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Noob^^
12-12-2007, 16:49
I am currently playing a Pontos campaign.
I decided to expand into the west first and have now just conquered that
celtic town above Byzantion. I even made it out of the start debt quite
quickly by selling a peace treaty to the Ptolemaioi^^.
Does someone have some tipps for playing Pontos?

Horst Nordfink
12-12-2007, 17:01
You ARE going to fight AS soon! So you may as well start it off and keep all your shared allies.

Sarkiss
12-12-2007, 17:26
You ARE going to fight AS soon! So you may as well start it off and keep all your shared allies.
didnt work for me.
i suggest you dont start all out war with Selucids but try to conquer all the Anatolian, Krym rebels first, even if you are at war with AS. AI got different levels of aggressiveness. the more stubborn and persistent will you be in attacking it the more aggressive and indomitable will AI become towards you.
and build mines. in about 40 years in campaign i was rolling in money and had 300k in the bank with about 20 k rolling in each turn. i did though keep my armies on minimum and always only trained the cheapest garrison troops.
then diplomatic game begins and its a game in itself when you sponsor enemies of your enemies and try to prevent either party from becoming too powerful.
in Armenia Minor and Cappadocia you can place forts and that will stop AS for a turn or two so you can regroup where needed.
and keep an allience with Ptolies for as long as you can, fighting 2 superpowers at once is not a wise think to do. even allmighty Romans didnt allow that to themselves. i managed to stay allied to them for over 60 years until i took Cyprus from Sels. thats when Ptolies launced their unprovoked attack trying to claim the island for themselves (i play with BI exe)

Noob^^
12-12-2007, 22:06
Well I have played on and actually decided to attack the AS because they were moving armies towards my borders... I now took two of their towns and have allied with the Ptolies. War is going quite well in Asia minor now^^

Cyclops
12-12-2007, 23:03
I have gone the other way with my current h/h pontos camapaign.

In order i took Sinope, Trapezus, Kotais (pause to disband army and refit these cities so they could produce slings and a bit of cav), then Ani-whatsit (south of Trapezus). I was about to disband the army again when I noticed my Armenian friends heading east to take Mtsh-whatsit, you know, kartli province. I shamefully blitzed them, and put them out of the game.

Now i have the east coast of the black sea, from sinope to kartli, and have built all basic mines. The AS have remained neutral the entire time. Usually the trigger to go to war is when they attack Nikeia, but it hasn't happened this time: peace reigns. Maybe the Ptiollies are giving them hell?

Its around 252 BC, and I've just had a very exciting development: a messenger from the Crimea tells me that there's been a barbarian invasion and they need my help: if I "send a general to the forest northeast of the city friendly forces will meet me there": sounds like a trap to me. Gotta love the scripted events though.

Like a sucker I'm marching up a decent general from Kotais and shipping a small stack of slings from the capital, intending to hire mercs/acquire locals once i get there. canm't weait to see where this leads...hopefully not to a war with Sarmatia.

Horst Nordfink
12-13-2007, 00:11
I was pleasently suprised in my Pontus game!

Callicles
12-13-2007, 00:23
Money and over-extension are your biggest enemies as Pontos. I suggest carefully selecting your targets by relying on the settlement details/trade screen. You'll see that your most productive settlements are those around the Black sea. Focus on them. Avoid protracted battles for inland settlements (like Ankyra or Mazaka).

Don't over extend and don't raise an army you don't have the resources to support. As Pontos it is good to have cash on hand in case trouble strikes.

Getting the settlements in the Crimea will help a lot, but bring enough troops to garrison them against revolts. When it looks like they will fall soon, sail two or three units of skirmishers up to help create a proper garrison. You want those cities to have a lot of population, so try to avoid enslaving (and certainly not executing!) the people.

Finally, be weary of the Ptolemies, especially as the Seleukids begin to crumble. It will take them time to get organized, but don't go running off into the former Seleukid empire thinking you'll grab a bigger piece of the pie. That will just aggravate the Egyptians who lost a lot of money and men fighting in Syria. They won't be happy if some snarky Pontic king thinks he can sneak in and snab Antiocheia like its leftovers that fell on the floor.

This is especially true because the Ptolemies will be impressively large with an enormous economy and well trained elite troops. Be careful venturing out of Anatolia. Much better to create a pretty good defensive line against incursions from the East, and then focus on Hellas and Thraikia. Nikaia, Pergamon, and Mytilene are good because taking only really upsets the Makedonians who, generally, aren't doing too well. If you go after Byzantion, you'll get the KH going after you. They are stronger than you might think.

I apologize that this is sorta rambling. Pontos is by far the faction I've played most in EB (In fact, I've played them non-stop for the last year).

konny
12-13-2007, 00:26
Pergamon! Go to Pergamon! There are mines right from the start. Do not bother around with Galatians or the Greeks in Sinope. Get all your men together, take Nikaia and then head immediatly south. There is a strong army defending the region, so you'll better use all your starting money to hire some good mercs, for example naked fanatics.

Afterwards, provided there are some men left in your army, go for Byzantion; the forces there are very weak. After that you should disband all not needed men and start saving money to build mines in the other towns. After that start building up your empire.

You should use the next occasion to get Ipsos, Mazaka and Sardis form AS. After that you are basicly the master of Asia Minor. With all the mines build around you can also afford the luxery of a mercenary army. Hire them when needed in large numbers in one turn and disband them afterwards to boost your cities even further.

Cyclops
12-13-2007, 03:13
... As Pontos it is good to have cash on hand in case trouble strikes...

Yeah on reflection you've nailed it here.

Pontos has such a long land border you simply can't maintain enough forces to meet threats, so a war chest is vital, more so than for any other faction.

You have an eastern front in the direction of Armenia: if you wipe them that just opens the door for the Sarmi's Parthians and AS. South is AS, or Ptollies. West is whoever wins out in Hellas.

Fortunately each neighbour aklso has a nasty non-allied rival: the only scripted wars are with KH (over the Black Sea fringe cities) and AS (if/when they attack Nikaea and Byzantion)

Noob^^
12-13-2007, 16:27
Thanks for your tipps guys. I will try to do what you are suggesting.

Sygrod
12-16-2007, 06:11
Did you read my "Pontos Campain" thread?

I am at 217 BC and have both the Ptollies and the Seleukids on the run. If I were more aggressive, they would have been wiped out by now, but I use a defensive strategy. Of a total of 119 battles so far, I have lost 1, and that was very early. Even the formidable enemy elite phalanxes are chased off the field or wiped out. My frontier in the east is Arbela - Edessa - Damaskos - Sidon. In the West, maks are still holding two cities and form a nice buffer to KH, who have advanced to Byzantion.

If you want to have unbeatable armies, recruit phalanxes as mobile walls on the battlefield; many slingers (your best units by far) and horse archers where you can get them (Ani-Kamah is good). The offesive weapon is the slinger contingent. Get some chevrons and they are deadly. Horse archers are good for hitting enemies in the back and chasing after them. Phalanxes are good for shielding the slingers and leading enemy generals into. Other supporting units come in handy for chasing enemies and assaulting city walls.

Imperator Invictus
09-29-2009, 16:53
In my pontic campaign:

-I've started with a rapid anexation of ptolemaic posessions (lightly defended) in Anatolia with the troops of my hellen general

-then, at the same time, with my king and the rest of the army I've besiged greek colonies of Sinope and Trapezous and hold the siege(because I was numericaly inferior)

-I've ended the alliance with Seleucids and kept it with the seccesionists (baktria, parthia)

-the ptolemies asked for peace and I accepted it with their money of course

-then I've unified the remains of the troops from the north and south coasts and start the war with Galatia

-after that I started the war with Pergamon and "pergamean clients" Bithynia and Byzantion

-after the fall of Byzantion I've divided thracia with the getai

-now I'm preparing two opperations, I start to fortify the mountain pases to Syria because I want another rapid anexation of seleucid possesion in Anatolia(and I want to stop a posibile retaliation from the seleucids) and I'm also building a expeditionary corp to be sent to Crimeea

-for the future I will create a "thacian army" to consolidate my power in Balkans and possibly invade epirus or macedonia from the north, a "galatean army" to send in to Syria and Mesopotamia, and a "schyto-hellenic army" to operate first in the Egeean and later in Alexandria
(at the zenit of the PONTC EMPIRE the first army will enter in Rome, the second will enter in Babylon and the third will enter Alexandria)

:whip:

Azathoth
09-30-2009, 00:31
Why?

the man with no name
09-30-2009, 03:29
Why?

Yeah dude this thread is ancient.