Through The Ages / Through The Ages - Round 5 - Voting

This topic hosts comments for 2 parks(View Parks)

Which parks completed the round objectives the best?

Which parks had the highest overall quality?

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    Through The Ages - Round 1 Voting

    Logo by J K

    Round 5 Graphic
    Round 5 - The Renaissance

    1300 - 1600

    We're inviting dreamers, designers, and visionaries to enter Round 5: The Renaissance — a celebration of art, innovation, and imagination. From grand piazzas and marble fountains to workshops of curious inventors and gardens fit for kings and queens, we want to see your vision of a world reborn.
    Objectives
    • Your park must be set between the years 1300 and 1600 or themed to that era.

    • Must feature a well known style of art or architecture from the Renaissance.

    • Your park must include a pair of synchronised rides (eg. duelling coasters, synchronous flat rides).

    Voting

    Before voting, please ensure you have viewed all entries below. The first question asks you to evaluate which park or parks have met the above Objectives the best. The second question asks you to choose the park or parks with the highest Quality. You may vote for multiple parks in each question. The poll will be closed in approximately 72 hours, after which the total vote for each park will calculated and the park with the highest number of votes will be declared the winner of the round, granting its creator(s) entry to the Grand Final.

    Entries
    Race for the Renaissance Narc (85%) and Faas (15%) The soul of Vergilius, the Roman poet, once traveled to early Renaissance Florentia to visit Dante Alighieri and (not unlike the Ghost of Christmas Past) show him the dire consequences of a life of sin, excess and spreading office gossip. Many years have passed since then but now the time has come for Vergilius and Dante to return and (with the assistance of Great Coasters International) bring us on a ride we will not soon forget. Inferno, Purgatorio or Paradiso? See for yourself.
    The Polymath's Lament BarnNID (50%) and Gustav Goblin (50%) In his final moments, Leonardo da Vinci expressed regret for not pursuing his art the way he could have, even stating he “had offended God and man.” Looking out from the Chateau du Clos Luce in a moment of terminal lucidity, he envisions a world where his artistic and mechanical potential was truly realized. So vibrant, so real, yet so painfully unfinished…

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