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Revision as of 23:20, 17 September 2021
A mega-nation is formed by a group of smaller nations binding together to achieve a common goal. There are three types of mega-nations: Empires, Unions, and Extended Nations.
- Empires heavily influence smaller states so they become subservient to the core nation, almost like a state of the irl United States. An example of this is Cascadia
- Meanwhile Unions are formed when multiple nations decide to join forces and unite their nations together to achieve a common goal. The difference with Empires is that they don't have a core nation.
- Extended Nations are nations which were originally one, but they bought or created other nations in order to expand their range. An example is La Plata
Most current mega-nations are empires, with the exception of La Plata.
History
La Plata is an example of an early mega-nation. La Plata was composed of Argentinian and Chilean towns. The problem was that some IRL Chilean towns were outside of the nation range. To work around this, they bought a newly created Chilean nation.
Cascadia was the first empire 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 as a colony.
List of current mega-nations
Name | Type | Provinces and colonies | Continent | Chunks | Residents | Established |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
La Plata | Extended Nation | South America | 3450 | 97 | Early 2019 | |
California | Empire |
Oregon |
North America, but holds South American colonies as well as some land in Russia | 2840 | 280 | Late 2018 |
Rio Grande | Empire | Rio Grande
NT Washington Louisiana South Texas New Mexico |
North America | 6004 | 430 | Mid-2019 |
Cascadia | Empire | Cascadia
Bhutan Haida British Colombia Kaska USSR Wyoming(doesnt exist) Yukon |
North America, however holds colonies in Asia | 2898 | 214 | Late 2018 |
The Canadian Empire | Empire | Alaska
Anchorage Baffin Belize Canada Central Alaska Coasta Rica Dakota D.C. East Alaska Gjoa Groenland HBC Honduras Inuvik Iowa Iroquois Kievan_Rus Klondike Kodiak KSSR Midwest Minnesota Etc. 47 provinces in total |
North America, but holds colonies in Asia, central america and Europe | 16199 | 722 | late 2019 |
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.