Meganation: Difference between revisions

From EarthMC
Jump to navigation Jump to search
>Nip dip
mNo edit summary
>Nip dip
mNo edit summary
(No difference)

Revision as of 05:18, 14 July 2020

A mega-nation or empire is formed by a group of smaller nations (typically called colonies, provinces or regions) controlled by a leading nation.

History

Cascadia was the first mega-nation to form on EarthMC, holding many provinces under its wing during 2019. However, when the Cascadian Civil War began, Cascadia started losing its status. Rio Grande was the next mega-nation to form, holding provinces like South Texas(independent de facto but under such heavy influence it is considered a province), followed by California, who benefited by taking provinces from the collapsing Cascadia, like North California and Oregon. California was also one of the first nations to experiment with colonialism, founding Nicaragua and Inca as colonies.

List of current mega-nations

Name Provinces and colonies Continent Chunks Residents Established
La Plata Argentina

Chile

Perú

Paraguay

South America 3450 97 Early 2019
California Core California

North California Inca(which has its own colonies of Grosso and Antarctic Coast)

Brazil

Oregon

North America, but holds South American colonies Needs research Over 200 Late 2018
Rio Grande Rio Grande

Texas Republic South Texas

North America Needs research Around 200 Mid-2019
Cascadia Cascadia

Bhutan Haida

British Colombia

Kaska

USSR

Wyoming(doesnt exist)

Yukon

North America, however holds colonies in Asia 2898 214 Late 2018

Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Mega-nations can grow significantly larger than typical nations, because they can bypass the town limit by simply adding a new province to their mega-nation.
  • They can affect nations outside their main region more efficiently by setting up colonial provinces like California's Inca province.
  • They have a larger population on average due to their size, which can lead to larger armies, improved infrastructure, and even permanent activity.
  • They can afford to lose more towns in a fight, and can bring larger armies to the battlefield in case of war.

Cons

  • They cost more to make and maintain.
  • They run the risk of having provinces declare independence or switching sides.
  • Smaller nations tend to not like mega-nations since they control alliance votes and heavily influence smaller nations within their sphere of influence. This is the main reason that California left the Sunset Confederacy in June 2020, and went to war with Salish soon after.
  • It is harder for mega-nations to control their towns and provinces effectively.