Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
The easiest thing to do is to edit the Autotax feature such that it maintains 180 loyalty rather than 120 loyalty, because you can still get rebellions very easily at 120. This makes the Autotax feature much more practical.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Goofball, if a province had 120% loyalty, how can it revolt? Rebellions only have a chance of happening at under 100%, don't they?
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Autotax is very useful... There are times when i am too impatient to go through each and every one of my provinces and set the tax manually, and it seems to work well enough.
Plus I like to Squeeze as much cash as i can from my lands, it really helps my massive building and troop training efforts.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Quote:
Originally Posted by Maeda Toshiie
MTW auto-tax set at 100% happiness
VI auto-tax set at 120% happiness
Slight subtlety: in MTW 1.0 auto-tax aims for happiness above 100%; in MTW 1.1 (the patched version) it's 120%, same as VI.
I use it all the time now: gives you exactly the desired effect without a lot of pointless pointy-clicky stuff ever turn or so.
I never see rebellions from loyalty 120% without there being some other major factor involved. The +20% is there as a safety net for the typical variations you might see across a turn boundary: ruler moves a province farther away, an enemy spy or two, that sort of thing. If your enemies have stacks of spies doing you dirty you'll need a higher safety margin, of course.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
I always use autotax in VI.
BTW, for the Sicily thing. I was ones of the people who started that whole rush so I can tell you the optimal for that.
attack the first turn and the spear always goes to the keep.
second turn go back and fight the rebellion in Naples then attack Sicily again the 3rd turn.
this time, the spear will stand and fight.
pin with Byz inf, nuke with naptha from behind and charge from both sides to capture them all without any survivors. This will make the keep fall right away whereupon you can build a peasant or two to maintain the peace and send your troops back to crush Naples rebellion.
your Byz inf and naptha shall be the fire brigade and perpetually go back and forth. soon, you'll have a very strong infantry general.
It's quite possible to keep both provinces.
SIcily is also a nice shipyard. The forward shipyard helps although you should pump garrisons to maintain loyalty.
Also try to build to Byz inf in Sicily to replenish your general's unit.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
and this works in Expert?
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
I pretty much only play expert and I pulled this off twice.
It usually ended in war with the Italians though as they find Naples weakly garrisoned and try to invade.
I've never avoided that but this method makes you a supreme naval power.
You cripple the Sicilians so that their third ship doesn't even hit the water and the Italians got wasted when they tried to fight me.
I managed to use the naptha to kill the bulk of their RKs (princes) in an ambush and surrounded their king and captured him once, gaining a nice ransom and bankrupting them.
The other time ended with giant march upon Venice and loads of treb archers mowed down the enemies before massed Byz inf ran over their forces.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Quote:
Originally Posted by HicRic
Goofball, if a province had 120% loyalty, how can it revolt? Rebellions only have a chance of happening at under 100%, don't they?
Nope. Cross-turn events (king being stranded, excommunication, spies, etc...) can drop loyalty significantly and cause provinces to revolt on you if you are only maintaining 100% or 120% loyalty. 180% gives you a better cushion to protect against unfortunate occurrences.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Quote:
Originally Posted by Goofball
Nope. Cross-turn events (king being stranded, excommunication, spies, etc...) can drop loyalty significantly and cause provinces to revolt on you if you are only maintaining 100% or 120% loyalty. 180% gives you a better cushion to protect against unfortunate occurrences.
The point with auto-tax is that if you got a province with 160% loyalty on very high and a sudden drop causes a 80% drop in loyalty, the auto-tax will change the tax to low or very low to get over 120%.
The only difference if you change it to 180% is that your tax in the beginning is only going to high.
Auto-tax got one bug with spies though, if the loyalty is low and you send in a good spy, you can get the comp to tax his province with high taxes and 98% loyalty for example. I assume that this is the same with humans on auto-tax but that isn't a problem thanks to border forts.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
The disadvantage of the auto tax (VI version) is it works so well 99% of the time. Something goes wrong - you lose control of a sea lane, your king dies or picks up a negative vice or something - and the province has less than 100% loyalty even on very low taxation, but the auto tax doesn't tell you. You have been using it with no problems right from the start, so you think you are still ok. If you are lucky you get away with it, and you don't even notice, but sometimes you get a loyaltist revolt or the HRE re-emerges in Switzerland! Answer - check loyalty at the end of every turn even on auto-tax.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
Although it won't always win you games I usually just keep my taxes at normal. If I'm planning on crusading I raise taxes a bit and if I get involved in a slug fest war I raise them as well. I play so that I'm always building up money for safe keeping and by taxing at a normal it gives me the extra cash boost I need when I tax higher by allowing me to build more troops while still putting money in the bank.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
doesn't it still take huge effort to raise and later lower taxes?
autotax works so well for me.
I use the shift and scan method for checking rebellions every turn.
I wish you can change the green level to 120 though.
Re: Taxing and a byzantine question
I enjoy micromanaging. When I tax I tax evenly across my whole nation. The biggest pain in the ass is that I can't raise taxes for all of my provinces like I could in STW I need to go to each one. I don't really worry about rebellions though, if it looks as if a province will rebel I usuallly wait for them to rebel and then send a nice army to crush it. Many a general of mine has become higher ranked and "field defense specialist" thanks to rebellions.
It wouldn't be fair to the more loyal of my people if I were to give the more rebellious ones tax breaks simply because they might rebel. No tax cuts for the rebellious!