Well, with China already in their pocket, Japan either won't start the pacific front, or they'll win it.Makes you wonder how ww2 would pan out ittl.
The states of Okinawa, Taiwan, Kyushu , Shikoku and Honshu.
Soviet Republic of (North) Japan and the Southern Japanese Kingdom?
Yep.Soviet Republic of (North) Japan and the Southern Japanese Kingdom?
Great map, but Braunschweig is where Hanover is.It's been several months, but here's another map from my 16th-century timeline:
Amazing quality! I can see the time was well spent.It's been several months, but here's another map from my 16th-century timeline:
Henry VIII is dead, slain at Oxford. In his place, Richard de la Pole has seized the throne, whilst Catherine of Aragon flees across the Narrow Sea into a life of exile and piracy in Calais. Meanwhile, the Most Christian King of France, Francis I, prepares to dislodge the Tudor Exilarchate and thereby pave the way for an invasion of the Netherlands. In the Holy Roman Empire, Archduke Ferdinand manages to soothe the confessional tempers at the Diet of Speyer, promising that imperial reform is coming, Charles V being furious with Pope Clement over the latter's alliance with the French and scheming at wresting Naples from the Habsburgs. And in Hungary, Mary von Habsburg is desperately trying to restore at least some form of royal authority as rumours of an Ottoman invasion begin to flow in from Constantinople...
Great map, but Braunschweig is where Hanover is.
Amazing quality! I can see the time was well spent.
Below is a map of North Fusania in 1205 including both Wayam and the many smaller states in the region which remain independent. The Wayamese are by far the largest and most powerful state in North Fusania yet function as more of a tight-knit confederation, hence the five provinces of Wayam which are depicted on the map. These provinces have subjugated many bordering areas to their rule to varying degrees. Most other states portrayed on this map are city-states, with only a few being anything greater. Borders as portrayed on the map would be like an in-universe reconstruction of this era rather than defined fact.
Usually a lot of people use colour schemes. If you want your own colours (which is rather fair, especially if you're using a colour for depicting some niche stuff like numerous german states on the steppe), typically I play around with the RGB values, then I go down to HSV to narrow down the colour and make sure it's not too light or too dark.How do you guys make colors not look garish and overly bright? I have a decent map but my color sense is just trash and I hate it.
How sophisticated of an editor are you using? Can you adjust Saturation, Hue, and Value indivually?How do you guys make colors not look garish and overly bright? I have a decent map but my color sense is just trash and I hate it.
Well I would have thought the Chinese Govt would've made more subdivisions Chinese majority.(Oh boy, this one is gonna be controversial)
Well, this is a simple one, this is an ethnic map of China. Not the typical one you might see on Wikipedia.
It shows the biggest ethnic group in each 2nd-level subdivision (prefectures). Not the majority though, as in some areas there is no majority group, for example in some parts of Yunnan or Guangxi.
It might be surprising to some, but this is how it is, nor Inner Mongolia has a Mongolian-majority population, nor does some parts of Xinjiang.
Without any more clarifications, here you have it:
View attachment 627598
Thank you, I've moved Brunswick a few clicks to the west