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Vasiliyi
02-13-2009, 07:29
I have been reading the discussion of the tourney where they plan to pit the romans vs the maks and since I can't play it online I would like to create a custom game in which I could fight a balanced phalanx army of about 14 units. I'm thinking they need,

1general,
1 cavalry,
4-6pikes,
2 skirmishers,
2 peltasts
2 flanking/flank protectors?

What do you think?

Maion Maroneios
02-13-2009, 12:50
1 x General
1 x Hetairoi
1 x Hippeis Thessalikoi
1 x Prodromoi
2 x Argyraspides
4 x Pezhetairoi/Hysteroi Pezhetairoi
2 x Thureophoroi
2 x Hoplitai
2 x Sphendonetai Rhodioi
2 x Toxotai Kretikoi
2 x Random units of your choise

Next step is watching yourself getting bitch-slapped. At least I would if I was controlling this army against you :evilgrin:

Maion

Βελισάριος
02-13-2009, 15:42
Uhm... I don't think that came out the right way, Maion.

In any case, I'm usually pretty conservative when it comes to my army make-up. It's all pretty balanced. Unless I'm playing Makedonia or other successor states with good cavalry. I'm big on cavalry tactics.
Oh, and I'm a horse-archer fiend. But back on topic...

I take, for example, 4 phalanx units, 4 hoplitai in the rear, 4 peltastai/thureophoroi, 4 cavalry. If you want 14 then you can mix say 2 hoplitai and 2 thureophoroi, though I'd miss the Peltastai to tell you the truth. Very vluable units on the battlefield.
I usually go with a full 20-stack for full efficiency so I'd also have toxotai & sphendonetai.

seienchin
02-13-2009, 16:28
If you want to win just take 11 Phalanxes plus 3 Cavallery...
I mean in EB theres nothing as hard as phalanx so I would count on them.
I would place the Elite on the flanks and two pantapoi Hoplitai as Reserve cause their AP Axes are pretty cool against heavy Cavallery the enemy will most likely throw at you..
But if you want to have fun I guess your army is pretty cool, just dont forget to use the thracian skirmishers instead of peltasts cause they ROCK :yes:

Vasiliyi
02-13-2009, 18:48
I think your mistaken as to what i was asking. I want to play the Romani and practice slaughtering the Maks. I will be putting the battle difficulty at hard, it should be pretty fair. and i plan to have a balanced roman army from the camillian era. That is why i wanted to have a balanced Phalanx army because whenever i play as a successor faction i created armies that are "efficient" not exactly balanced.

seienchin
02-13-2009, 20:14
I think your mistaken as to what i was asking. I want to play the Romani and practice slaughtering the Maks. I will be putting the battle difficulty at hard, it should be pretty fair. and i plan to have a balanced roman army from the camillian era. That is why i wanted to have a balanced Phalanx army because whenever i play as a successor faction i created armies that are "efficient" not exactly balanced.

Oh.. Then if you want to have a hard time pick the Army with a lot of Phalangitai.
But your choise is realistic, yes. :juggle2:

Dayve
02-13-2009, 23:30
1 x General
1 x Hetairoi
1 x Hippeis Thessalikoi
1 x Prodromoi
2 x Argyraspides
4 x Pezhetairoi/Hysteroi Pezhetairoi
2 x Thureophoroi
2 x Hoplitai
2 x Sphendonetai Rhodioi
2 x Toxotai Kretikoi
2 x Random units of your choise

Next step is watching yourself getting bitch-slapped. At least I would if I was controlling this army against you :evilgrin:

Maion

That's a very, very unrealistic army composition and i'd leave the server before even starting the battle if you brought that into a game with me.

Βελισάριος
02-13-2009, 23:33
I'm very curious, Dayve... why?
I happen to find that unit roster very much to my liking.

Vasiliyi
02-14-2009, 00:06
Well to tell the truth i just tried the unit composition of both armies. The romans (whom i played as) had

1 General
1 Calvary (roman)
1 Pedites extrordinari
2 Trarii
3 Princepe
4 Hastati
2 Velite

The maks had

1 gen
1 calvary
2 Theruphoria
2 Peltasta
1 slinger
2 Akonkistai
4 Pezhetaroi
1 Asparygaros (the elite unit)

and the battle difficulty was on hard and i got my @ss handed to me... now im a romani fan, but it seemed to me like the phalanxes on hard were a bit overpowered. ill have to try the same composition on normal. (oh and im not a terrible infantry commander)

:balloon2: To the maks

LordCurlyton
02-14-2009, 01:56
Depending on which Equites you gave the Romans and Maks that should be a very winnable battle on M, which is what the stats are balanced for in any case.
Oh, and my thumb-up-butt self feels like saying its "cavalry", not "calvary".:embarassed:

Dayve
02-14-2009, 02:41
I'm very curious, Dayve... why?
I happen to find that unit roster very much to my liking.

Because unless you fought that army with Marian Roman troops you couldn't win, the Romans have no units like those to compete with their huge numbers, huge attack and defense and morale stats.

In real life a republican Roman army could smash that to pieces on any given day, but not in this game because the units are far too superior, which would make the battle an unfair one, which defeats the object of this game.

Plus, these battles are supposed to be realistic. It's very unrealistic that the Makedonians would be using an army of nothing but nothing but the absolute elite of the elite. There isn't a single unit of levies in that army, of which Makedonia and Greece used more of than anything else.

Βελισάριος
02-14-2009, 03:21
I beg to differ.
I don't think Alexander set out to conquer half the known world with an army of levies.

Look at the battle of Gaugamela, both sides used their elites. Darius recruited the best of his cavalry from the satrapies under his command, Indian elephants and the dreaded scythed chariots (well, we know what fate those had).

The macedonian army had its elite phalangites, 7000 [by some estimates] of Alexander's best cavalry (with some Thracian and Thessalian mercenary units) and the man himself leading his guards. Parmenion and his elites on the other side of his army.

Also, you have to keep in mind... some of those battles numbered 50 to 200 thousands on each side. In RTW you can have roughly 4000 for each. Not much room for levies and arrow fodder in this kind of an army.

And Vasiliyi, thanks for sharing that with the rest of us. Takes guts to admit a defeat like that (especially with Maion around to rubb it in your face later... don't mind him, he's just a kid with a crush on a whole faction =P).

Dayve
02-14-2009, 03:48
I beg to differ.
I don't think Alexander set out to conquer half the known world with an army of levies.

Look at the battle of Gaugamela, both sides used their elites. Darius recruited the best of his cavalry from the satrapies under his command, Indian elephants and the dreaded scythed chariots (well, we know what fate those had).

The macedonian army had its elite phalangites, 7000 [by some estimates] of Alexander's best cavalry (with some Thracian and Thessalian mercenary units) and the man himself leading his guards. Parmenion and his elites on the other side of his army.

Also, you have to keep in mind... some of those battles numbered 50 to 200 thousands on each side. In RTW you can have roughly 4000 for each. Not much room for levies and arrow fodder in this kind of an army.

And Vasiliyi, thanks for sharing that with the rest of us. Takes guts to admit a defeat like that (especially with Maion around to rubb it in your face later... don't mind him, he's just a kid with a crush on a whole faction =P).

Then Rome should use it's most elite forces, Marian legions and re-inlisted veterans so that their units are on par with the Macedonian units, stats wise. Also Rome should be given extra units to use, because Macedonian mainline infantry have 240 men per unit as opposed to Rome's 160, even though the Macedonians units have better stats.

I should also point out that all Macedonia could ever throw at Rome were rabble, and were utterly brushed aside like a light sweat on ones forehead. So if you want to make this a realistic "once and for all" battle, your Macedonian army should reflect the fact that it has been at constant war with its every neighbour for half a millennium and was in a state of stagnation and decay in this period, and should thus be composed of mostly levies and led by incompetent drunkard who think that the phalanx is a practical offensive weapon without decent mobile infantry support.

Βελισάριος
02-14-2009, 04:02
Then Rome should use it's most elite forces, Marian legions and re-inlisted veterans so that their units are on par with the Macedonian units, stats wise...

Was I arguing that point?


I should also point out that all Macedonia could ever throw at Rome were rabble, and were utterly brushed aside like a light sweat on ones forehead. So if you want to make this a realistic "once and for all" battle, your Macedonian army should reflect the fact that it has been at constant war with its every neighbour for half a millennium and was in a state of stagnation and decay in this period, and should thus be composed of mostly levies and led by incompetent drunkard who think that the phalanx is a practical offensive weapon without decent mobile infantry support.

And I should point out that this is neither the point of the game nor desirable in any way.

The way I see it, you're simply fishing for arguments to make the Roman army invincible. Not to mention the fact that your last statement is horribly ignorant and insulting to a certain degree.

If you fancy yourself such a great Roman general that you think yourself in the position to insult greater men than you why don't you attempt a fight against a "general" of your par in an online tournament with the above Macedonian army and tell us how badly you got your arse whooped afterwards.

Dayve
02-14-2009, 04:40
I'm not fishing for anything.

The point of this game is to settle the "Which army was better, Rome or Greece?" question. In history, we already know which one was better. In the game, it cannot be tested properly, because people will not use historical armies. The army posted a while ago with nothing but elites in it is simply not historical for the time this game is set in. A mix of any of those troops with a lot of levies is, but not a 100% elite army that never existed in this time frame.

Instead people should be picking individual battles between Rome and Greece/Macedonia/Seleukia and recreating those. That would be a much easier thing to test with the game.

antisocialmunky
02-14-2009, 05:15
Dayve has a point. He's not saying to convince but rather argue the point with exaggeration but don't let that get in the way. Phalangites in RTW are overpowered and Macedonia was gassed by all those wars and emigration of its people eastward. While they weren't 'pushed aside' or could 'only field rabble,' they weren't the crack troops of Alexander's army. At the end of the day, all he's saying is that the army compositions are too lavished for a realistic battle.

@Dayve. The Macedonian Army did manage to do well against the Romans in parts of battles. Usually they won part of the battle and lost somewhere else. Without heavy infantry support, the Macedonians couldn't check the Romans defeating part of the line while the Romans could move men to counter a breakthough.

Βελισάριος
02-14-2009, 05:37
One thing everyone needs to understand. Actually two things

1.) I am not denying Rome's (massive) impact on history, nor do I presume to deny their military prowess. Ave! They did a good job.
I am merely of the opinion that phalanx armies are superior.

2.) The most important thing one needs to understand is, as you stated in a way, Rome's victory over Macedonia was due to the fact that the Macedonians and the rest of the Greeks were tattered by so many wars among each other.

If you really want to see which faction could have been greater or is in the game, you need to pit each factions elite against the other's. It's the only way to settle this matter.

And the army posted above is not a-historical, let's get our semantics straight, it is, I will be the first to admit, anachronistic. But that is a different issue.
Now, antisocialmunky put it very well, the Macedonians that the Romans faced were no rabble, nor were they Alexander's finest.

On a sidenote (and back on topic). Maion's army is defeatable even with Polybian units, as the following experiment will show. 40.000 Mnai was the price. I was left with 3.000 and the AI, 300, and they had a 19-stack. 3200 Macedonians vs. 3000 Romans, roughly. Hard difficulty.
And the successor army was shamefully slaughtered. But hey, I think it was you Dayve who was quoted as saying "You're fighting the AI, how could you NOT win?"

https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v238/Thunder_wulf_X/Europa%20Barbarorum/Wearethechampions.jpg

I didn't even need the Accensi, bloody useless. It was the Triarii that won the battle.

My first battle with the Romani, by the way... only noticed this after it was over.

BurningEGO
02-14-2009, 10:52
I'm not fishing for anything.

The point of this game is to settle the "Which army was better, Rome or Greece?" question. In history, we already know which one was better. In the game, it cannot be tested properly, because people will not use historical armies. The army posted a while ago with nothing but elites in it is simply not historical for the time this game is set in. A mix of any of those troops with a lot of levies is, but not a 100% elite army that never existed in this time frame.

Instead people should be picking individual battles between Rome and Greece/Macedonia/Seleukia and recreating those. That would be a much easier thing to test with the game.

Hellenic warfare would beat Roman warfare any day frankly. As it did.

Of course Rome won in the end due to sheer overwhelming numbers. How many times did Rome get their armies totaly destroyed, and still managed to raise new ones?

You can easily confirm what i am saying just by seeing what hapened to Pyrrhus and to Carthage. And you can of course say that Rome could beat Macedonia any day as it did, but, by the time they actually beated Macedonia, Greek warfare had returned to the stone age, for it was mostly only a clash of phalanx.

Dayve
02-14-2009, 15:41
How many times did Rome get their armies totaly destroyed, and still managed to raise new ones?

Against the KH or Macedonia? A grand total of none.

Pyrrhus had some success and so did Carthage, but a little success is worthless if you still eventually get conquered and don't see independence for another 1,400 years.

BurningEGO
02-14-2009, 20:35
"Some sucesses"? He never got defeated by the romans! (Pyrrhus)


little success is worthless if you still eventually get conquered and don't see independence for another 1,400 years.

The results arent the point. The point is, that the roman war machine wasnt that "awesome". After all their warfare was based on what? Sending wave after wave. Overwhelming numbers over and over again instead of using their brain.

Even despite the countless fiascos Rome suffered, for example, during the 2nd Punic war, they managed to win in the end. That just shows how big their manpower pool/economy was. And that yes, was Rome's greatest strength.

Whenever facing someone who used some sort of "hellenic warfare", in equal grounds (and sometimes even with a vast superiority), they lost. Rome always lacked proper cavalry, and given the fact that heavy infantry units are slow, their enemies always exploited that weakness to deliver a blow either on the flanks or in the rear.

You can easily see that in Cannae, for example. Although in that battle the carthaginian infantry also had an important role.

Husker98
02-14-2009, 21:20
A typical diadochi/ macedonian army would be fairly large and heavily reliant on infantry and cavalry.
the composition of my seleucid AAR army is comprised of....

6-9 Pikemen
4 cavalry usually medium
2 skirmishers
1-2 archers
1 general


this was a more common "field" army makeup of the time

Husker98
02-14-2009, 21:46
"Some sucesses"? He never got defeated by the romans! (Pyrrhus)



The results arent the point. The point is, that the roman war machine wasnt that "awesome". After all their warfare was based on what? Sending wave after wave. Overwhelming numbers over and over again instead of using their brain.

Even despite the countless fiascos Rome suffered, for example, during the 2nd Punic war, they managed to win in the end. That just shows how big their manpower pool/economy was. And that yes, was Rome's greatest strength.

Whenever facing someone who used some sort of "hellenic warfare", in equal grounds (and sometimes even with a vast superiority), they lost. Rome always lacked proper cavalry, and given the fact that heavy infantry units are slow, their enemies always exploited that weakness to deliver a blow either on the flanks or in the rear.

You can easily see that in Cannae, for example. Although in that battle the carthaginian infantry also had an important role.

something you will have to accept though is that Rome developed a strategy that EB cant replicate. when roman legions where faced with Hellenic/Macedonian style warfare they tossed their pila and well see for your self...
http://warandgame.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/sarcf.jpg
http://warandgame.files.wordpress.com/2008/09/scaff5.jpg

The Phalanx was not an all terrain battle formation either unless you were on flat level ground the following happens.... the image and excerpt below or from the website http://warandgame.wordpress.com/2008/09/18/gladius-versus-sarissa-roman-legions-against-greek-pike-phalanx/

Regarding the causes of the Roman victories, Polybius wrote in his classical comment on Macedonian and Roman tactics that nothing could withstand the frontal charge of the phalanx as long as it preserved its characteristic formation.22 However, ‘ … it is acknowledged that the phalanx requires level and clear ground with no obstacles such as ditches, clefts, clumps of trees, ridges and water courses, all of which are sufficient to impede and break up such a formation …. the Romans do not make their line equal in force to the enemy and expose all the legions to a frontal attack by the phalanx, but part of their forces remain in reserve and the rest engage the enemy. Afterwards whether the phalanx drives back by its charge the force opposed to it or is repulsed by this force, its own peculiar formation is broken up. For either in following a retreating foe or in flying before an attacking foe, they leave behind the other parts of their own army, upon which the enemy’s reserve have room enough in the space formerly held by the phalanx to attack no longer in front but appearing by a lateral movement on the flank and rear of the phalanx …. the Macedonian formation is at times of little use and at times of no use at all, because the phalanx soldier can be of service neither in detachments nor singly, while the Roman formation is efficient. For every Roman soldier, once he is armed and sets about his business, can adapt himself equally well to every place and time and can meet attack from every quarter . He is likewise equally prepared and equally in condition whether he has to fight together with the whole army or with a part of it or in maniples or singly
In this way Polybius clearly presented what was most likely to happen in every encounter between phalanx and legion.

The point is that the Phalanx was not flexible and its soldiers when forced into man on man combat where inferior to better trained roman legionaries. the Phalanx was great but the problem was that you had to be on flat ground with out any stumps large rocks or any other formation to screw up the formation. and more often than not you are fighting in or on terrain not favorable to this formation. Great Generals like alexander and phillip made this formation work only because on top of being geniuses they wouldn't let their men chase retreating troops and chose their battlefields and didn't let their men leave the area for fear of exposing or breaking up the formation. so in the end the phalanx was out dated by a style of warfare that was more flexible and could be executed in almost any terrain. sory for the long post guys lol

Dayve
02-14-2009, 21:54
Whenever facing someone who used some sort of "hellenic warfare", in equal grounds (and sometimes even with a vast superiority), they lost.

I love how you're forgetting to mention the battles where Rome fought against Hellenic enemies with vastly superior armies and won with little casualties.

Macilrille
02-14-2009, 22:12
"2.) The most important thing one needs to understand is, as you stated in a way, Rome's victory over Macedonia was due to the fact that the Macedonians and the rest of the Greeks were tattered by so many wars among each other."

And Rome was not by the 2nd Punic when they took on Macedonia and defeated them in 2nd macedonian? Have you any idea how much Italy had suffered from the Punic wars? If not Brunt's "Italian manpower" will give you a good idea.


Edit, I have some musings on legion Vs Phalanx in this thread, I simply am too lazy to repost something debated 2 weeks ago ;-) sorry for that https://forums.totalwar.org/vb/showthread.php?p=2123625#post2123625

BurningEGO
02-14-2009, 22:24
Thing is, i am not speaking of Phalanx to Legion battles. But hellenic warfare as a whole - which means, that infantry has a defensive role, and will hold the enemy, while cavalry or some other elite troops will conduct deadly flank/rear attacks. In a short resume, the cavalry or whatever elite troops used to perform such actions were the real killers.

Roman warfare was the opposite - infantry was the main killer while cavalry had a supportive role. Whenever these 2 type of warfares collided, Rome was usually badly beaten.


I love how you're forgetting to mention the battles where Rome fought against Hellenic enemies with vastly superior armies and won with little casualties.

I already said - when Rome fought any greeks or macedonia, the greeks or the macedons obviously were badly beaten because they limited themselves in using only phalanx formations. That is not Hellenic warfare. Or at least not the latest form of it.

If you check Cynoscephalae or Pydna, you will see that Macedonia barely even bothered using cavalry.

Macilrille
02-15-2009, 00:13
I have to point out that in most historical cases of cavalry vs heavy infantry the heavy infantry has prevailed. And again to my other post, further I sort of feel obliged to point out too that Pyrrhus was beat by the Romans at Beneventum. Not overwhelmingly, but then again the victories you Hellene lovers gloat over from him were hardly convincing either. The phrase Pyrrhic Victory comes from somewhere. And in both instances when he defeated the Romans, it was the elephants that was the decisive factor, at Beneventum the Romans countered the elephants and won...

Dunno why people keep saying that Hellenic warfare was superior to Roman, who won and created an empire?

Oh yes, "the greeks or the macedons obviously were badly beaten because they limited themselves...", there is always an excuse is there not?

BurningEGO
02-15-2009, 01:45
most historical cases of cavalry vs heavy infantry the heavy infantry has prevailed

Its true that Roman legionaries had a good chance of repelling cavalry attacks... provided they were organized properly against such. There are countless examples where a good general managed to beat cavalry forces with heavy infantry. In fact, Rome did rather well even when facing Parthian-Persian-Armenian Cataphracts.

Making use of tight formations (to soften the enemy charge), firing at the enemy (sometimes legions were even given slingers), exchanging the Pilum with heavy thrusting spears, using terrain to their advantage, creating some very loud noise by yelling and/or beating their shields or even using caltrops, were just some things the Romans would do against cavalry forces.

And, cavalry forces were not that powerful as in the middle ages since their charges were not as devastating.

But did i say that Cavalry was better then Heavy Infantry? What i said is that the combined arms, the way, for example, Hannibal used was far more devastating then the old Roman strategy of "throw at them all we have got". A cavalry charge in the enemy rear would cause devastating casualties. Suposing, they werent expecting such (otherwise the legionaries would be able to repel such an attack like Caesar did in Pharsalus).



I sort of feel obliged to point out too that Pyrrhus was beat by the Romans at Beneventum.

First of, Pyrrhus' army had been drained due to his struggles in Sicily and due to his other Pyrric Victories. Secondly, he didnt loose. In fact, the battle was inconclusive to each side, but he did afterwards decide to abandon Italy for good. He didnt have the means to beat the Romans as everyone should know (in fact, few had).



The phrase Pyrrhic Victory comes from somewhere.

Of course, the Romans had an almost infinite reserve of manpower. Despite all their looses they always managed to bolster their ranks again and throw at Pyrrhus everything they had. If Pyrrhus had the same resources as Rome, he would have definetely win. The Romans only managed to annex Magna Graecia because they were experts at fighting wars of atrition. Hannibal couldnt defeat them, and Pyrrhus was no exception either. Although Hannibal had a lot of conspiracies going on against him.



Oh yes, "the greeks or the macedons obviously were badly beaten because they limited themselves...", there is always an excuse is there not?

Its a fact that the romans managed to snatch such big victories from Macedonia due to the incompetence of certain leaders, like Perseus. Macedonia was not what it was, either. The army was just a shadow of its former self.

By the time of the third macedonian war, everything was in favour of Rome. Had Rome faced a Macedonia so strong as the one of Alexander The Great (prior to his conquest of Persia), for example, things would have been absurdly different.

Beating a nation when that same nation is at its weakest, doesnt really show any kind of superiority.



Dunno why people keep saying that Hellenic warfare was superior to Roman, who won and created an empire?

Ancient Rome had little, if any, enemies (they actually had many, but few that could actually match their finances and manpower). Only real threat to Roman existance was Carthage, but due to internal intrigues Hannibal was limited. All of its neighbours were, far inferior, and didnt have the means to challenge Rome. Even great leaders like Pyrrhus were unable to defeat Rome due to lack of resources.

Again, just because of sheer weight, brute force and a vast economy, it doesnt properly mean that Roman warfare was superior to Hellenic wafare.

How many times did Rome actually manage to win a battle against a force using some sort of Hellenic warfare? And how many times did they loose against such a style? I dont know the exact numbers, but its rather obvious that their defeats under such circunstances were far bigger then their victories.



you Hellene lovers

I am just stating the obvious. If you "Roman lovers" are unable to see it due to your blind love, your problem. And dont call me Hellene lover, bud. My first name starts with a R, and its closely related to Rome. Its a very famous name, and if you discover it, i will give you a cookie. :verycool:

DaciaJC
02-15-2009, 03:34
My first name starts with a R, and its closely related to Rome. Its a very famous name, and if you discover it, i will give you a cookie. :verycool:

Romulus? Remus?

A Very Super Market
02-15-2009, 03:40
Fail. It's Romeo

Cullhwch
02-15-2009, 03:43
Rex?
Ricimer?

antisocialmunky
02-15-2009, 03:49
Ya know, I'm just going to throw this out here but massed HA beats both.

BurningEGO
02-15-2009, 04:33
Romulus?

Cookie for you! :cake:

And damn, you actually made me laugh with that one Super Market. Romeo... Ah!

desert
02-15-2009, 04:35
https://i494.photobucket.com/albums/rr309/desertSypglass/ddw.jpg

Husker98
02-15-2009, 18:36
Of course, the Romans had an almost infinite reserve of manpower

umm no it didn't during the punic wars after its epic defeat at cannae Rome was forced to withdraw all its remaining armies due the fact there where no more reserves left. they had to wait until their next bunch of kids grew up to raise another couple legions.


By the time of the third macedonian war, everything was in favour of Rome. Had Rome faced a Macedonia so strong as the one of Alexander The Great (prior to his conquest of Persia), for example, things would have been absurdly different

i don't really think so the organisation and execution of roman military strategy would have held him off or atleast forced him to return to macedon to raise a new army atleast once. once again italy is not the place to execute a phalanx like military formation in battle, nor are parts of greece for that matter. Alexander would have only been willing to fight on open ground and the romans wouldn't have. to negate his phalanx, you want to simulate an invasion of rome take your phalanx into the many ravines and forests of italy and the mountains of greece at the time on EB and tell me different. i sure did when i conquered rome on my eb campaign with macedon, even then it took me decades to take down the republic at the cost of thousands of troops.

BurningEGO
02-15-2009, 19:41
umm no it didn't during the punic wars after its epic defeat at cannae Rome was forced to withdraw all its remaining armies due the fact there where no more reserves left. they had to wait until their next bunch of kids grew up to raise another couple legions.

Uh? Thats a good thing for me to review, but from what i knew Rome was still able to muster multiple armies after Cannae - after Cannae Hannibal managed to gain new allies, but these allies were for the most part defeated because while Hannibal was busy somewhere, the Romans attacked them. Syracuse is one example, the Samnites are another, and even far away Iberia, the main source of Carthaginian manpower.

And come to think of it... if they had to wait for the kids to grow up, Rome would have been defenseless and Hannibal would have taken it.

But yes you are right regarding the Phalanx - such formations required a wide open field. Still, both Hannibal and even Pyrrhus managed to lure the Romans into fighting battles under their conditions.

Oh and come on... Macedonia by Alexander's time was able to defeat the Achaemenid Empire, which was far, FAR bigger and could muster far more men then Rome... Now now, lets not exagerate. We all know that Rome was a Lernean Hydra that grew two heads for each one cut off, but even such a beast could be defeated. As it was.

antisocialmunky
02-15-2009, 20:52
Perhaps if Darius hadn't been assasinated after Gaugamela, it would have been more interesting...

And yeah, the Romans after losing 45,000 out of 80,000 raised another 80,000 men and divided them into four armies to deny Hannibal any more major pitched battles. They also invaded Iberia and Illyria during the same period.

It's always amused me as to how well the Romans multi-tasked.

Cbvani
02-15-2009, 21:06
If the Roman manpower advantage is universally acknowledged, shouldn't the Roman players get a few extra units in their stacks, going to 20 unit stack instead of a 14 uniter?
I'm kidding, I'm just Hellen baiting.:clown:

Husker98
02-16-2009, 01:03
And yeah, the Romans after losing 45,000 out of 80,000 raised another 80,000 men and divided them into four armies to deny Hannibal any more major pitched battles. They also invaded Iberia and Illyria during the same period.

exactly only those armies raised weren't roman more of their increasinly fewer local allies and remaining units. Scipio Africanus had been deployed with Roman Allies to Iberia to avenge Roman losses in the area. Illyria was a minor invasion to stop the Illyrian piracy that was raising heck.

And come to think of it... if they had to wait for the kids to grow up, Rome would have been defenseless and Hannibal would have taken it.

Hannibal, you know how to gain a victory; you do not know how to use it -- Maharbal


Hannibal didn't have a siege train or siege equipment with him and a siege of rome would have taken YEARS, this thought of mind prevented a march on Rome. oddly enough though if he had besieged Rome (he marched near to the city once) he might have forced their hand and thus a favourable truce. Hannibal had a chance and his indescisiveness saved rome and killed Carthage.

Hannibal had them on their knees thats why Rome was bent on destroying carthage once and for all in the third war.

Macedonia by Alexander's time was able to defeat the Achaemenid Empire

Yes it was a leaderless empire with alot of man power... Give those men at Gaugemala good General like Cyrus the Great and maybe Alexander doesn't conquer all of the Persian empire..... the persians problem is similar to the Macedonian one in the Roma vs Makedonian war, a powerful country with no leadership.

soup_alex
02-16-2009, 09:58
Hannibal had a chance and his indescisiveness saved rome and killed Carthage.
Please tell me you didn't just blame Hannibal for the downfall of Carthage.

Βελισάριος
02-16-2009, 10:04
Please tell me you didn't just blame Hannibal for the downfall of Carthage.

Oh, dear... I feel a third Punic War coming...

You do have to admit that Hannibal didn't play his cards right in the end. Maharbal was right, He did not know how to use a victory. He could#ve taken Rome and spared the rest of us a lot of trouble.
And please don't say we'd all be speaking some kind of Semitic language.

And how is this anywhere near what the topic was originally about?

Macilrille
02-16-2009, 10:17
Hannibal was right, Rome was too large to be taken, just like Carthage was, note that Scipio did not march on it after Zama. With the resources available to hannibal, he could not have invested Rome.


BTW, Hellene lovers, I am now trying to compile a list of all Hellene vs Roman battles to answer your question, as well as trying to get a clear picture of what state Rome was in after the Punic wars, I suspect no better than macedon, probably even worse.

soup_alex
02-16-2009, 11:42
You do have to admit that Hannibal didn't play his cards right in the end. Maharbal was right, He did not know how to use a victory. He could#ve taken Rome and spared the rest of us a lot of trouble.
Perhaps, yes!


And how is this anywhere near what the topic was originally about?
That is a very good question.

Macilrille, I had thought that Scipio didn't move on to Carthage because he wasn't a total c*nt? the war was effectively over and the Senate wanted to make terms?

Maion Maroneios
02-16-2009, 12:05
I think your mistaken as to what i was asking. I want to play the Romani and practice slaughtering the Maks. I will be putting the battle difficulty at hard, it should be pretty fair. and i plan to have a balanced roman army from the camillian era. That is why i wanted to have a balanced Phalanx army because whenever i play as a successor faction i created armies that are "efficient" not exactly balanced.
OK I understand now I suppose:laugh4:


That's a very, very unrealistic army composition and i'd leave the server before even starting the battle if you brought that into a game with me.
It's not unrealistic at all, it's just out of date. As for that last part, that means you're a plain coward Romaios barbaros :evilgrin:


Because unless you fought that army with Marian Roman troops you couldn't win, the Romans have no units like those to compete with their huge numbers, huge attack and defense and morale stats.
And you want to win per se, right?


In real life a republican Roman army could smash that to pieces on any given day, but not in this game because the units are far too superior, which would make the battle an unfair one, which defeats the object of this game.
That was a nice one. Have you ever haired of the quote of Aemilius Paulus saying: "I have never seen anything as terrible and fearsome as the Macedonian phalanx?". He said that for a reason. Macedonia was a shadow of it's former self, repeatedly beaten by anyone who came into range (Epirus, the southern Greek states, northern Thracian and Illyrian tribes, then Rome) but managed to pull off quite well. Add the complete incompetency of the leaders of that time and the poor quality of the armies (plus the habit of using the phalanx as an offensive force) and you get a clear result: Roman victory.

Ah, before I forget it: The Romans were never able to get the Macedonians on head-to-head. Only when they encircled them. This means there weren't any units that could just mop the floor with the Makedones. They just used their troops wisely and took advantage of their flexibility and terrain.


Plus, these battles are supposed to be realistic. It's very unrealistic that the Makedonians would be using an army of nothing but nothing but the absolute elite of the elite. There isn't a single unit of levies in that army, of which Makedonia and Greece used more of than anything else.
I must disagree with you. The southern Greeks used many levies, that is correct. The Makedones used levies only when they were in dire need, not always. They only used psiloi as levies. Even their crappiest phalangites received a considerable amount of training before thrown into battle.

Maion

Dutchhoplite
02-16-2009, 12:45
Not very new but still very interesting:

http://www.ancientbattles.com/WAB_Successors/Phalanx_vs_Legion.htm

Macilrille
02-16-2009, 16:55
No one could defeat the Maginot Line from the front. Does that then, by the same way of judging things, make French 1940 doctrine and army superior to German 1940 doctrine? Everyone then thought they were, and their tanks were better as well, and more numerous... Yes, they must indeed have been superior to the Germans, just as the Hellenes were superior to the Romans.

Oh both the Germans and the Romans employed superior battlefield tactics and mobility!! No they must not!! That is cheating! They must understand their inferiority!!!

antisocialmunky
02-16-2009, 17:21
Belgium FTW?

BurningEGO
02-16-2009, 19:05
And... French static warfare was good. If they had covered all their fronts the germans wouldnt have gotten past them, just like in world war 1 (the schlieffen plan was after all a major failure, which resulted in trench warfare). You also have to take in consideration that France had... internal problems, en masse during these times (i would even go further and say that they still have them today).

Although, covering all their borders would be semi-impossible. The maginot line itself was already... costly.


Now, i could say that Blitzkrieg was inferior to all other battle plans because hitler got defeated in the end (just like i heard someone saying that Rome was the one that built an Empire, lol). Actually, the greeks had the same problems as the germans had in world war 2. Lack of numbers. The soviets just kept pumping men out of nowhere, and no matter how many were killed, many more came. The romans did exactly the same.


Rome's Hellenistic enemies never were able to achieve the coordinated combined arms cooperation that Pyrrhus or Alexander achieved

Keep that in mind.

Vasiliyi
02-16-2009, 20:25
Oh boy, I never planned to start a rome vs hellen war online. Sorry guys. I just wanted to pit myself against a balanced hellen army and I wanted to make sure the army I used was balanced. I hope to replicate the battle today and play it on medium difficulty. And ill be using full stack armies this time. That said I never condem or encourage this arguement of rome vs hellen.

Cbvani
02-16-2009, 21:13
Oh boy, I never planned to start a rome vs hellen war online. Sorry guys. I just wanted to pit myself against a balanced hellen army and I wanted to make sure the army I used was balanced. I hope to replicate the battle today and play it on medium difficulty. And ill be using full stack armies this time. That said I never condem or encourage this arguement of rome vs hellen.

The Rome v Hellen war thing is kind of a topic around here right now. Go on, try and start another topic that mentions even tangentially rome or the hellenic way of war, and see what happens.

Dutchhoplite
02-16-2009, 21:29
That's certainly true...

BurningEGO
02-16-2009, 21:52
Hey no war here, just a lively, good discussion. Right Macilrille, right Husker? :clown:

Now seriously i dont have any problem with neither greeks or romans. Only that i think that a proper army using some style of hellenic warfare had more chances at victory then a roman army. As history showed.

A Very Super Market
02-17-2009, 00:43
Blitskrieg isn't a bad tactic per se, but it requires total air superiority to work. Poland's was destroyed on the ground, France was completely taken by suprise, and Norway was comparitively hard fought to due the British air presence.

Vasiliyi
02-17-2009, 04:00
A very super market, your forgetting his successes in Russia.

A Very Super Market
02-17-2009, 07:26
Russia was poorly prepared for an attack, and especially a well-organized one. The Russian airforce wasn't exactly one to admire either. Many planes, but poor quality. Russia also lacked many AA defenses, and just generally wasn't prepared, much like France. But on a bigger scale.

BurningEGO
02-17-2009, 07:41
Still, operation barbarossa was a tactical failure for it failed to conquer any of its 3 targets. Managed to encircle many armies, but failed to put a decisive end to the war. Stalin also had moved his industrial base to siberia which made things harder for the germans.

Not to speak about the winter. Napoleon wasnt able to deal with it, neither were the germans.

Husker98
02-17-2009, 08:10
Hey no war here, just a lively, good discussion. Right Macilrille, right Husker? :clown:

Now seriously i dont have any problem with neither greeks or romans. Only that i think that a proper army using some style of hellenic warfare had more chances at victory then a roman army. As history showed.

yea it's a friendly discussion/debate on military strategy of the time all is good hearted fun.

Not to speak about the winter. Napoleon wasn't able to deal with it, neither were the germans.

The Germans could have been ready for the winter but Hitlers original battle plan was only geared for the summer and early fall, Hitler believed it possible to cover all that ground in one campaign season. Once the German troops had the adequate clothing and gear to combat the winter they were doing ok. not great but ok. Had they been ready for winter warfare i don't think all of those casualties would have happened. but once again after 1941 Hitler was his armies and Germany's own worst enemy he thought France and Poland were all his success, not his General's, this built up ego helped him make the mistakes he made on the eastern front ultimately costing Germany the war there.

kekailoa
02-17-2009, 08:59
All this arguing about Romans vs Hellenes is making me sick.

We all know the superior form of warfare is the good old Celtic charge. Never fails.

BurningEGO
02-17-2009, 09:20
Mhhh, speaking of roman haters, i just checked the social groups out there and there is one called Rômaioktonoi - A group for all Rômaioi-haters. Obviously created by no one else then Maion. Maion, if you are reading this, tell me, do you serve smashed romans with a distinct smell of elephants? :clown:

Now, seriously (speaking of EB): There is nothing better then beating a full stack of romans with elephants...

soup_alex
02-17-2009, 09:24
There is nothing better then beating a full stack of romans with elephants...
Except, obviously, beating two full stacks of Romans, etc. ~;)

Macilrille
02-17-2009, 10:01
No flamewar- flamewar!!! I HATE you all ;-)

Of course not, a debate can be spirited without devolving to flaming, the difference is whether you go for the man or the ball (football- what you barbaroi Americans call soccer- expression). And should anyone ever feel offended by me, spit it out so we can resolve it. Fora such as this tend to be misinterpreted.

However, it is slowly dawning on even my dense head that no matter what I say or do, or no matter how convincing my arguments are, even if I actually devote my professional ardour to it and research it to write a book upon it, there will always be an excuse, an explanation, something... that allows the Hellene lovers to retain their delusion, so I am simply getting fed up with trying. Keep your delusion, to me history shows who was strongest.

Just one thing, if you think Macedonia was more exhausted by the traditional Hellene internal strife (fool Graeculi) than Rome was by the 2nd Punic war there is something seriously wrong with you. Try reading Brunt's "Italian Manpower", even his low estimates shows how badly Rome and Italy was hurt by these. It is 600+ pages though and not written in a very entertaining way (ie it is dry even to me who is a historian myself), good luck with it.

Edit: What I mean is that no one can argue with the delusional, I shall refrain from comment on this subject at all in the future. It is like hitting a pillow, you leave no mark when retracting your hand. No offense at all by calling you delusional- we all have our little personal ones, me included.

Maion Maroneios
02-17-2009, 13:27
Mhhh, speaking of roman haters, i just checked the social groups out there and there is one called Rômaioktonoi - A group for all Rômaioi-haters. Obviously created by no one else then Maion. Maion, if you are reading this, tell me, do you serve smashed romans with a distinct smell of elephants? :clown:
Most certainly I do (it's my favorite dish actually). But that belongs to another long story... Anyway if you are in the mood (the same goes for anyone else), check the Group now and then. I will start posting Roman-smashing pictures very very soon:evilgrin:

Maion

Dutchhoplite
02-18-2009, 11:21
Does anyone got some information on Alexander I of Epeiros (brother of Olympias, mother of Alexander III). He campaigned in Southern Italy against several Italic tribes in the 330’s and died there. I found some information in Livy but this is biased (as usual with him).

It’s somewhat before the EB period but it could be a nice background for a Epeirote Italian campaign :)

BurningEGO
02-18-2009, 20:41
Nothing special to know about him. He decided to aid Magna Graecia against Lucanians, Samnites, Bruttis and some other tribes. Won a victory at Paestum amongst others i believe and managed to conquer some cities.

He later decides to cross Pandosia in 331 BC, which the oracle of dodona had told him to avoid at all costs. Go wonder, he fought a battle nearby, lost it, and got killed by Lucanians.

What did you precisely want to know?

Dutchhoplite
02-19-2009, 08:21
Some Epirote background, army composition, political ideas..

Stuff like that, for my upcoming Epirote campaign. I found something but it remains rather obscure :)