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Astonishingly, the three roman factions got outlawed in year 256 BC !
My faction (Scipii) wasn't even popular with the plebians, I only captured Sicily and two small Greek towns...(I completed all the Senate's missions but one).
Has anyone experienced this, or is it simply a bug to get outlawed that early?
solypsist
11-10-2004, 22:32
so any time something unusual happens, it becomes a suspected bug?
Last time I played as Romans (Julii) I got outlawed in 100 BC, I had a very strong plebian support, it made sense. But there it was rather... unexpected ~;)
Probably not a bug, just what your game decided to throw at you on that Campaign.
I did not experience such results, however if there is many more, I would just say that the game is made that way.
Being outlawed 15 years into a campaign sounds fairly buggy to me. I can't believe CA would program the 'Senate outlawing a faction' trigger to be a purely random event, it simply doesn't make sense. Does your faction leader possess any traits that might wreck his Influence rating? If you've created no tricky alliances and have done nothing wrong other than fail a single Senate mission then either this is probably the result of a wildly improbably roll of the dice combined with something small amiss in the relevant files.
Being outlawed 15 years into a campaign sounds fairly buggy to me. I can't believe CA would program the 'Senate outlawing a faction' trigger to be a purely random event, it simply doesn't make sense. Does your faction leader possess any traits that might wreck his Influence rating? If you've created no tricky alliances and have done nothing wrong other than fail a single Senate mission then either this is probably the result of a wildly improbably roll of the dice combined with something small amiss in the relevant files.
My faction's leader possessed no traits that could provoke the Senate's wrath (skilled bureaucrat, skilled commander, ex-Quaestor, etc...). I had no allies but the other roman factions. If I had been outlawed alone, then maybe it could have been a Senate's plot but considering the two other Roman families shared my fate I doubt it.
Domitius Ahenobarbus
11-12-2004, 01:04
When I played the Brutii campaign, my faction was outlawed by the senate in 268 B.C., two years after the beginning!
Is this really supposed to happen? ~:confused:
One of my generals did have one the "bonus to popularity with the people, penalty to the popularity with the senate" traits, but two years is awfully quick...
Well first of all I'm thinking a mod is causing this, if no mods are in use no idea. Also did you check your income from corruption occasionally it's not a negative and 1 year I mysteriously had an income of 20,000 from corruption and other. I do'nt know if the income was corruption or other but it enede up in my treasury. Check your senate offices see who's the trearurer for the senate.
The reason you and the 2 others got outlawed and heres my guess. If you are way overpowering the senate only outlaws you if all 3 factions can compete then all 3 get outlawed.
There is a bug which gets you outlawed.
I was laying siege to a rebel city.The Scipii bribed the city, which resulted in my faction taking a Scipii city and therefore getting outlawed.Everything happened between my 2 turns, so I could not lift the siege.
Of course all 3 of the roman factions getting outlawed is very strange...
I suspect that as well as your faction leader's ancilliaries and traits and how they effect his standing with the senate and the people, plus the effect of any conquered provinces and mission results of course, that there might be a random factor upon game start, adding or subtracting one or more points of standing.
The reason I believe there is a random factor is that while I was playing around with the campaign start file I once began a game where my leader was instantly ordered to commit suicide. I'm fairly certain that I hadn't changed the file between that and the previous game, at least not in an area that should have effected my leader's popularity. I didn't go back and check since I was busy testing other areas, but it's something worth looking at when I get home. ~:)
It's definitely possible to guarantee being outlawed at the start of the game. I began a Scipii campaign last night after giving my leader as many ancilliaries and traits I could that boosted his standing with the people and reduced his senate standing. Naturally I refused the invitation to commit suicide and so I'm already in a civil war with my fellow Romans, plus I still have to deal with the Carthaginians... should be amusing. ~:)
These all sound stupid. I've never been outlawed or ordered to commit suicide, but i like to make the first move :charge:
It's all a balence.
Has anyone noticed that it's almost impossible to get a position in the senate on vh?
Domitius Ahenobarbus
11-12-2004, 13:20
Well first of all I'm thinking a mod is causing this, if no mods are in use no idea.
Now that you mention it, I do have a mod installed currently, but it only adds some historical battles ( it's the " historical battles'-Mod)...
Could this mod affect the campaign as well?
Yep i think it would... who knows what might happen next 10 years.
For all the troubles, just go conquer Rome and other two factions to be the supreme leader of ROME!
Just need alot of troops, spies, diplomats as well good strategies!
Pellinor
11-12-2004, 15:46
Of course all 3 of the roman factions getting outlawed is very strange...
Strange? Try this:
I am playing as the Julii (H/H). I have taken western and central Europe , and I'm on about 48 provinces. The Bruti have four provinces in Illyria, the Scipiones have Sicily and Africa west of Cyrenaica.
I am at 10 popular approval, and about 4 or 5 with the Senate; I get the message saying "the people wouldn't mind if you marched on Rome". So, I attack the Bruti in Illyria as a prelude to taking out Rome.
The Senate outlaws me. It also outlaws the Bruti (who have done nothing in 50 years save get attacked by me) and the Scipiones (who have demolished Rome's enemies then stopped at the border of their allies), and gives me two missions: attack the Bruti or be outlawed, and attack the Scipiones or be outlawed. I have -1 turns remaining to achieve these.
So: I am apparently Romulus reborn, despotically trying to become dictator over the the people who love me; anathema to the Senate, and its last best hope to put down the traitorous other familes and foil their evil plots to get attacked while peacefully minding their own business.
I like to role-play things, but I've lost the plot of this one. I'm half expecting to get "attack the Julii or be oulawed" as a mission ~:confused:
Cheers,
Pell.R.
Hmm that is weird, maybe next time i try lure some barbarians to take out the other two factions as well ROME then retake them.
Maybe there something wrong with the scripts.
-Vikings
I have not added any mods, (not even unlocked the locked factions). Now that you mentioned it, maybe my faction's leader got many ancillaries, I can't remember what though. He won numerous battles so I guess he gained the "legendary commander" and "great vanquisher" traits. I didn't check the corruption level either, but given that my territories were close enough from one another I doubt it could have caused such troubles.
Anyway, despite my leader might have had ancillaries aplenty, my popularity among the plebs was at the bottom of the scale. Thus I was no great threat for the Senate and so were the two other families.
Mikeus Caesar
11-12-2004, 19:13
Errr.....i may sound like a noob by asking this, but how do you get outlawed, and what happens if you do?
Errr.....i may sound like a noob by asking this, but how do you get outlawed, and what happens if you do?
You get outlawed either when you attack one of the other Roman families, or you become too much a big threat for the Senate. Your alliances are broken and you must fight the Roman families. I generally manage to get a cease-fire with the Scipii or Julii but the Brutii are too stubborn.
Mikeus Caesar
11-12-2004, 19:35
Hmmmm....so in other words, you would start a civil war?
Exactly, it starts a civil war, because the Senate asks you to attack the other families although you're already outlawed... Even though you wouldn't accept the mission, you're set to "enemy".
Mikeus Caesar
11-12-2004, 19:42
Oh well. Shit happens. And anyway, it wouldn't matter if they set me to enemy, because they have a puny army. And i go on the Rome custom battle once a day, so that i can practise taking rome, and thus get ready for the campaign.
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