Personally I think it's sort of arbitrarily harsh. I can see that high of a penalty for New World or Asian countries -- but -3 for EE or Muslim seems excessive. It's not like they're *that* far removed from European tech. Heck, the Muslims had even better advances, and EE was about equal with Western Europe, a couple hundred years before.. I'm pretty sure they could adapt without falling into anarchy.
During that time period, they became horribly xenophobic, and lost a lot of trade flowing their their area, losing their pluralism and what pluralism they had, they feared and rejected it.
When the Middle East was the leading force in math, and science it was also the leading force in pluralism in terms of scientific progress, political and cultural.
Even during these years of intense rivalry and fighting for Europe, there was a lot of shared knowledge and a lot of pluralism. Lots of trade of trade, and lots of travel and traveling got faster and safer.
Westernization, is just an abstracted measures that promote the better exchange of ideas and their implementation, either purposefully or incidentally.
Uh.... like a random example. War Manuals were pretty major thing for EU during this period. Warmasters would print these manuals, that showed the construction and use of siege weapons, and best practices for fielding infantry, and it served much of an advertisement for their skills, so they can get hired as higher ranking officers in armies afield as it propagating knowledge.
Whereas with the middle east, they for practical purposes, banned books. Especially foreign books.
But in the Ottomans, Mathematics, Astronomy, etc. all reached their height during the early period of EU4. The point is, the reasons for falling technologically backward were COMPLEX. A simple "Yes you can do well/No fuck you" is the problem.
I don't get the whole argument. Paradox doesn't try to analyze the reasons behind the Europeans having better tech and showing up with vastly superior armies and navies in other parts of the world.
Point is, they did.
When you create a game about plausbile alternate history you have to consider shit like that in order to make it actually plausible. There's more to a game like this than giving arbitrary advantages to nations that succeeded historically. A game like this should have a great degree of stuff encouraging historical outcomes in a non-arbitrary way. Otherwise if anything ahistorical happens (which is guaranteed) things make less and less sense.
I would rather all tech groups have the same (statwise) units for any given tech level to demonstrate technological equivalency, since that's already the case in every other matter. Then Sub-saharans and Native Americans would have straight up maluses, while all countries would struggle with a more fluid system of technological maluses, which would also come with stability benefits and such. The Innovative v. Narrowminded slider was great in that regards, as you could see tangible benefits for stifling innovation, which is the reason why non-europeans turned out the way they did.
Quite frankly, there's no reason why China or Japan or Persia or India couldn't have embraced technological innovations without becoming "western" during the early portion of this time period. In Victoria 2 westernization makes perfect sense in that regard, but in 1444 nobody would have said that the entire world would become Europe.
Ugh. After only 80 years of my Ireland game I am getting bored. I can only have 3 colonists with all relevant ideas. WTF is that.
I just sit around waiting for my 3 colonies at a time to fill and there isn't much else to do. I conquered or vassalized much of India at least.
I guess I just need to start spawning tones of armies and flooding India and the New World with them and colonial conquest and overseas expansion everyone.
I haven't be able to really do that previously because I had a bunch of events like Peasant's war that made overextension a problem. Early on I was overextending my ass off to conquer Great Britain.
You can recall colonists and send them to more provinces, your colonies will just grow slower.