I've been working on a big spreadsheet listing the population of every single kingdom, empire, and independent town on Rifts Earth, along with a citation of where the population numbers came from. Hard numbers in Palladium are often contradictory, and I know there have been heated debates about some population statistics and whether the settings listed population numbers make sense or fits the setting. Despite this I am looking for feedback on what you guys think of my work when you look over the list. Are there any surprises? Do you think I've got something wrong? Do you think this is a dumb endeavor and I'll never be able to get the time back that I spent on this? Let me know what you think. Below you can find a link to the Google Document with a copy of my spread sheet Census.
https://drive.google.com/file/d/1w-DE1TDOs3ZLal5Y6Rv_lPzSPWImlEhS/view
My list is definitely a work in progress, and there are many instances where I needed to make rough estimates based on imprecise language like "one or two dozen towns of 1d6x1000 people". In such cases I tried to take the middle road using numerical averages and assume 18 towns of 3500 people 18*3500 = 63,000. In a few other cases, like the number of Oni in Japan, size of Milu & Davey Jones Empire, or number of Black-Winged Monster-Men, I pulled the numbers out of my butt based on my best guess and text in the book involving the nations position relative to its neighbors. For clarity I highlighted the cells in yellow where I made such dubious calculations and estimates, and tried to explain my reasoning in the citation even if it was simply "Conjecture".
The factions that were the most difficult and time consuming to determine their population numbers (and who I suspect will be the most controversial) included the Coalition States, Diablo Island, the Gargoyle Empire, the Lemurians, and Archie 3/Shemarrian Nation/Titan Robotics.
I also should mention that I do not own a copy of World Books 26-30, the adventure sourcebooks, Merc Town, or Merc Ops, and only have 21 of the Rifters. This means that I am definitely still missing things, so if you happen to see something is missing and can give me a citation and page number I can add it to the list.
I found this project very interesting and discovered that I learned a lot about the various kingdoms, empires, and independent towns while pouring through the various books, and piecing together the details. Even the population numbers themselves speak volumes on the relative sizes of nations. While the size of population does not translate directly to the military strength of an empire, it is certainly one of the factors that influence how many armies a nation can support. So if you want to know if Kingsdale could hold its own in a fight with the Australian City Melbourne, the answer is probably not, look at the numbers (144,000 vs 3,381,345).
Looking at this list also sheds light on factions that could use more attention from the authors due to their size, like the Poznan Collective in Poland with its 5.6 million people. The Poznan Collective outnumbers all of the various Russian warlords combined, but it always seems like a foot note next to the NGR with only a few paragraphs to describe it.
Finally I offer a preview of the top 10 factions for those of you who are afraid to click links