If the USA was teleported back to antiquity would it collapse much like Rome did due to its sheer size? Would successor states seek to emulate it? Would the nation divide between east and west and the center of power shift from D.C to some other city? Stupid question, I know, but it has been bugging me and I need to hear your guys' opinion on it.
Pic semi-related
Who the fuck knows
>>1493124
Rome wasn't divided due to size, it was divided so more emperors could take turns ruling, instead of fighting and killing each other.
>>1493124
Those borders look sexy as fuck, but incomplete. You need to finish of Austria and Tirol then take egypt to look perfect
>>1493253
That wasn't a recent picture this is the last one I took before I ended my playthrough
they would be pretty fucked with no imports
>>1493260
Who did you start as?
>>1493279
France, had to combat a huge coalition for most of the game until I moved onto the Ottomans
>>1493124
>world full of resources to exploit held by primitives who don't even know about gunpowder
>collapse
Walk me through this logic, senpai.
>>1493124
Unlikely. Rome's collapse was more to do with its political institutions than pure geographic size: A quasi-military state with loose oversight over the military is inherently unstable.
The U.S., even if it was magically transported back in time, has a very different setup, with a civilian government firmly in control, not much of a standing army, and government apparatuses run by a professional bureaucracy, which can easily be replaced because of widespread literacy.
Would there be problems? Certainly. Would you see a rise in regionalism? Almost certainly. Would it be another Rome in the western hemisphere? Probably not.
Is there any way to play EU4 in a less tedious manner? I played as Portugal my first game and things were going more or less well but I just stopped because I lost interest.
>>1493260
>moving that far into the sahara
>moving that far into arabia
Ruined it tbqh
>>1493306
They obviously only have the technology of antiquity.
>>1493317
MEIOU and Taxes
you need a decent PC tho
>>1493322
Those are wasteland provinces that you cant colonize or take over, but to make borders look better, Paradox decided that if you have over half the provinces around a wasteland province, that province becomes your color
>>1493323
Then in what way
would it be the US of A?
>>1493124
They would rule the fucking world because they would be so far ahead of everyone in terms of technology that it would seem like incomprehensible magic to the rest of the primitive world.
>>1493306
I can't wrap my head around this either. They could simply get all the ressources by handing out some worthless junk for excavation rights. Remember that oil etc. back then was easier to exploit. They would be free to do whatever they please.
>>1493260
What mod? The text looks cool.
>>1493464
Theater of the World mod
or
Theatrvm Orbis Terrarvm
>>1493375
Just because it is less technologically advanced doesn't mean it isn't the USA. Was 1700s USA not the USA because it doesn't have technology from 2016
>>1493467
Why? If the USA was teleported back in time, why wouldn't they take with them their land, their resources on that land, and their accumulated knowledge and technical skill? Or is the question more about if there existed some empire the size of the United States in the same territorial region as the United States at the time of Rome, and how long it would last?
>>1493488
1700s USA was still technologically leaps and bounds ahead of Rome. Any further back and there is no USA.
>>1493491
Maybe "teleported" was not the best choice of words. What if the USA and all its political institutions was formed at its present borders during antiquity
I'm so confused by this thread
>>1493514
Its political institutions are also a form of technology, but in short the nation wouldn't hold together as well because of travel distance between the the two coasts and the remote position of the great plains. Even the east coast might split up between the Ohio-Mississippi valley and the Atlantic states if first century galleys don't do well on the Atlantic ocean.
>>1493514
This scenario is making less and less sense. With what people? Institutions from what exact period? Also America's borders changed a lot. And what exact time are we talking about "teleporting" the """USA""" to?
>>1493533
what is there to be confused about?
>>1493536
>Its political institutions are also a form of technology
How so?
>>1493537
> With what people?
The 300 million people in the usa right now. Might need to be scaled down as to not have widesprea famine
> Institutions from what exact period
The present...
> Also America's borders changed a lot.
Well I am referring to the borders it has now (military bases not included)
>And what exact time are we talking about "teleporting" the """USA""" to?
The time of the Western Roman Empire so 27 BC- 476 AD
>>1493575
So everyone in America today gets teleported to the year 250 CE butt naked?
This is a shit scenario, senpai.
>>1493575
U.S. institutions are the result of centuries of legal thought and philosophy since the fall of Rome. Our tax code alone would dwarf Roman law and bureaucracy by several degrees.
Also, if you're transporting 300 million Americans from the present, they're bringing their years of education with them. You might for some reason or another say they can't bring their toys with them, but in a few decades enough people would reinvent and reconstruct he country as to resemble 1700s America at the very worst.
>>1493601
It seems to me that a lot of people can't get it through their head that technology is in the heads of humans. The same thing comes up in TEOTWAKI threads. A lot of people act like killing off a significant portion of humanity wouldn't negatively impact the technological state of humanity. Maybe it's just a common thing among people without degrees?
>>1493592
No their clothes, houses, cars, etc change to what would have been available then. Cars would become horses/carriages. Phones would become memo pads, etc
>>1493743
What would a computer be?
ITT: OP phrases a scenario poorly, /his/ takes it literally and the thread devolves into pure autism.
Its honestly making me cringe gong through this thread right now.
>>1494265
this