![Surprised :-o](./images/smilies/icon_e_surprised.gif)
But it just looks amazing overall , good job !
MyOdessa wrote:You are wrong on many points. People build high-rises, not because any particular city doesn't have open terrain around, but because of cost or desirability of any particular location is at the premium.
If you take a Europe as an example most cities were walled in for protection, building up was the way to stay within protected walls. Another example is London, they could have build buildings in surrounding countryside, but because proximity to the City, with its financial and government centers, put premium on the land and the only solution was to build up. Similarly in the US or Russia, were most or all major cities were never walled in and spaces are wast and readily available, high-rises are build for their proximity to government and financial centers of the city. Additionally, one of the main reasons for construction of residential high-rises is cost. It is much cheaper to build 2, 5, 10 ten stories buildings, then 2, 5, or 10 one story buildings, both in cost of construction materials and utilities (roads, electrical, sewer, gas and water.) If you doubt any of this, take a look at cost of running connection from the water main to high-rise building vs. cost of connecting neighborhood of one story building to the same main, were each house has to be connected.
In Beirut in particular, while it is blocked by sea and mountains on East and West, they have space to grow North and South. High-rises in the Beirut center are product of the cost consideration, not space limitation.
As an illustration and limiting just to a few desert cities, here are examples of desert cities containing both available open spaces to build and skyscrapers (scroll down in each link for panoramic view):
In the Middle East:
Shibam - Shibam - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Dubai - Dubai - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Cairo - Cairo - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Riyadh - Riyadh - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In the USA:
Phoenix - Phoenix, Arizona - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Tucson - Tucson, Arizona - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Las Vegas - Las Vegas, Nevada - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Of course this has nothing to do with PR or Beirut map, which I think so far looks great, can't wait to play it.
Too bad they are tin cans that like to explode from being sneezed at.Nebsif wrote:U'll have those scary sneaky tank killing spandrels... xD
compare it to tow-humvee and you will be happyMendozaMan wrote:Too bad they are tin cans that like to explode from being sneezed at.
lolwut, only if u drive into the heat of battle, ppl just underestimate the BRDMs. On asad khal I usually prefer to go MEC and then make a BRDM squad, my gunner always gets like 10-20 kills w/o dying once, its eazy mode. Kozelsk is also a good example for BRDM pwn and epic win (on russian side). It can ambush teh ambushers (Spandys) and is more efficient than the big noisy tanks imo.MendozaMan wrote:Too bad they are tin cans that like to explode from being sneezed at.
Nebsif wrote:lolwut, only if u drive into the heat of battle, ppl just underestimate the BRDMs. On asad khal I usually prefer to go MEC and then make a BRDM squad, my gunner always gets like 10-20 kills w/o dying once, its eazy mode. Kozelsk is also a good example for BRDM pwn and epic win (on russian side). It can ambush teh ambushers (Spandys) and is more efficient than the big noisy tanks imo.
look more like marines.TiRkazan wrote:Cool map, but what RFAF forgot in Beirut?