What happens when the center of the modern world shifts—not just in America, but everywhere?
In this episode, we step beyond the Atlantic and explore how a French-led discovery of the New World reshapes the entire global system. If Christopher Columbus sails for France instead of Spain or Portugal, the consequences ripple across continents—from South America to Africa, Asia, and Oceania.
South America no longer becomes a unified Iberian world. Instead, it fragments into a mosaic: French-influenced northern regions, a powerful Portuguese Brazil, and contested Andean zones where empires, resources, and Indigenous resilience collide.
In Africa, French influence grows earlier along the Atlantic coast, especially in the west. Trade, forts, and later colonial structures expand—but without full domination. The continent remains divided, shaped by competition rather than control.
Asia becomes a three-way chessboard between France, Portugal, and Britain. French presence is less aggressive than Iberian conquest, but more stable—built on trade, diplomacy, and long-term influence. India, Southeast Asia, and China all become arenas of balance rather than domination.
And in Oceania, nothing is purely British. Australia and New Zealand emerge as contested spaces—Franco-British worlds where language, culture, and power overlap instead of align.
The result? Not a world dominated by one empire, but a multipolar system from the very beginning. No single global language fully prevails. No single power defines the rules. Instead, modern history unfolds as a constant negotiation between competing centers of power.
This episode reveals the deepest consequence of all: change one decision in the 15th century, and you don’t just redraw maps—you rewrite the logic of the entire world.