Sorry, I've been doing oher things, and haven't thought of anything else yet. I'll look at my plans for my game, and see if there is something else there.
Offline
Okay, found some stuff. There should be a bank in both the capitals, and a few of the larger villages, where you can store items and materials, and of course, cloins. You could also grow plants, have a farm, ect. There could also be at either of the capital's banks, an exchange of sorts, where you could exchange with other players.
Last edited by sonicfan12p (2012-06-07 17:04:37)
Offline
OK, great! I like that idea! Maybe you could have loans. You have to pay at a certain amount of days, or you go to a prison-type place called Cloud Prison. Your fee goes up each day.
A day in the cloud world is the same as a day here, 24 hours.
Offline
Cool! I have to go to a ball game soon, so I might be back on later. Bye!
Offline
Oh, and I have another idea. The capital picks a cloud from the prison, and he/she must compete in one of those collumisians. (Don't know how to spell it. ).
Last edited by coolhogs (2012-06-07 18:02:32)
Offline
Offline
OK. Here's a good idea:
Each cloud has lives. The number of lives you have depends on what time period you're in. Lose all of your lives, and you have to restart the game with no cloins, no house, nothing. How do you like my idea? Give suggestions for it.
Offline
Rome:
Ok, I was going to give a detailed history, but that would take a lot of reading. But, I won't. Rome was run by a Senate, or republic. Where there was, I think, 500 members, they were senators. They had direct control over Rome. But, around 0 BC, that changed. An emperor took control, (Long story, but I know it by heart) He was in control, but the Senate still remained, and still had power. Although less than they did before. They were always enemies with the northern Germanic tribes. They had chiefs, and Warlords. The Romans were very civilized. Is there anything in particular you would like to know?
Offline
Yoshiboy wrote:
Rome:
Ok, I was going to give a detailed history, but that would take a lot of reading. But, I won't. Rome was run by a Senate, or republic. Where there was, I think, 500 members, they were senators. They had direct control over Rome. But, around 0 BC, that changed. An emperor took control, (Long story, but I know it by heart) He was in control, but the Senate still remained, and still had power. Although less than they did before. They were always enemies with the northern Germanic tribes. They had chiefs, and Warlords. The Romans were very civilized. Is there anything in particular you would like to know?
What were the people of Rome like? Also, what were the buildings like? Can you tell me the long story?
Offline
Ok. Now for the shortest way of telling the story I could think of:
Julius Ceasar, a great roman general, and the single most powerful person in Rome, was setting out on a campaign against the Parthians (an eastern empire, located in what is noe Iraq). He was going to take his favorite nephew, and future adopted son, Octavian, with him. The day he was going to leave, he was murdered. Some people had always feared that Julius might claim himself king. He had the power to do so. The Romans had long since gotten rid of the last king (Tarquin, considered a tyrant) and established a republic. Julius Ceasar, was stabbed to death by his friend Brutus, and a handful of others. Octavian, and Marcus Antonius (mark Antony) set out and defeated the people who had killed Julius. The roman empire was then divided by the two. Octavian had the west, and Mark Antony had the east. This part is long and full of details, so I'll just say Mark Antony had always seen Julius's death as a chance to take over Rome. They started fighting, Octavian won, he bacame emperor, the people loved him, gave him the name Augustus(which was a word that would be used in describing a god, not a name for a human) and got the title "Father of our country". Bla bla bla.
Buildings:
The roofs were made of red tiles. Most large buildings had a roof that had a squar hole in it, and the roof slanted down from the walls to the hole. The hole, was above a courtyard, or something, and the rain would slide down the roof into the large square hole, and fall into a small pool, not for swimming though. that courtyard, or whatever it was, was mainly in the centre of the house.
Last edited by Yoshiboy (2012-06-08 00:33:27)
Offline
Yoshiboy wrote:
Ok. Now for the shortest way of telling the story I could think of:
Julius Ceasar, a great roman general, and the single most powerful person in Rome, was setting out on a campaign against the Parthians (an eastern empire, located in what is noe Iraq). He was going to take his favorite nephew, and future adopted son, Octavian, with him. The day he was going to leave, he was murdered. Some people had always feared that Julius might claim himself king. He had the power to do so. The Romans had long since gotten rid of the last king (Tarquin, considered a tyrant) and established a republic. Julius Ceasar, was stabbed to death by his friend Brutus, and a handful of others. Octavian, and Marcus Antonius (mark Antony) set out and defeated the people who had killed Julius. The roman empire was then divided by the two. Octavian had the west, and Mark Antony had the east. This part is long and full of details, so I'll just say Mark Antony had always seen Julius's death as a chance to take over Rome. They started fighting, Octavian won, he bacame emperor, the people loved him, gave him the name Augustus(which was a word that would be used in describing a god, not a name for a human) and got the title "Father of our country". Bla bla bla.
Buildings:
The roofs were made of red tiles. Most large buildings had a roof that had a squar hole in it, and the roof slanted down from the walls to the hole. The hole, was above a courtyard, or something, and the rain would slide down the roof into the large square hole, and fall into a small pool, not for swimming though. that courtyard, or whatever it was, was mainly in the centre of the house.
Julius did claim himself king for life. I learned that about a month ago. Augustus means: "Holy One". The reason Octavian was named Augustus was due to the fact that
A.) He defeated Mark Antony whom the people thought of a traitor (long story involving the last pharoah Cleopatra)
B.) He followed in Cincinnatus's footsteps by taking giving up the power he was given.
The senators (which now regained their power with Julius out of the way) gave him the name Augustus in order to convince him to stay in power.
Offline
Actually, he turned down an offer to become king. He didn't really become king. Brutus had offered him the crown, but Julius knew better and turned down the offer. I was just skimming through the story.
Offline
No, I don't know CSS, but I know where to find it. My mind has been blank recently, I can't focus on hardly anything!
Offline