The authors also had the extra challenge of offering a vision of France that would remain kinda compatible with the atrocious, uncanonical France sourcebook published by Descartes years before, but at the same time being truer to Shadowrun that this book was. Stuff like the mist covering Britanny for instance are based on ideas from the France book, but done better. As bad as France was, many French players had used for their games, due to the lack of alternative, canonical info, so the authors of SoE had to salvage at least some parts of it whenever possible.
For a complete assessment, the EuroSB project started in late 2000 (rather than 2001 as I wrote previously - I checked my archives), it was a fan project, as stated above, the
France sourcebook had been released only three years old, Descartes Editeurs still had the French license (it would keep on releasing translations as late as 2002, before Black Book Editions became the French licensee in 2006) and FASA was still running with Mike Mulvihill as the line developer.
From 144 pages down to 15-16, there are actually not many elements from
France that did appear in
Shadows of Europe.
- Police and emergency services remained public.
- The Mist covering Brittany (though downgraded from "moving into this part of the world kills you under 12 combat turns" to "something may happen to you late into the night 'round here"
- The eruption of Auvergne volcanoes, with a dragon asleep (also downgraded from "largest dragon in the world at the bottom of a crater, can be seen from space" to "rumors of a large object detected underground").
- The former royals of the Bourbon-Orléans and the Bourbon-Anjou families enjoy position of power (also downgraded, from "granted hereditary cabinet position" to "politically influent").
On the other hand, the corporate scene is very different, and would have been even more different if I had the word count to expand over canon material regarding Ares Global Entertainment or Aztechnology/Dassault.
To be fair, public police force and emergency services would have been at least considered even without
France SB. There was a consensus among French and European authors to say that France, of all European countries, should be the place where the megacorporations should face a stubborn political opposition, and that it could generate good plots.
Officially, "French ruling aristocrats" were made canon by The
London Sourcebook. We probably could have ignored the "ruling" word without any non-French reader noticing. It wouldn't have been the first time a decade-old sourcebook had been ignored (does anyone remember Charles Nakatomi?).
I learnt only years later that FASA (probably Tom Dowd or Nigel Findley) had handed
France authors a short note with a number of items that were requested and ought to be used in later plots (probably Horrors-related), after a planned translation that never happened. So there is a strong possibility the Britanny Mist and possibly the Auvergne dragon actually came from SR then-line developer.
There's also the SOX book, co-developed by German and French authors, which offers a pretty cool campaign dealing with some dark secrets of French politics (IIRC the German version of the book has another, German-centric campaign).
The German campaign "Hoffnungsstrahlen" deals with a Feuerschwinge-connected cult and a nuclear incident inside the ESUS SOX arcology in 2068. Except for the starting point arbitrarily set in Hamburg, it's not that much German-centric, and rather noteworthy for doing what
SoE barely started to do (or
SoNA and
SoA for that matter) and use elements across national chapters' borders.
The two campaigns also differ in that the French campaign deals with table-flipping events like say,
Shockwellen or
Super Tuesday, that alter large parts of the French background, while the German one is more like "Crazy cult, corporate coverup? Must be tuesday."