I really hope you continue this series! A tip for making larger factories: when you put level-1 depots next to each other, they'll balance resources between them. So you can chain them together and surround them with extractors to utilize the ore spaces in the middle of the veins. This also helps when you want to make a bunch of one item. You can create a line of "input" resource depots, then next to them a line of factories, then another line of "output" depots. Level-2 depots have a range of 2, so they can be 1 space away from other depots and factories, which makes these sort of "mass factory blocks" much easier to build.
Overboard, Efficiently! But that out the way, did anyone else notice how many days the trucks took to make their journey. Those size ratios are massively off or those trucks are insanely slow.
You know rce is a architect or at least one brainwashed into thinking he is a engineer just watch 30 of his videos your agree or I think so, well looks like you don't have to play only 1 game and have a character in it to have lore
Couple tips it is better to fill a resource area with extractors fill in depots where you need them and then export. Depots will auto balance so use them as a way to move resources over very short distances. Straight lines are your friend in this game. Don't overproduce what you don't need as it hurts you later on. When producing something I have been doing one line of depot one line of factory and one line of depot then export from a few points on the line of depots. This stays pretty balanced and produces a lot more then your method. You can expand on this once you get the better depots and trains. GL my fellow engineer and terraform that planet!
Matt, your content has replaced just about every source of entertainment in my life lately. Thank you for playing videogames in a fashion way more entertaining than doing it myself. It's been fun marathoning through your backlog of videos. Have you ever thought of narrating those nature documentaries? Maybe it's the British accent but getting a bridge review in the middle of lion chasing a zebra would make my day.
Fun fact: Aluminum was coined by British chemist Sir Humphry Davy back in the day and America simply just kept doing it after everyone switched to Aluminium. Aluminum is a British Invention like so many other things
hexagons are bestagons! Oddly enough the first question that comes to my mind: How did they split up a sphere into bestagons? (because you can't with a sphere, they must use a trick) Very interesting game, already put it on my wishlist. Exactly my kinda stuff :D
I'm guessing the pentagon tiles are hidden in the non buildable regions, and if they procedural generation, they have a rule that all pentagonal tiles must have a obstructing land feature.
Fun fact: the reason why people from the usa spell things differently is because noah webster, who made the merriam-webster dictionary had the words spelled how he wanted them to be spelled. They mostly agreed with him, but some spellings didn't catch on, like 'wimmen' for 'women'. The reason why they call trapeziums trapezoids and trapezoids trapeziums is because someone accidentally switched the definitions in a dictionary
Webster is part of it. There have also been occasions where the change was by the British. Aubergine and courgette because French words were in vogue in the 19th century. Aluminium because it better matched the "ium" used in many other elements. And so on.
@@OriginalPiMan Hans Christian Ørsted, the discoverer of Aluminum, had to write 2 papers on it to get people to stop calling it Aluminia and call it Aluminum properly. I don't know if it was the Victorians that reverted back to using a "fancy" sounding name, but either way. The Brits keep saying it wrong and everyone else says it correctly. :)
@@worldsenddesign5374 But the brits call it the same way as most the planet does, -ium. Ørsted didn't -discover- it either, he just managed purification to the actual metal; its existence was already known.
A developer from my country made this game! It's French🥖 ! By the way, there are a lot of things you do wrong by me : you use several supply centers, you build on ores...
Fun fact: aluminum was originally named alumium by English chemist sir Humphry Davy who later changed the name to aluminum. British editors then decided they disagreed with his naming scheme and changed the word in Britain to aluminium to fit with the other metallic element names (sodium, potassium etc.) while the Americans kept the official name.
You can branch out into a few road stops at either end with more depots and supply centers attached to them, and that way your trucks won't be stuck waiting.
I bought this game shortly after it came out. you always start with 3 "cities", not just one. they are more like landing capsules in the beginning. the mechanics are quite unique. you never loose a building. if you "erase" it, it gets put back on the buildable stack. you can loose resources though, if you remove depots or stations, that still have some on them. not sure, if you can reach the 1 million population yet. last save I played, I got stuck on 1k pop in all 3 cities and was almost out of resources on half the planet and the other half had less to begin with.
"The Oxford English Dictionary reports that in a lecture Sir Humphry Davy (A British chemist) delivered in 1809 and published in 1810, Davy does not use the term alumium, but refers only to good old alumina as alumine. By 1812, Davy had revised his coinage, opting instead for aluminum." As we can see the Brit who discovered it settled on the term aluminum not aluminium. So it's not Americans who are saying it wrong, it's y'all.
Was it not first discovered by a Dane who first named it 'Alumium' from 'alumina'. however, he himself later called it 'aluminium' and so it was felt to be the right way to go. Greetings from Denmark🇩🇰 :)
@@justj7687 I believe it was Davy and he went through a few variations of the name before settling on aluminum. Someone else shortly after called it aluminium.
11:33 I hear it's amazing when the famous hard hat engineer in Plan B terraform space, with the logistics drones, does a raw blink on Hara-Concrete Rock. I need extractors! 61!
the best thing about that supply center thing, is that when the city grows to a massive size, you can place them outside the city limits, and the city will expand around them and keep expanding, so there isn't really a concept of 'outside of city-limits', the game will just keep spawning new buildings further and further away. so you don't really need to seperate the atmosphere extractors from the city with a small road, just build within the city itself, because any small length of road would just get engulfed anyway, and at that point you don't need the road, just the supply center next to the outputs. later on you also have to deal with city waste in order to help the city grow, which can be processed into other materials, but same thing. if the city continues to grow it'll engulf the waste processing facilities, so you don't need to transport the waste outside the city-limits, since there is no concept of an 'outside of city limits', so all you do by moving the waste is cause slows downs in processing.... of course there is a limit to this, every supply/waste station has to be adjacent to a city tile. I'm just informing you that moving stuff into the city or moving it out of the city gets silly as there is only city beyond a certain point. instead of the factory must grow, this game is 'the city must grow'. if you don't believe me go watch nilaus play this game, he just ended his 5 episode series on it.
Pause at exactly 18:34, @RealCivilEngineerGaming appears to be missing the road when you built there, so we may need another video to prove you connected the planet with that road.
19:05 -58C is -72F, however if you tell someone it's -40 outside you don't have to specify units because there is no -40K and -40C and -40F are the same
@@harshsabade9107 no -40K is not possible and if you think you need to specify it isn't -40K you shouldn't be allowed to vote. There is a difference between different and non-existent. You don't have to specify that it's not the non-existent unit.
As an American, I normally have to do the equation conversion from Celcius (or Centigrade if you prefer) to Fahrenheit, but I do know that at -40 degrees, they agree.
I built a stack of belts (for coal, iron ore, copper and oil) around the first planet of Dyson Sphere Program. That way I did extract resources globally and fabricate centrally. Needless to say that spaceships and cargo drones make this irrelevant at some point but it was useful for a good while.
Hello RCE! You haven't played wandering village and Planet Crafter in forever. Please play those games too. Recently, only games you play are City Skylines, Timberborn and Kerbal Space Program
Roads!!! The game has drones and the devs can only think of using roads to transport stuff around. 😢 No G wagons though.😢 Anyways, great video as usual. 😊
Oh you can build around the entire planet! I was wondering if you were able to do that, I just bought this game a few days ago, so that's good to know! *Mr. Burns fingers*
2:33 I don’t know how you do it, but I usually make one big mining complex taking up the whole node and build the production on the side, only downside is you have to revamp it to have the *number go brtttttttt* effect
Update, I have now played this game for like 3 hours straight without realizing time passed. Some of the things are a little hard to understand at first? But it's good c: also RCE you have 3 cities not just one.
Yeah when I play this game I lose track of time... haha. I am stuck at around 100k population always running out of something such a mess... might start over!
Fun fact, the aluminium/aluminum thing isn't an 'Americans spell things weird' issue, It's because there was extended debate over what it should be named. Alum was the base mineral, Alumina [now called aluminium oxide] was the actual compound containing it. Alumum [alum + -um] was the initial proposition; then aluminum [alumina + -um]; then aluminium [alumina + -ium]. -um is from classical Latin, where as -ium is from Neo-Latin [15th century reconstruction used in science]. We can still see the old -um in use with Platinum and Molybdenum.
Here in the midwest it has gotten quite close to that cold a few times in the last few years. Around -40, the last time was colder than that, counting windchill.
Aluminum is literally quicker to say, why do Europeans not only say it with an extra letter and syllable, but find us weird for making it more efficient😂
Day 14 of asking RCE to play Machinarium. It’s a 2011 puzzle game with great characters and gameplay, an amazing soundtrack and some very detailed puzzles. It’s available (though not free) on Steam.
Game is good in concept but need to be aware its still in early access and there is maybe only 2-3 hours of actual gameplay before you hit the content wall. Resource nodes also get depleted fairly quickly. While it looks like a lot of iron there you can burn through that entire patch in about 30 minutes and I can easily see a point where you get deadlocked and run out of resources on the entire planet.
Who was the dude who's hair was the source of his strenght? Can't recall, but it has to be the beard that gives Matt such great engineering powers to achieve such magnificent levels of infrastructure performance. . .And also the ability to break the game in one way or another in the first 10 minutes🤣
"Look how long that train is! Bloomin' hell that's long!" *Laughs in United Statesian, then stops laughing because while we have 2-4 mile long trains on the regular, they go slow and that equals quite long waits at level crossings....*
Fun Fact: North American spells it Aluminum well everywhere else spells it Aluminium. So technically both are being correctly pronounced, it just depends on the spelling.
Only because Webster "decided" it should be "Aluminum" when they wrote their American English dictionary. Before that, the US had more or less agreed to use "Aluminium", but the people kind of assumed that Webster had consulted with literally anybody about it and that they must've had an important reason to print "Aluminum", so they adopted it against the academic consense, when in reality, Webster just found it easier to spell. It is only technically correct now, because IUPAC relented at some point and added the American spelling to the Element's description, but every serious scientist and engineer should use "Aluminium", because it makes it needlessly harder to index scientific papers for both spellings
2:46 I was looking away as he said this, and was incredibly shocked when I looked back and it wasn't -knob shaped- _highly efficient engineering_
Ikr
I think it was two knobs that he made. If you look at them, you can sort of see two - ahem, highly efficient shapes.
then theres 13:42
100th like :D
Let's hope that as Matt plays this, he does make --knob shaped-- highly efficiently engineered things.
I really hope you continue this series! A tip for making larger factories: when you put level-1 depots next to each other, they'll balance resources between them. So you can chain them together and surround them with extractors to utilize the ore spaces in the middle of the veins. This also helps when you want to make a bunch of one item. You can create a line of "input" resource depots, then next to them a line of factories, then another line of "output" depots.
Level-2 depots have a range of 2, so they can be 1 space away from other depots and factories, which makes these sort of "mass factory blocks" much easier to build.
That's weird, I remember him playing before where he did that
@@new_simsons you sure?
So basically the depots as conveyers as well interesting
@@AndereRickert yes im sure he played before, even remember a commentary saying he thought it was planet crafter
Omg I'm so dumb. It was another youtuber
I just love how you always immediately go completely overboard with resource production
Overboard, Efficiently!
But that out the way, did anyone else notice how many days the trucks took to make their journey. Those size ratios are massively off or those trucks are insanely slow.
Idk about immediately… it’s been years!
You know rce is a architect or at least one brainwashed into thinking he is a engineer just watch 30 of his videos your agree or I think so, well looks like you don't have to play only 1 game and have a character in it to have lore
@@thelukesternater ye editing magic
I do the same in every game I play.
Please make a series out of this, I want to watch the planet change
"I'm going to stay tidy on this planet"
*reads title*
he did say he would try
Couple tips it is better to fill a resource area with extractors fill in depots where you need them and then export. Depots will auto balance so use them as a way to move resources over very short distances.
Straight lines are your friend in this game. Don't overproduce what you don't need as it hurts you later on.
When producing something I have been doing one line of depot one line of factory and one line of depot then export from a few points on the line of depots. This stays pretty balanced and produces a lot more then your method.
You can expand on this once you get the better depots and trains.
GL my fellow engineer and terraform that planet!
Matt, your content has replaced just about every source of entertainment in my life lately. Thank you for playing videogames in a fashion way more entertaining than doing it myself. It's been fun marathoning through your backlog of videos. Have you ever thought of narrating those nature documentaries? Maybe it's the British accent but getting a bridge review in the middle of lion chasing a zebra would make my day.
Fun fact: Aluminum was coined by British chemist Sir Humphry Davy back in the day and America simply just kept doing it after everyone switched to Aluminium. Aluminum is a British Invention like so many other things
Infraspace is implementing terraforming in their March update. Looking forward to that one.
Looking at your name, I conclude that this must be RCE's other account... XD
@@lukearts2954 engineers never reveal their secrets 👀
hexagons are bestagons!
Oddly enough the first question that comes to my mind: How did they split up a sphere into bestagons? (because you can't with a sphere, they must use a trick)
Very interesting game, already put it on my wishlist. Exactly my kinda stuff :D
I'm guessing the pentagon tiles are hidden in the non buildable regions, and if they procedural generation, they have a rule that all pentagonal tiles must have a obstructing land feature.
at 13:22 there's some signs of foul play afoot
You can easily subdivide the surface of a sphere into simple polygons
@@DominicRyanOsborne Polygons, yes. Hexagons specifically, no.
@@daneshannonsparks that's so weird you responded to that when like 2 hours ago I made a similar response on Twitter
Fun fact: the reason why people from the usa spell things differently is because noah webster, who made the merriam-webster dictionary had the words spelled how he wanted them to be spelled. They mostly agreed with him, but some spellings didn't catch on, like 'wimmen' for 'women'. The reason why they call trapeziums trapezoids and trapezoids trapeziums is because someone accidentally switched the definitions in a dictionary
Webster is part of it. There have also been occasions where the change was by the British. Aubergine and courgette because French words were in vogue in the 19th century. Aluminium because it better matched the "ium" used in many other elements.
And so on.
@@OriginalPiMan Hans Christian Ørsted, the discoverer of Aluminum, had to write 2 papers on it to get people to stop calling it Aluminia and call it Aluminum properly. I don't know if it was the Victorians that reverted back to using a "fancy" sounding name, but either way. The Brits keep saying it wrong and everyone else says it correctly. :)
@@worldsenddesign5374 But the brits call it the same way as most the planet does, -ium. Ørsted didn't -discover- it either, he just managed purification to the actual metal; its existence was already known.
@@worldsenddesign5374 It was transcribed incorrectly by the British translator.
You have the best editor, hands down
If I ever made a game, I'd add a British English version that just shoehorns extra letters into every word. It'd warm my American soul.
A developer from my country made this game! It's French🥖 !
By the way, there are a lot of things you do wrong by me : you use several supply centers, you build on ores...
Fun fact: aluminum was originally named alumium by English chemist sir Humphry Davy who later changed the name to aluminum. British editors then decided they disagreed with his naming scheme and changed the word in Britain to aluminium to fit with the other metallic element names (sodium, potassium etc.) while the Americans kept the official name.
Cool
Nice
You can branch out into a few road stops at either end with more depots and supply centers attached to them, and that way your trucks won't be stuck waiting.
I bought this game shortly after it came out.
you always start with 3 "cities", not just one. they are more like landing capsules in the beginning.
the mechanics are quite unique. you never loose a building. if you "erase" it, it gets put back on the buildable stack.
you can loose resources though, if you remove depots or stations, that still have some on them.
not sure, if you can reach the 1 million population yet.
last save I played, I got stuck on 1k pop in all 3 cities and was almost out of resources on half the planet and the other half had less to begin with.
You can go past 1 mil it just doesn't level you up.
Theres enough resources to get all threee planets to 1 mil pop
@@futurefox635 I guess you mean cities, not plantes. I probably drew the short stick on resource RNG then...
Thank you for always doing quick conversions of C to F. And Meters To Yards .
"The Oxford English Dictionary reports that in a lecture Sir Humphry Davy (A British chemist) delivered in 1809 and published in 1810, Davy does not use the term alumium, but refers only to good old alumina as alumine. By 1812, Davy had revised his coinage, opting instead for aluminum." As we can see the Brit who discovered it settled on the term aluminum not aluminium. So it's not Americans who are saying it wrong, it's y'all.
Was it not first discovered by a Dane who first named it 'Alumium' from 'alumina'. however, he himself later called it 'aluminium' and so it was felt to be the right way to go.
Greetings from Denmark🇩🇰 :)
@@justj7687 I believe it was Davy and he went through a few variations of the name before settling on aluminum. Someone else shortly after called it aluminium.
Hexagons are the bestagons...couldn't expect less from an engineer
11:33 I hear it's amazing when the famous hard hat engineer in Plan B terraform space, with the logistics drones, does a raw blink on Hara-Concrete Rock. I need extractors! 61!
thanks for the uploads rce always enjoy your vids :D
Love you RCE
love you michael
A huge shoutout from Shenzhen!!! Or you might call us Old Shenzhen, eh? Please make the next episode soon, can't wait to see how New Shenzhen develop!
I love the transport system in this! The drones are so cute, as are the trucks
3x speed they look like mites jumping on the skin
2:05 haven't thought about You're under arrest! in years! Thank you editor!
the best thing about that supply center thing, is that when the city grows to a massive size, you can place them outside the city limits, and the city will expand around them and keep expanding, so there isn't really a concept of 'outside of city-limits', the game will just keep spawning new buildings further and further away. so you don't really need to seperate the atmosphere extractors from the city with a small road, just build within the city itself, because any small length of road would just get engulfed anyway, and at that point you don't need the road, just the supply center next to the outputs.
later on you also have to deal with city waste in order to help the city grow, which can be processed into other materials, but same thing. if the city continues to grow it'll engulf the waste processing facilities, so you don't need to transport the waste outside the city-limits, since there is no concept of an 'outside of city limits', so all you do by moving the waste is cause slows downs in processing.... of course there is a limit to this, every supply/waste station has to be adjacent to a city tile.
I'm just informing you that moving stuff into the city or moving it out of the city gets silly as there is only city beyond a certain point.
instead of the factory must grow, this game is 'the city must grow'.
if you don't believe me go watch nilaus play this game, he just ended his 5 episode series on it.
Pause at exactly 18:34, @RealCivilEngineerGaming appears to be missing the road when you built there, so we may need another video to prove you connected the planet with that road.
Searched for this comment! He totally didn't notice that the mouse moved when he clicked 😆
Every time I hear Matt call something efficient, I can't help but search my screen for the knob
19:05 -58C is -72F, however if you tell someone it's -40 outside you don't have to specify units because there is no -40K and -40C and -40F are the same
K is still different tho
@@harshsabade9107 no -40K is not possible and if you think you need to specify it isn't -40K you shouldn't be allowed to vote. There is a difference between different and non-existent. You don't have to specify that it's not the non-existent unit.
@@Masterman2020 Read your comment again, understood now that you were saying -40K doesn't exist, I thought you said K C and F are the same at -40
Real Civil Engineer + Plan B Terraform = Perfection. More of this pleaseeeeeeeeee!
YAY!!! 😄
you finally made this video!
As an American, I normally have to do the equation conversion from Celcius (or Centigrade if you prefer) to Fahrenheit, but I do know that at -40 degrees, they agree.
Looking forward to this series. It feels similar to infraspace but with much more space, and a bit less restriction
Really liking this, more episodes please!
I built a stack of belts (for coal, iron ore, copper and oil) around the first planet of Dyson Sphere Program.
That way I did extract resources globally and fabricate centrally. Needless to say that spaceships and cargo drones make this irrelevant at some point but it was useful for a good while.
Small tip, you can hit middle mouse to duplicate a building and what its producing, so duplicating resource chains becomes much easier
Hello RCE! You haven't played wandering village and Planet Crafter in forever. Please play those games too. Recently, only games you play are City Skylines, Timberborn and Kerbal Space Program
I will gladly watch a whole series of this
This is a great one. I'd love to see you continue and make a series out of it.
Roads!!! The game has drones and the devs can only think of using roads to transport stuff around. 😢 No G wagons though.😢 Anyways, great video as usual. 😊
It's so nice hearing a TH-camr saying "Aluminium" for once; fellow Briton here!
Oh you can build around the entire planet! I was wondering if you were able to do that, I just bought this game a few days ago, so that's good to know! *Mr. Burns fingers*
Terraforming a reddish-brown planet.... Hmm. Reminds me of another game on this channel.... When do we get another episode of Planet Crafter?
Was literally thinking about this today
NICE VID
nice vid
Day 31 of asking Matt to play SpaceFlight Simulator.
Promote this!
2d ksp
Ik what to do
Why would you play it when ksp exists?
Just going to say space flight simulator is just the downgraded version of ksp
2:33 I don’t know how you do it, but I usually make one big mining complex taking up the whole node and build the production on the side, only downside is you have to revamp it to have the *number go brtttttttt* effect
2:07 You've just created a positive feedback loop. This mines it slowly at first but speeds up until it absolutely ravages the iron at the end.
Hexagons? Terra forming? Planet wide construction?! Assembly line factories?!? Oh yes, this game and I will go along great c:
Update, I have now played this game for like 3 hours straight without realizing time passed. Some of the things are a little hard to understand at first? But it's good c: also RCE you have 3 cities not just one.
Yeah when I play this game I lose track of time... haha. I am stuck at around 100k population always running out of something such a mess... might start over!
Fun fact, the aluminium/aluminum thing isn't an 'Americans spell things weird' issue, It's because there was extended debate over what it should be named. Alum was the base mineral, Alumina [now called aluminium oxide] was the actual compound containing it. Alumum [alum + -um] was the initial proposition; then aluminum [alumina + -um]; then aluminium [alumina + -ium]. -um is from classical Latin, where as -ium is from Neo-Latin [15th century reconstruction used in science]. We can still see the old -um in use with Platinum and Molybdenum.
This game looks like SO MUCH FUN!
This is too efficient!
In the next episode, RCE will create the Strongest Highway to maximize the efficiency of his supply chains.
I have been loving this game, highly recommend people try it out!
Game looks cool, it would be nice if you played more of it!
Can't wait to see more of this game
We need a mega upload of this game!
I'd love to see more of these episodes
I would love to see more of this game it’s really entertaining to watch
Here in the midwest it has gotten quite close to that cold a few times in the last few years. Around -40, the last time was colder than that, counting windchill.
Only number that makes sense in Celsius and Fahrenheit
please continue this series it looks like a really cool game
You’re the best, TH-camr
Good to know the devs know the proper spelling of aluminum
2:00 wth was that☠️
What’s funny is that Matt only plays games that have hexagons 😂😂😂😂
Matt! Paddy wants you to play Spaceflight simulator! 🐕🦺🐶🥺
Any other satisfactory gamers out there? Because this smells a lot like a top down variant of satisfac.
Loving this game, and the way you are playing it!
Please make more in this series!
Please make this a series!
I would absolutely love to see more of this!
Woah dude thats out of this world!
Love to see the obscure Anime at 2:05.
Nikaidou, Yoriko Taiho Shichau zo (You're Under Arrest)
19:05 : its -72°F Matt
This makes me want more planet crafter.
fun game, the long road is pretty fun, you can play truck music when its done lol good game nice vid
*_definently not a _**_-infraspace-_*_ _*_clone obviously not right 👍_*
Hope that there will be a second part very cool game👍
0:05 "Blimming hell thats long"
*Insert your strongest shape jokes in replies*
Hi RCE
This game suspiciously looks a lot like infraspace. Not a bad thing of course.
Aluminum is literally quicker to say, why do Europeans not only say it with an extra letter and syllable, but find us weird for making it more efficient😂
You really like engineering, huh? I can appreciate that. I have a passion for sociology
Day 14 of asking RCE to play Machinarium. It’s a 2011 puzzle game with great characters and gameplay, an amazing soundtrack and some very detailed puzzles. It’s available (though not free) on Steam.
Game is good in concept but need to be aware its still in early access and there is maybe only 2-3 hours of actual gameplay before you hit the content wall. Resource nodes also get depleted fairly quickly. While it looks like a lot of iron there you can burn through that entire patch in about 30 minutes and I can easily see a point where you get deadlocked and run out of resources on the entire planet.
Blud did not get that by random 0:21
the factory must grow
Finally Matt has to use the grid
10:39 *laughs in late game train spaghetti*
MOAR PLEASE NOW
Have a close look at your around the world road. I think you left a gap at 18:34.
"the friday afternoon job" - can 100% relate.
Who was the dude who's hair was the source of his strenght? Can't recall, but it has to be the beard that gives Matt such great engineering powers to achieve such magnificent levels of infrastructure performance. . .And also the ability to break the game in one way or another in the first 10 minutes🤣
"Look how long that train is! Bloomin' hell that's long!"
*Laughs in United Statesian, then stops laughing because while we have 2-4 mile long trains on the regular, they go slow and that equals quite long waits at level crossings....*
if you like factory games then you should try satisfactory
4 times this got recommended, i will finally WATCH THIS
This is such an amazing video all I got left whit was craving for more please make more videos of this game
I found this game last week and I’m obsessed
Fun Fact: North American spells it Aluminum well everywhere else spells it Aluminium. So technically both are being correctly pronounced, it just depends on the spelling.
Only because Webster "decided" it should be "Aluminum" when they wrote their American English dictionary. Before that, the US had more or less agreed to use "Aluminium", but the people kind of assumed that Webster had consulted with literally anybody about it and that they must've had an important reason to print "Aluminum", so they adopted it against the academic consense, when in reality, Webster just found it easier to spell. It is only technically correct now, because IUPAC relented at some point and added the American spelling to the Element's description, but every serious scientist and engineer should use "Aluminium", because it makes it needlessly harder to index scientific papers for both spellings
@@Dragongaga Going against both logic and reason because they don't want to put in the extra effort?
Sounds about right for America.
This is how Civ 7 "maps" should be. Imagine the gameplay