Concepts
Major Civilizations
Leaders
City-States
Districts
Buildings
Wonders and Projects
Units
Unit Promotions
Great People
Technologies
Civics
Governments and Policies
Religions
Terrains and Features
Resources
Improvements and Routes

Introduction

Terrains

Features

Natural Wonders

Bermuda Triangle

Cliffs of Dover

Crater Lake

Dead Sea

Eyjafjallajökull

Fountain of Youth

Galápagos Islands

Giant's Causeway

Great Barrier Reef

Hạ Long Bay

Lysefjord

Mount Everest

Mount Kilimanjaro

Païtiti

Pantanal

Piopiotahi

Torres del Paine

Tsingy de Bemaraha

Uluru

Yosemite

Païtiti
Description
Three-tile impassable natural wonder. Provides +3 Gold and +2 Culture to adjacent tiles. The city that owns the tile receives +4 Gold on its outgoing international Trade Routes.
Historical Context
Humans, ever on the search for “lost cities,” particularly Lost Cities of Gold, tend to gravitate towards legends of great wealth and prosperity. Like most mystical cities, the prevailing thought is that Païtiti exists deep within the unknown wilds just waiting to be discovered. The Inca saw the city as the last safe haven from the Spanish Conquest. However, others (predominantly non-Incan explorers from the 1600s) perceived the city to be a treasure trove just waiting to be plundered. The legends of Païtiti’s wealth were perpetuated by the attack of Francisco Pizarro and his murder of Atahualpa, the last ruler of the Inca. He searched for the remaining gold said to exist, but Pizarro never received all of the alleged gold he tried so desperately to gain from his conquest. Despite multiple expeditions into the “unknown” jungles of the Amazon, no explorer has yet discovered the location of Païtiti.
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown
"Hidden in the glorious wildness like unmined gold."
- John Muir

Traits

Appeal to Adjacent Tiles: 2
Impassable
PortraitSquare
icon_civilization_unknown
Description
Three-tile impassable natural wonder. Provides +3 Gold and +2 Culture to adjacent tiles. The city that owns the tile receives +4 Gold on its outgoing international Trade Routes.
Historical Context
Humans, ever on the search for “lost cities,” particularly Lost Cities of Gold, tend to gravitate towards legends of great wealth and prosperity. Like most mystical cities, the prevailing thought is that Païtiti exists deep within the unknown wilds just waiting to be discovered. The Inca saw the city as the last safe haven from the Spanish Conquest. However, others (predominantly non-Incan explorers from the 1600s) perceived the city to be a treasure trove just waiting to be plundered. The legends of Païtiti’s wealth were perpetuated by the attack of Francisco Pizarro and his murder of Atahualpa, the last ruler of the Inca. He searched for the remaining gold said to exist, but Pizarro never received all of the alleged gold he tried so desperately to gain from his conquest. Despite multiple expeditions into the “unknown” jungles of the Amazon, no explorer has yet discovered the location of Païtiti.
"Hidden in the glorious wildness like unmined gold."
- John Muir

Traits

Appeal to Adjacent Tiles: 2
Impassable
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