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Favonius Cornelius

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Everything posted by Favonius Cornelius

  1. Hi folks, just wanted to mention that I have posted my second installment of pictures from my Italy trip this year, this time of the Temple of Vesta at Tivoli. Note the spooky black cat on the alter in the square temple!
  2. The Turks are some of the worst in the world, right next to the Chinese, who have a remarkable disregard for history and archaeology. Over the last 10 years at least I've read countless articles of Byzantinian sites being destroyed for the smallest of reasons. You know why too: different religion, intolerance and ignorance, and an effort to forget the past in exchange for the now. What gets me is when countries like these get all upset that someone from another country has a historical artifact. Fact is, if it was not for that collector then some priceless history would not exist today, as with much of China
  3. Are you talking EU3 here? That's the only one that is similar to Rome, all the others (the Eu2-generation games) are quite different. CK is a role-playing game, HoI a wargame, Victoria a highly complex socio-economic simulator and then there's EU2 which I suppose is the base template but still very different from the others, as well as different from EU3 and Rome. That said, Rome has turned out to be a flop, and I'm glad I withstood the temptation of finally getting my hands on a Roman Paradox game. Perhaps you are right, I think I am thinking of the progression of EUII to Roma. It was so disappointing to see how similar Rome and EU were. $50 down the drain...oh the burn! I usually keenly enjoy going out of my way of sending my money to great game developers too.
  4. The writing and the plot was not great, but at least it did not insult you or spit in your face. Also it was clearly made to make a splash with IMAX. I could do with a touch less flashy action scenes, and more content. Hey though, if the label needs that level of success though to keep going and inspire more attention then I'm ok with it.
  5. You know what we need isn't oil at all, what we need is to make every land combustion engine an electric one. We have the tech to do it now, but what we don't have is the will to do so nor the power over the oil countries and corporations to make it happen. What the world really needed was not an Iraq but a total conversion over to electric powered cars. It could easily have happened with those billions, and would have spurned huge business opportunities. Of course, we instead chose the path of war for a variety of reasons I'll not bother to get into. Course, thinking back to an old topic long ago in the arena, M. Porcius Cato might have a few different big business counter opinions.
  6. I'll have to check that one out Maladict. Actually reminds me of another unique battle game: The Great Battles series.
  7. I hate cities with a passion, and in the next few years am going to do my level best to get away from them. Frankly, I rather risk the occasional sting of the bee than the crime, crowding, noise and pollution of most cities of the world. Cities are unnatural, filthy places where disease of mind and body breeds. Don't believe me? Visit Rome, and you will be a new believer! I don't think it has changed much since Augustus' day.
  8. Have you ever needed your Roman game fix, and gone to the store in a vain attempt to find something fresh and exciting? After you get over RTW and its mods, you'll find that a great majority of 'Roman' themed games are nothing more than a sorry template of the Warcraft war game engine. I can't tell you how tired I am of seeing that garbage being sold to us on the sly, for the Roman theme and many more. Read the box and they will sell you all sorts of promises on the game play and show you graphics you'll never see, only to find that its just another cookie cutter version of Warcraft: collect resources, build buildings, build mindless units then send them en masse against your enemy. The game developers do this because they are cowards! Too afraid to try something new and fresh, they do what's been done before. Hell I think you can even buy the rights to the template, and all you have to do is make the maps and unit graphics. The best attempts at the Roman theme are RTW and Roma Victor (if you have the computational power and LOTS of patience). Oh I suppose there is the Caesar city building game, but how many times can one arrange one's temples around the forum? Everything else sadly sucks. I
  9. Not sure that 'massive' is accurate....maybe multiplayer online role playing game. MORPG! In the time I played it though it was pretty fun. I guess my biggest gripes about it would be needing to add 1000's of objects into a mud hut to make one, and the combat system. Point, click, and hope the gods are on your side that day!
  10. Basically when it comes to these Paradox games, all you need to buy is Europa Universalis, because each of its associated games are a cookie cutter match to this one, with a few bells and whistles added to make it seem more adjusted to the theme. So in this one they have what, a few 'pleb' and 'equites' scores and some new graphics, but essentially you are buying EU. EU somewhat fun, but it can have a steep learning curve and many nuances that you might disastrously forget the next time you play, overburdened with probably too many options that don't do much to reflect the times as much as make you want to build a few excel spreadsheets to keep on top of what is going on. I totally agree with Ursus' review!
  11. If you want to set up your own battles with units that reflect the time period, then it is worth it. If you want to redo Alexander's conquest of Persia in campaign mode, save your money, because it's AI is terrible and things get unrealistically slogged down.
  12. 200,000 year old human hair found in dung By Richard Gray, Science Correspondent Palaeontologists found 40 strands of fossilised hair inside samples of coprolite, or fossilised dung, from a cave in South Africa that was used by brown hyaenas. Until now the oldest samples of human hair were from a 9,000 year old mummy found in northern Chile. It is extremely rare for soft tissue such as hair, skin and muscle to survive more than a few hundred years and only hard tissue like bone is fossilised normally. But scientists believe the new samples of hair are the remains of an early species of human that was scavenged by hyaenas after death, allowing the delicate hairs to be preserved inside the dung as it fossilised. As reported at Telegraph.co.uk...
  13. Who was that masked man? Hail one and all, I'm back! I just had too much fun in Rome with too many things to share.
  14. I spent the day there yesterday and I intend to return as soon as possible Are you traveling in the area around Rome at the moment? Oh excellent! I came back a few days ago, and now I'm letting my body recover from running around Latium and Campania. Thankfully I got sick only after getting home, but I figured it would happen some time. Although I went to Capri with the intention of seeing some of Tiberius' villas, but decided against it since its a pain in the posterior to get around that island and I did not plan it well. As you might expect, after a mixed sea food platter I had there, Tiberius had his revenge on me.
  15. Hey Klingan you might also want to visit Ostia Antica, the old Roman port. There seemed to be a number of advertisements around Rome for it.
  16. So do you all feel it would be appropriate to say that paints and fibers are susceptable to damage from the light of a camera flash, but as for stone, marble, clay and metal, these materials should be resistant enough to light that flashes are unimportant? Another consideration I thought of is that some cameras have a mini laser attached to the camera to help it auto-focus when taking a picture, so even if you don't have a flash this could 'burn' a path into the object as well.
  17. Hello all! It is good to be back again at UNRV, and America for that matter. Recently I was in Italy celebrating my marriage and I visited quite a few Roman ruins and museums. I'll be posting a few photo albums to share the hundreds of photos I took of some amazing sites and artifacts. Even these hundreds of photos are just a portion of what is to be seen in the Rome area alone. For my first album, I have posted a little tour through Hadrian's Villa. I have a photo map key you can follow to get an idea of what you are looking at from what angle to make the pictures more informative. I'm 95% sure about their positioning, but there might be a little wiggle room for error on a few shots since I did not have the time to write down details on what I was taking pictures of. More albums are on the way! Still, there are a few things I regret not having a chance to take a picture of, such as the Pyramid of Cestius, the Pompeii museum artifacts in Naples, the alligator sculpture at the Hadrian's Villa Museum...and not a single bust of Julius Caesar to be found! (If anyone is going to Rome any time soon, get these please!!) If you would like greater detail on any of my photos, I can send you a much larger file than what UNRV allows in the gallery, just ask. FC
  18. I'm so happy. After the cancelation of the Enterprise series it seemed this worthy brand might die. I'll have to go see today in fact!
  19. Hello again folks! Just spent 10 days in Italia and saw quite a bit of history on my stay. I tried to document as much as I could, since I want to remember it all and share these precious sights with you! A particular question came up for me regarding the best way to preserve artifacts in museums with regard to photography policy. I've seen just about every variation of policy: from absolutely no pictures allowed at all like at the Hadrian's Villa Museum, to pictures without flash photography (my personal favorite) like at the Getty Villa, to any photography allowed as at the Capitoline Museums in Rome (gods I saw too many flashes at the Capitoline Wolf no matter what it's real age!) So my question to you all is what is the most appropriate way to allow or disallow photography in museums?
  20. I was at Pompey a few days ago and walked into a room, horrified to find a bunch of loose mosaic pieces ready for the taking. The gate to the structure had an unlocked chain to it. I closed up the situation personally, but sadly wondered how often that happens.
  21. Thank you all for adding to the discussion. I plan on updating this section and creating another for the next distinct era of Roman military progression in the next week.
  22. I don't know much about Belisarius' campaigns. Can someone provide a synopsis on the high points and methods that characterize the successes he had?
  23. I don't recall ever reading about how any Romans hate philosophy. Perhaps they did not take to it as much as the Greeks did, but for the most part they respected the philosophical understanding of the Greeks and basically left them to it. Still, a great many of the upper society of Rome partook to some degree in all three philosophies, though I suppose you can say stoicism was the most popular.
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