A fantasy Renaissance scenario with cool graphics on a map of Europe by St. Leo.
About:
A fantasy Renaissance scenario with cool graphics on a map of Europe by St. Leo.
Mod files rescued from DSquared's Zandanian League backups and repacked in 7zip by Blake. Successfully tested in Civ2 MGE. Also Leo's Title.gif had palette conversion issues so Blake fixed it.
Original mod homepage can be found here:
web.archive.org/web/2005051...ameid=1&urltypeid=1&urlyearmin=0&urlyearmax=1
File added to this area as part of Blake's lost scenario/mod files restoration & cataloging project which can be found here:
forums.civfanatics.com/thre...o-doom-b5-strek-swars-sgate-homm-more.657278/
Browse other Civilization 2 scenarios & mods in the collection here:
forums.civfanatics.com/tags/civilization-2-mod/
www.moddb.com/tags/civilization-2-mod
archive.org/search.php?query=subject:Civ2ModCollection&sort=titleSorter
Join the Civilization 2 Scenario League at CivFanatics here:
forums.civfanatics.com/forums/civ2-scenario-league.428/
Original Description/Intro:
^"In Chamonix at the foot of Mont Blanc, people watched in fear as the Mer de Glace
^ (Sea of Ice) glacier advanced. In earlier years, they had seen the slowly flowing
^ ice engulf farms and crush entire villages.
^They turned to the Bishop of Geneva for help, and he made the journey to Chamonix.
^ At the ice front he performed a rite of exorcism.
^Little by little, the glacier receded."
^
^The Fifteenth Century saw the end of the Medieval Warm Period and the beginning of
^ the Little Ice Age. In some parts, all of the snow no longer melted in the summer
^ and gradually the world's glaciers began to grow to truly Continental dimensions.
^ With so much water being stored in land ice, sea levels around the world dropped
^ dramatically.
^In the meantime, a pesky little primate species was beginning to get truly
^ interested in technology and exploration. Europe and Asia discovered each other
^ and a search for shortcuts added the Americas to the global community.
^However, to contemporary Europeans, these events were nowhere near as important as
^ the growing power of the Habsburgs. Research and development, formerly focused on
^ agricultural techniques because of the falling harvests, once again turned its
^ sights onto the topic of war.