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View Full Version : Interesting new discovery...



timdickins
03-28-2008, 00:28
I don't know if anyone else has discovered this but in the "export_descr_ancillaries" file there are famous historical figures (Archimedes, Cicero, Livy). Anyone know the purpose of these?

Good Ship Chuckle
03-28-2008, 00:35
Those characters are actual retinue that can be acquired by your generals/governors in the game.

For instance, I know that one of the first retinue you get with a scriptorium is Archimedes. IIRC, +2 when assaulting walls, and +100 build points. "Considered the greatest mind alive."

timdickins
03-28-2008, 04:18
I suspected that was what they were for... You can add them to your family members ancillaries when you start a game, but I didn't know if they appeared during a campaign!

Spartan198
03-28-2008, 04:40
I suspected that was what they were for... You can add them to your family members ancillaries when you start a game, but I didn't know if they appeared during a campaign!
They don't appear in person during a campaign. They're ancillaries that your family members and generals can aquire to boost command,influence,etc..

Quirinus
03-28-2008, 10:08
But since these historical characters appear only within their historical lifetimes, getting ancillaries like Cicero are pretty rare. I only ever got Archimedes once, for example, but I get Callimachus of Cyrene in almost every game I play with a faction that builds academies.

TruePraetorian
03-29-2008, 19:49
The really odd thing is even though you only gain them in the ancillaries life time, after getting the ancillary it will last until the rest of the game (if you keep giving it to other people of course)

Motep
03-29-2008, 22:01
The really odd thing is even though you only gain them in the ancillaries life time, after getting the ancillary it will last until the rest of the game (if you keep giving it to other people of course)

Hes right there. I have passed Archimedes on untill 14 AD a couple of times.

Also, I have never gotten Callimachus, but I have never not gotten archimedes.

shlin28
03-29-2008, 22:28
Hes right there. I have passed Archimedes on untill 14 AD a couple of times.

Also, I have never gotten Callimachus, but I have never not gotten archimedes.

You just contradicted yourself in two sentences... :beam:

Motep
03-29-2008, 22:31
You just contradicted yourself in two sentences... :beam:

expain yourself. I thought I made it clear...ish.

shlin28
03-29-2008, 22:33
expain yourself. I thought I made it clear...ish.

"I have passed Archimedes on untill 14 AD a couple of times"

"but I have never not gotten archimedes."

:laugh4:

Motep
03-29-2008, 22:36
"I have passed Archimedes on untill 14 AD a couple of times"

"but I have never not gotten archimedes."

:laugh4:

Double Negative

hence, I always get Archimedes

shlin28
03-29-2008, 22:37
Double Negative

hence, I always get Archimedes

:sweatdrop:

I hate American English...

Motep
03-29-2008, 22:39
:sweatdrop:

I hate American English...

:grin2:
I love it.

TruePraetorian
03-30-2008, 00:44
I dont speak English.

I SPEAK AMERICAN

:smug:

PS:
Thanks for the language English :thumbsup:

Horseman
03-31-2008, 23:46
:sweatdrop:

I hate American English...

Thats nothing to do with American English.

It is plain English - double negatives always make a positive. MAde perfect sense to me and I am from England :beam:

Myrddraal
04-01-2008, 16:16
Well double negatives can be used (but not most of the time), but that certainly was American English. For starters, "gotten" is American English. The correct English English would be: I have never failed to get archimedes.

This is totally off topic. Would you like me to split the thread timdickens?