Alternate History... Literally

7980 BC: Kamun culture arises

7900 BC: Alric and Wullic culture arises

7670 BC: Xir has to greatly limit expansion due to large deaths caused by a particularly bad winter

7550 BC: Alric and Wullic begin extensive trading across the small path of ocean between them

7400 BC: By this time every existing civilization uses stone tools as a part of everyday life

7300 BC: The city-states of Urila and Sanam arrive on the world scene

7230 BC: Fesrians begin to develop an extremely primitive form of writing which utilizes pictures

7000 BC: Juun continues expansion along the coast

(remember you guys can suggest things you want to see :) )

Zuvarq Basemap Legend 8.png
 
I wanna see some areas that got screwed in OTL do better, like a powerful Congo river based civilization or something.

Also, I wanna see you go wild with the religions and ideologies man. Make up some unique stuff!
 
I wanna see some areas that got screwed in OTL do better, like a powerful Congo river based civilization or something.

Also, I wanna see you go wild with the religions and ideologies man. Make up some unique stuff!

Oh damn i just realized ive more or less been shunning religion this whoe time, thanks for reminding me :D
 
I would like to see more stuff in Australia and New Zealand! it will make it much more interesting for me personally!

Keep going this is great! :)

P.S. Use Antartica! A southern Inuit City-State
 
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k killtertahu I have a suggestion for you.
How about a strong maritime citystate/civilisation based around the Korean peninsula? It could act as OTL Greece for Persia/China. :D
 
It's all very good, but when was the POD actually? Because a civilization developing in north Siberia doesn't seem very plausible.
 
Quick question, in your guys' opinions, do you think the size of the nation(s) are growing too slowly for 1000 year turns?
 
I like the location of the North American civilization. The Colorado river delta can be a fascinating substitute for the Nile River Delta...in fact it's somewhat surprising an agricultural civilization did not develop in this area
 
If I might: I cannot see that a civilization would thrive from origins based at where the Colorado River empties into the Gulf of California.

As a more likely alternative, how about where the American and Sacramento Rivers meet (near Sacramento, California)? The climate is more moderate, the soils are excellent for agriculture, the rivers would drive transportation, and the nearby Sierra Nevada mountains would be an early source of metals.
 
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