Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
I have also sabotaged a city down to 20%, all to no avail. The comp run roman cities do not revolt. Normally a city that revolts will revert back to the traditional owner if they still exist. This doesn't happen with roman held foreign cities? ~:eek: I know it does if the human player owns it! :furious3:
Is it possible the Pathia problem you mentioned was because they were unable to garrison any troops before the end of the turn?
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ziu
I have also sabotaged a city down to 20%, all to no avail. The comp run roman cities do not revolt. Normally a city that revolts will revert back to the traditional owner if they still exist. This doesn't happen with roman held foreign cities? ~:eek: I know it does if the human player owns it! :furious3:
Its really annoying :furious3:
But what puzzles me is that my spies in Northern Germany have revealed that some of the cities up there occupied by the Julii faction have indeed revolted to Rebel throwing out their Roman oppressors. Its just that I can't seem to encourage the process.
Really Frustrating
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ziu
Is it possible the Pathia problem you mentioned was because they were unable to garrison any troops before the end of the turn?
Quite likely. But that doesn't explain why a foriegn city (say Cathage) liberated from Roman oppression by Eygpt (and thus occupied by Eygpt for a while) and then sold into slavery to the Pathian Empire would rebel back to Rome. ~:confused:
It just seems weird.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
Quote:
Originally Posted by Didz
Its really annoying :furious3:
But what puzzles me is that my spies in Northern Germany have revealed that some of the cities up there occupied by the Julii faction have indeed revolted to Rebel throwing out their Roman oppressors. Its just that I can't seem to encourage the process.
Really Frustrating
Yes, it's extremely annoying. It seems to make the whole sabotage function pointless.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Didz
Quite likely. But that doesn't explain why a foriegn city (say Cathage) liberated from Roman oppression by Eygpt (and thus occupied by Eygpt for a while) and then sold into slavery to the Pathian Empire would rebel back to Rome. ~:confused:
It just seems weird.
I wonder if there are any set points as to when the city will no longer revert back to the founding civ. For example, after a certain amount of years or when all of the buildings have been replaced and the culture penalty is gone.
It certainly stops the slash and burn tactic. I know. I tried it in my first campaign, against the other Roman factions when the civil war broke out and I wasn't ready.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ziu
Yes, it's extremely annoying. It seems to make the whole sabotage function pointless.
Well, not entirely. I mean I still station a couple of assassin's outside most of the Roman main production area's to frustrate their attempts to build foundries and high level training centres. By continually destroying these I ensure that my armies and navies have the technical edge on the battlefield.
But destroying temples is pretty pointless.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Ziu
I wonder if there are any set points as to when the city will no longer revert back to the founding civ. For example, after a certain amount of years or when all of the buildings have been replaced and the culture penalty is gone.
I would have thought it would be based upon the culture penalty but I'm not so sure now. After all if the culture penalty is based upon buildings and I have sold off every building in a city then I would have expected the city to revert to its base culture e.g. Cathaginian.
I actually think CA have missed a chance here. It would have been really cool if capturing a city like Cathage from Rome selling all the Roman buildings in it and letting it revolt caused a re-emergence of the Cathaginian dynasty.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
A 10 infuence governor who likes to exterminate can hold any city.
Warning a bit of an exploit
Another trick is to gather up 3-4 cities then completely leave. The huge rebellion will give them a big army they cannot support. It takes the A.I. forever to get it selfout of debt and by the time they do they'll probably get weakend by there neighbors.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
you dont easily get a ten influence governer
romans are an exeption just let them get elected for a few offices
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
well, if you play the carthaginian blitz and exterminate and leave capua, it will never rebel to scipii. this occurs on the third turn so how long they hold it definitely has something to do with it.
You can just keep the city for yourself by gifting them to the roman factions and then repeatedly exterminate so that the population is very controllable even with far away capital and lone peasant garrison.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
I don't want to keep them thats the whole challenge of the game.
Ideally, I would like to resurrect their original factions but as that isn't possible it would at least benice if they rebelled as Rebels.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
Quote:
Originally Posted by Emperor Umeu 1
you dont easily get a ten influence governer
romans are an exeption just let them get elected for a few offices
Yes the 10 influence govermors are rare but you get 5 percent happiness bonus for each horseshoe and a 40 percent max bonus for happiness so a 10 influence governor will have the same effect as an 8 influence.
Actually for me I always have plenty of governors that are over 5 influence and that is playing as a non Roman. Barbarians get influence easily by kicking butt and as an Eastern or African faction those execution squares can sometimes add a nice vice that adds plus 6 to law, that's another boost of happiness by 30 percent.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
give it back to them, thats the best course of action since they get it back anyway, this way the city could revolt and its a rebel army. Either way the original owners wont get a free army out of it
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
If you dont want the Romans to own it but dont want it yourself, then there is only one possible solution. Do what I always do as a Roman faction that despises competition for elected offices and assasinate any and all rival Roman faction family members. Use a group of spies and a half dozen assasins to get it done fast. Train the assasins on diplomats and captains before moving onto generals. Be sure to pick off all family members before going for the faction heir and then finally the faction leader. However be sure that you keep an assasin within a short distance of any of their roaming armies and their capital as when they get too low on family members they begin to start adopting captains and marrying off their daughters. Once they are wiped out all of their cities go rebel. Then you can either leave them as is or give them to a faction of your choice.
Re: Strategy: Slash and Burn
Of course the big exploit is to give away your own core cities to your enemies , then you get a free stack of troops when it revolts , or you recapture it if it doesn't revolt and exterminate for the money and population reduction.
I was Egypt's Protectorate in one game which allowed me to spend a long time assassinating and sabotaging their cities, eventually I only had an odd battle or two to completely eliminate them. I had little trouble getting their cities to revolt.