russia thingy. After Victoria we will convert to a hopefully less buggy and more stable Hoi3.
As promised, some pictures of the situation. As one might expect after 770 years of interference, it is not much like our timeline.
North America, split between the Norwegian Realm and the United States of Italian America, with the tiny exception of the Fortress City of Narragansett, nominally a Georgian enclave:
Africa, completely dominated by the Republic of Transvaal:
Europe. The red border in England marks the extent of the Norse Law, colonised by settlers from Norway in medieval times and ruled by the Norselaw Assembly at York. The southern part of England, usually referred to as England-south-of-Thames, is French, English, and largely Catholic. The black border in Ireland marks the northern limit of the Norwegian settlement there; the Celto-Norse areas are administratively separate from the Norselaw proper, being under the authority of the Dublin Ting.
The Middle East, and the enormous Georgian empire, larger than Alexander's:
East Asia, where the Dragon Throne broods over the recent unequal treaties.
Oceania. In the sixteenth century, Georgian settlers took advantage of their more advanced seagoing technology to leapfrog the Malaccans and colonise Australia; it remains to be seen whether they can maintain their outposts.
The Norwegian political situation:
Some statistics, sorted by population:
[/QUOTE]
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Factory growth and industrialization:
Some further statistics on factories. Rather than counting the number of factories, as our Indonesian player has done has done, I have counted the number of factory levels, so that a level-2 factory counts as 2, and so on. This presents rather a different picture of industrial strength; the raw factory number makes Norway and Indonesia, which have a lot of level-1 factories, look disproportionately good. Note particularly that China, with 29 factories in 1853, has apparently been expanding every last one of them and has in fact got Sixty Four levels. Similarly Transvaal, whose growth from 12 to 16 factories looks pretty unimpressive, has nonetheless been expanding and has in fact gone from 13 to 27 in factory levels. You can do lots of fun things with statistics!
Factory levels:
As a fraction of the total levels in the world (note France dropping like a rock between 1845 and 1853):
Cumulatively:
And the cumulative fraction :
[/QUOTE]
As promised, some pictures of the situation. As one might expect after 770 years of interference, it is not much like our timeline.
North America, split between the Norwegian Realm and the United States of Italian America, with the tiny exception of the Fortress City of Narragansett, nominally a Georgian enclave:
Africa, completely dominated by the Republic of Transvaal:
Europe. The red border in England marks the extent of the Norse Law, colonised by settlers from Norway in medieval times and ruled by the Norselaw Assembly at York. The southern part of England, usually referred to as England-south-of-Thames, is French, English, and largely Catholic. The black border in Ireland marks the northern limit of the Norwegian settlement there; the Celto-Norse areas are administratively separate from the Norselaw proper, being under the authority of the Dublin Ting.
The Middle East, and the enormous Georgian empire, larger than Alexander's:
East Asia, where the Dragon Throne broods over the recent unequal treaties.
Oceania. In the sixteenth century, Georgian settlers took advantage of their more advanced seagoing technology to leapfrog the Malaccans and colonise Australia; it remains to be seen whether they can maintain their outposts.
The Norwegian political situation:
Some statistics, sorted by population:
*********************************************************
Factory growth and industrialization:
Some further statistics on factories. Rather than counting the number of factories, as our Indonesian player has done has done, I have counted the number of factory levels, so that a level-2 factory counts as 2, and so on. This presents rather a different picture of industrial strength; the raw factory number makes Norway and Indonesia, which have a lot of level-1 factories, look disproportionately good. Note particularly that China, with 29 factories in 1853, has apparently been expanding every last one of them and has in fact got Sixty Four levels. Similarly Transvaal, whose growth from 12 to 16 factories looks pretty unimpressive, has nonetheless been expanding and has in fact gone from 13 to 27 in factory levels. You can do lots of fun things with statistics!
Factory levels:
As a fraction of the total levels in the world (note France dropping like a rock between 1845 and 1853):
Cumulatively:
And the cumulative fraction :
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