That is great speed. Did you go after Numidia?
Printable View
That is great speed. Did you go after Numidia?
I immediately raced for Cirta after Tingi, then took a detour to down Carthage and Thapsus. Now I have an army headed for Dimmidi, and nicely bribed another Carthaginian one consisting mainly of Iberians and Roundshields headed for Leptis Magna
That's the expansion route I took.
Dimmidi isn't worth much and can wait. I ended up taking Siwa before Dimmidi.
You truly are a Legendary Commander, pez. :bow:
why thank you for the compliment. :-) I've ended my spanish game (burnout, my game crashed (see thread in Colosseum) and I want to try Egypt once I get it restarted) with about 30+ provinces. I own all Italy thanks to that preemptive strike, I've annihilated the Brutii, having had to chase them with two armies and two diplomats all the way from Apollonia to Vicus Marcomannii to down the last factioner. I own all lower Greece (Sparta, Athens, Corinth). This was due to a stroke of luck as my spanish swordsmen are incredibly crappy against hoplites, so I used diplomats as the shock troops. I managed to bribe 4 greek factioners (IN ONE ARMY) to my side, and recruited enough mercenaries to lay siege to and storm Sparta with their own greek troops. Now preparing to crush Macedonia in 3 turns flat. In the west, the Gauls have fought 3 major 20 vs 20 stack battles with me, and gotten trashed. I now own all western Gaul up to Condate Redonum, as well as southern Germania. In the south, I own all western Africa, and Cyrene. In the east, I own Kydonia and Rhodes and I actually owned Pergamum but gave it away to Pontus in return for alliance and an attack on Seleucids. The Pergamum army is now en route by ship to Antioch, which is the real prize. I've an army on the sea on a 20-large-boat-navy that surrounds and trashes any any in its way en route to Alexandria while the Cyrene army heads for Siwwa and Thebes. Altogether now army deployment are as follows, 3rd Army currently recuperating in Athens, 4th Army at Nepte en route to Lepcis Magna tp take ship to Chersonesos (I know, it's quite a long way), 5th Army en route to Antioch, 6th Army at Trier about to descend on Alesia and the two Gaulish rebel provinces, 7th Army at the border of Armorica (so much for indomitable Gauls) moving for Samarobriva, 8th army at Vicus Gothi laying siege, 9th Army at Cyrene, 10th army moving by ship to land near Thessalonica from Sparta... btw the numbers of my armies tells you the order of their formation.
Are you playing 1.2? Using diplomats as shock troops, lol.
I did that a lot in 1.0 and 1.1 but not so any more. The hapless AI often have nearly full captain-led stacks running around which are perfect prey.
That's a lot of armies. Guess you must have conquered fast and furious. How much upkeep does all of that cost?
I've never maintained more than 5 armies in my games but then again, I don't go for much of a blazing speed endgame.
Ok. We got going again. About to assault Rome, we were attacked by the massive Roman force. Tried Hannibal's "weak-centre tactic" and we deployed as far back as possible, it didn't work too well. Then we re-loaded and tried a three-line tactic. This worked. But our depleted force was attacked the next turn by half-Roman stack, with Scipii and Julii reinforcements. Needless to say, being attacked by 3 different directions meant that we lost.
That force is now almost dead.
It is a short campaign so only one more region is needed and then we win. We are hoping to breed a force in Italy, and attack Croton. It would be nice to take Rome for the final settlement, but the army is almost dead and it is v ery well protected (4 armies).
Ho hum, nice to know it's gotten going again :-) Hurray!
Katank, it probably cost me about 10k in upkeep, but I still made 10-20k a turn, because I captured some really good trade pairs and developed port cities. And I fully developed those that weren't. Quite a comfortable margin even with 7 armies, 5 of them full-stack, running around like loose cannons.
Wow, Spain is fun. Especially, if you do them right.
I just started a campaign after a month off from RTW and BI. Took Corduba, Tingi, Numantia, Palma, Cirtis, Carthage and Thapsus in that order. The key of course is to get the economics right in the first ten turns or so. Corduba got me Bull Warriors (though I havent used them yet!) before I even captured Palma!
I like the Scutarii and Spanish Mercs though. A poor man's Plumbatarii, but effective nonetheless. Really flexible unit roster.
And those temples!! ~:cheers:
The only problem you'll have is chronic alcoholism! :bow:
Hi all im a new guy and I need some help playing Spain
I modded the descr_strt to make it playable but when i click on it to play the game crashes. Ive been looking forward to Spain but I cant play it.
Can someone help?:help:
Nevermind I found out how to do it
Ok so Ive been playing it and heres my progress:
Starting game:
Immediatly i began building economic buildings and getting tribute from neighboring regions. i also make ports for trade and a strong navy. i take Corduba and Numantia then get ceasfires from Gaul and Carthage after. so when my economy is running smoothly i start making Iberian inf. and Sucartii. these would be important as Gaul has started to invade Spain to take back what it lost. eventually after some close called decisive victories i not only pushed out the Gauls but took 2 of there provinces. this began a conflict with the Gauls I like to call Spainic-Gallic wars. my navy will play in important role later on...
well thats all i got so far ill keep you informed
oops sorry just found out i should post that in stories sorry
I don't like Spain they have poor armies from my point of view.If you wan't to play sucessfully you must bribe everyone you can,and honestly I find that boring.I wan't to play with them but their Scutarii are to weak for chosen swordsman of the gauls even swordsman if used corectly is beter then scutarii.In Spain you can build real economic empire,but what after that?
Where to expand?I would expand further north to Gaul but we all know that without bribery that would not be possible,also I don't think that any force Spain can built can match Roman post Marius Army.Only good troop is Bull warior,and I must said that they are awesome troops,but I realy find it borring to play with just one selection of troops.Can anybody say that I'm wrong?I admit that Spain is Chalenge but I dont think its possible win this campaighn withaout bribery,so I anostly believe that this faction can not rule the world without cheating(and I find bribery as cheating!!!!).
If someone have other opinion I would like if he share this opinion with me,thanks
Scutarii volleys are always powerful. There is no way they are weak: the Roman legions were modelled after the Scutarii, with the scutum and gladius. The Gauls have low morale, and after the two volleys at least one unit should rout. Afterwards, just send in the bull warriors and cavalry and use the Roman tactics of divide and conquer. If even Numidia can defeat armies, Iberia is definitely no problem. The Gauls especially are easy prey: They're under attack by at least the Julii and Britons, if not the Germans. Gaul is usually the first faction to fall.
I'm using v1.5 of vanilla RTW, no BI, and I'm using the unofficial bug fix patch.
Since this is only my second campaign after not having played for at least a year, feels more like 2...I'm having fun. The spaniards are definately tough with both Gaul and Julii coming right at me. I took the benefit of saving before a big fight and doing some auto-resolve battles. In my next 5-6 turns I'll see two fulls stacks of Julii, and 2 1/2 fulls stacks of Gauls all heading to Osca.
As soon as I loaded up the game, I went and took over the single carthaginian town and the gaulish town. First buildings in all my towns were roads and mines and markets...so I'm getting plenty of cash. I'm not bribing anyone as I don't like to us it, but I am picking up as many units in the field that my generals can find, as possible.
I have trade agreements with most of the factions near me save all the roman factions and the gauls.
I started to fortify Osca and I have 4 towns as my unit producing towns, I've gone all Esus temples for now because I want Bull Warriors, and naked fanatics are nice also and I'm not good at running multiple temples and moving troops around to get the benefits of all the different temples. I had 2 of three forts set up around Osca, but I've had to pull back all my troops to Osca and a 5 star general that I've cultivated thats hanging out next to Osca. I own all of the spanish peninsula, and I managed to bribe one rebel town thats almost directly south of Italy...near the egypt area...which I will use later on.
My strategy after the next few turns of constant full stack fights is going to be building up my navy which I'm working on now, and taking that little island off the coast of Osca. That place is a hatasti breeding ground for the Julii and that needs to stop. I figure if I can field a decent navy in that area, I can sink a lot of Julii ships and keep them weak. Then I can work on the gauls, I think if I can nab two or three towns of theirs I can break their momentum.
For unit make up's, I'm using mainly what I can dredge up for mercenaries...Iberian infantry, and some skirmishers are the bulk. I have some naked fanatics coming in, but I'm not relying on them because of the 2 turn build time...which kinda sucks, but it's still doable, they are nice shock troops and can definately hold a line from what I've seen so far. I'm aiming for bull warriors, then perhaps a good mix of 3-4 cav units and 3-4 archer units. I'll have to see what they have later on down the line.
I think overall, I'm going to sweep north in Gaul lands, and take out the Britons as well....leaving Germania intact and see if I can keep good relations with them. Then I'll head into the Italian peninsula...I hate trying for Africa and East asia because there are so few provinces for the size of the area as opposed to Italy/Greece/Macedonia.
Every time I've played a Roman campaign, the Brutti go east, the Julii go west and the Scipii go south. It will be interesting to see how it turns out if I can nip the romans in the butt early and see if some of the other factions can hold their own for once.
So far I like the spanish, but I'll have to get a bit deeper into their roster of units before I can make a final determination. I have a weakness for cavalry, I love em...and I know thats not one of spains hot points. I'll update this info in another bunch of turns to let you know how my plan worked out...
I haven't started from my spot last night, but I've been thinking strategy over. If I go east and try and take some of the italian boot, I'll probably have the senate on me for the entire game, but I'm thinking about taking the islands between spain and italy so I can better control the Julii/Scipii navy. I think after that, I'm in a toss-up after that. I can go south and fight off the Brutii, or I can go north and fight the gauls. I figure south might be the better option though, if I can control the islands and block Scipii, i can let the gauls/germans and britons take their tolls on the Julii...hopefully keeping them smaller and I can work on Scipii, letting the Brutii head West into Greece and Macedonia.
Right now none of the factions of Rome will talk to me, so I'm going to see if I can secure contracts with everyone else, and then just beat up the romans navy wise and see how much the rest of the factions can beat up on the romans. I'll try and sell cash and maps and anything for factions to attack Roman areas...I'd love to see the Romans quashed since they always seem to win anyhow.
I actually thought pretty well of the Spanish roundshields in an old spain game. Took lots of casualties, but I then had 6 somewhat over-sized units at 2 silver or better -- fun to play with. It was a medium game, I think, so I had lots of fun sending doggies into packs of gauls.
As it sometimes happens, things did not go exactly to plan. The Gauls kept sending huge armies at me, though the Julii stopped. I got so annoyed with the Gauls that I took Narbo Martius(my main general is right now 10 stars...but 60 years old).
I also took the next island over to the East from Palma, SE from Narbo Martius...a Julii settlement. The Julii are now sending armies by boat but I keep sinking them, while the Gauls just keep coming after me. The Britons are going after Germania, and Germania is being squeezed by Dacia as well who has expanded quite a bit from my last map update.
I'm debating what to do now, I think I may just trash all the buildings on that little island east of Palma and let it revolt and leave the island. Let the Julii come back in and fix it. I'll pull back and finish off the Gauls I think since they are being so annoying. They can't have much left in the tank, and I have roughly three full stacks of armies marching around.
The only real problem is money, after playing the Brutii campaign it's a definate shock to the system, but it's still do-able, I'm just much slower in my growth.
--------------
edit/add: Its a bunch of turns later and everything has turned to crap...Numidia was my one big trading buddy, but they declared on me. I had three 10 stack navy's out and about killing Romans, but when Numidia declared me it all went to hell and I went into serious negative numbers. Somehow Gaul is STILL throwing full stacks at me, though it's almost all warbands with a few chosen archers and swordsmen. Julii has also stepped up their attacks AND their navy...most of my coastal cities and gaul cities have been under seige and unable to retrain troops because of my negative cash flow.
I managed to take the Numidia town just south of spain across the ocean, i ransacked it, exterminated the populace and retrained most of my troops. These next few turns could break me, but I think I can pull through. I'll try and sack one more Numidia town, then destroy all the buildings and gift it for peace. I grabbed a ceasefire with them for one turn before they re-declared...so, I'm gonna have to teach them a lesson. I've been gearing up for Gaul, and those extra troops are the only thing saving me at this point...so hopefully If I can get Numidia to back off, I can retrain and finally nip Gaul in the head, chest and extremeties once and for all...
I don't know WHAT in the hell the Romans are doing, they are no where to be found...shouldn't Scipii be taking over the southern continent...well, he's not...and Julii are not taking over Gaul...I don't know whats going on sadly....i was hoping the Romans would do their things, but they are not....
----------------------------
Another edit/add:
Ok, it's been a bunch more turns, i did some auto-resolving even though it generates higher losses to get through some tougher parts more quickly, and get back into the black.
The Gauls got a mid sized army into my mainland and captured one of my cities breifly...but I took it back about 3 turns later with mix and match units from the surrounding cities.
I went further south on the southern continent and grabbed the next Numidia town...
I also took Lemonum briefly, trashed all the buildings and pulled out. I grabbed Lugdunum and Alesia too...the turn after I took Alesia I got hit with the friggin plague. I had 5 generals in that army...and they are all infected now.
I'm on the warpath and Gaul is going to get a serious beat down now...
I don't think I'll win this one in the time alloted to me yet, I've been exterminating as I go for the extra cash to re-train all my troops, i know that will come back to haunt me cash wise down the road, not pulling in as much taxes, but I won't have to worry as much about troops hopefully.
Hi, first post for me.
I decided to start a spanish campaign the other week (H/H), been playing a long greek one and gotten sick of phalanx, so wanted to go far away as possible.
Started off pretty slow, and just got control of the iberian penninsula, concentrating on my economy for the start, the gauls kept coming in their massive armies, so my army was training itself, up, even though it needed to be reinforced quite heavily.
[Got a picture but i need to post atleast 1 post apparently]
As you can see, theres quite a few super powers in the world at the moment!
Im allied with egypt, armenia and scythia.
At war with the romans and gaul.
Carthage and gaul are allied, and the britons are just at war with everyone i think, they keep attacking my navy, then signing ceasefires every so often. But they're getting their arses kicked by the Scipii now, who are pushing into middle europe.
Pontus is a protectorate of the brutii, who are using them to attack into armenia.
I've recently taken segesta and raised it twice, going to build barbarian buildings , does it convert it slowly over time?
I've left the remainder of the gauls as a buffer inbetween britain and plan on joining in when the romans have their civil war (gonna be ugly in greece)
Ive got 3 armies, pretty similar to the one in the picture, gonna have to send one back to spain soon though to do some massacreing of cities.
I'll keep you updated if anything interesting happens ;)
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v621/merp/spain.jpg
https://img.photobucket.com/albums/v621/merp/spain.jpg
Sorry, image for the post above, i couldn't see an edit button (don't know if that would count as 1 post aswell)
Welocme to the org!
You need to be a member to edit your own posts.Quote:
Sorry, image for the post above, i couldn't see an edit button (don't know if that would count as 1 post aswell
Romans wont have civil war if you are other faction.Quote:
I've left the remainder of the gauls as a buffer inbetween britain and plan on joining in when the romans have their civil war (gonna be ugly in greece)
I suggest ambushes in Sardinia.There are lots of trees to make good ambushes.
Also, Prepare (very) good navies and disenbark in Londinium, Ebracum and Deva.Siege and capture.Then go to Samarobriva and start the end of the British people!
Caius
Thanks for the info.
My navy is pretty strong, got about 3 fleets at 300 men strong each (on large unit size) with gold and silver chevrons, got them early to stop the romans landing in oscar.
I've managed to trash a few post marius julii armies using the hammer and anvil technique, the cavalry seems to be performing more than its stats show it to though, but i ain't complaining.
I think i might take sicily now i know they won't have a civil war. Can't be bothered to go north anymore, want some sun.
Maybe i can boat across an army into carthage at gibralta, help out my egyptian allies, although it'll probably lead to war with them, maybe just tingi, so i can get a foothold.
Do spain get access to onagers or any siege artillery?
Im not sure.Quote:
Do spain get access to onagers or any siege artillery?
They do in custom battle; I don't think they can in imperial campaign, you'll need a fix for that.
Welcome to the Org.
Dont mean to burst Caius' bubble, but the Romans can get the Civil war even when you are not a roman faction. It just takes longer than usual.
Unless I am totally mistaken. But I dont think so:beam:
RM3
Bad Rm3:whip:Quote:
Originally Posted by Roman_Man#3
You will burn for that :beam:
Im confused.
I've played a M/M/N(ormal style) as Spain, and it went horribly. I delayed the war. That was the wrong thing I could do.
I started again. I quicly movilized my troops. In nine years, I destroyed the Cartaghinian town of Corduba, and Numantia went down also. I lost some Generals, I seem to have bad luck.
Now, Im heading for Narbo Martius. What should be my next objetive?
first of all, Palma and Sardinia, they're great trade centres and you can stage invasions from there in peace.
from here on, you should consider how you plan to expand: going north into Gaul, south into North Africa ? or you can also organize raiding parties and sack the roman cities to finance your growth at home. Let the romans or whoever take the cities back and come back in a few years.
I dont want to deal with Romans. So, I will head Gauls and kill them all.
Then, I will see.
If you can wait for them to tech up a bit, you can reap what THEY sow (culture penalty free, no fat nor sugar)
the problem with going for the gauls is that Pyreneans are such a good barrier that I'm reluctant about going across.
Fun alternative.
Defend at the Pyrenees. Forts in both Northern passes and a good defensive field army near Osca. This will become the focus of a lot of Julii and Gallic attention. You can bleed them pretty well there and train up several strong fighting units for subsequent attacks.
Equip an invasion force and a follow on force and go take Ireland. Follow on force is 4-6 Town militia and 8-12 peasants. Take Ireland, garrison with town militia, disband peasants to build population. Should have a port going and trade with your Northern ports. :yes:
Then, once you've paused and sorted things out, take Britain from the North down. The Brits are rarely prepared for this and usually have most of their fighters across the channel. Consolidate.
Now you should have 2 well trained strike armies: 1 in Britain and 1 in Spain. Send the Spanish army forward along the isles to attack Italy OR along North Africa after Carthage. Use the Northern force to hit Gaul, Germany or the remnants of the Brits as you see fit. None of the Northern Barb forces is particularly well set to handle an attack from the North like that.
funny, I used this strategy with the Britons
there's nothing like Brit Chariots sieging Corduba, with that feeling of "where did they come from ?"
I will capture Samarobriva, and Brits wont be smart enough to recapture it.
i am playing a h/h spain campaign i have a question shall i invade gaul or africa
I would say either. Just not both. Gaul would secure you back ie if you plumped for Africa Gaul could cross the pairofknees but Afica opens up more sea trade but Scipii and Egypt. Gaul, you also run ino romans but there is more towns so possibly more money/ easier conquest. Heads or tails mate
I would suggest you start by unifying Iberia and eliminating the Gauls, than it would be a good time to invade Africa.
its going pretty good i invade africa and capture Carthage
Jee wizz, you going to take sicily then move up through Italy? early game with Spain I would say was mad. :p
it was easier then i thought it will be i hope the romans are not to strong
Thats almost an exact imitation of my last last spanish campaign, I had the same territories as you do, unfortunitly thats as far as I got because I accidently deleted the save.
I've never felt compelled to play spain. They seem like a faction that CA made simply to fill the space of the Iberian peninsular.
to stop the romans just attack and enslave :whip: palma and caralis that sould stop the :furious3: romans i pretty soon had the julli coming for caesefire and got 5000 out of them! :surrender2: OK no for a diagram after the senate attacked me when I walked through Italy. The wizard is the senate and the dragon (to be) is my spanish armies. I tell you their principes were torn to shreds by my bull warriors. :wizard:
What an outrageous post KoP, there are however some valuable facts hidden in there. Your bull warriors will tear apart most which stand in your way but unfortunately are quite expensive. Iberia in barbarian hands is not at all wealthy and the capture of island provinces will increase trade income and also weaken the Romans.
I suggest that you unify Spain then launch an attack on Italy through the Apls taking Narbo and Massilla on the way, use mercenaries if you need to but it would be better to use all of your treasury to fund two armies, tactical know how will be the key to defeating army after army in Italy. It will be a hard fight but if you wait then the Romans will become far too powerful.
Iberians
Overview
- Spain begins with one of the largest beginning armies... You have a large amount of Skirmishers in Scallabis, some Cavalry in Osca, a normal garrison in Carthago Nova, and a force containing 2 Scutarii and some cavalry in Asturica. 3 Towns are walled, Osca is unwalled, but has a strong garrison, to balance things. There are some bribeable Rebel armies near Numantia and Asturica. Bribe these to gain Iberian Infantry early on.
- Spain generally has large revenues in their towns. All towns have such a high public order, that you can put every town on "Very High Tax Rate"... you should really do this... With barbarians growth is not as important as with non-barbarian factions, as barbarians can only achieve the 3rd level of town. So take it easy with growth, and concentrate on money first
- Spain has a Carthaginian based army, with 2 unique units, and 1 barbarian unit. They have Scutarii, basically the type of soldiers the Romans based historically their warfare on, so, strong unit. They also have Bull Warriors, excessively strong for a normal infantry unit, use this one too. They also have Naked Fanatics, but I don't advise using these, they really cost too much in comparison to their strength, they have high attack, yes, but one spear, arrow or stone on their heads and they die... leave these out. We all know about Carthaginian units, quite useful troops, use them.
Campaigning
A campaign strategy as Spain is always difficult, to make it more easy, make sure you have a good starting base, from which you can expand later. When the game starts, build in all towns Traders or Land Clearance. Wait for two turns, and build the other. Within four turns, all your towns have a Trader, and Land Clearance. After this build roads, and build in Osca, Carthago Nova and Asturica Town Militia, and in Scallabis a unit of Peasants. now your 6th turn comes, time to make a move. Move all your troops near the Gaul town, except Town Militia and Peasants, let your Diplomat bribe the Rebel armies. Bribing them gives you four Iberian Infantry, and one unit of Peasants. Put the Iberian Infantry in your main army, put the Peasant in Scallabis. Lay siege to the Gaul town. If they attack, crush them, even on H/H, your troops are stronger and better, so... expect no trouble. In the meantime, build in Carthago Nova, Scallabis and Osca shrines to Epona. In Asturica a shrine to Esus, so you can build Bull Warriors later on. Begin preparing a force to attack the Carthaginian town (Corduba) but don't attack until you have siezed the Gaul town. When you have it, occupy it. Same with Carthaginian. If they have moved their troops out of the town, bribe them. Don't worry about money, around the 7th turn you will already have about 20000 denarii on H/H. So you sohuld have some more when you attack Carthage (about the 15th turn or so) Also occupy this one. Keep expanding your towns in the meantime, remember : economy first, then Shrines, then Tavern (Public Order building), then Military, then Armory/Blacksmith, then walls. That is the best build order (generally) for Spain. When you have a basic economy, quite a bulk of units, let them guard the passages from Gaul. Capture Palma to increase Sea trade, as your Sea Trade will soon become very important. Keep building towards the highest level of town. Dump a small force near Tingi, but don't attack yet. Do the same with Narbo Martius. (Do this when you have nearly fully built each town) When each Town you posess is fully built, attack Narbo Martius and Tingi. Dump a small force in Caralis and Syracuse. Don't attack yet. When you have Narbo Martius and Tingi, Capture Massilia, Cirta and Caralis. When you have those, prepare to attack Carthage, Thapsus and the Syracusian (sp?) towns. Make a excessively large force of Scutarii and Bull Warriors, especially near Carthage. Capture Carthage Thapsus and all Syracusian (sp?) towns. Now you have your basic Mediterranean sea trade. Keep expanding further and further, and you should have no trouble, as all your cities will bring in huge amounts of money, and your Bull Warriors will simply crush anything they run into.
Spanish Armies
Spain has, surprisingly, a huge choice of making armies. Their units form good combinations with eachother, becouse they are all of similar strength. Except Bull Warriors, but these units are quite exceptional. So... what should your regular Spanish army look like? Here are some good choices :
Early stage Army
5 Iberian Infantry
7 Skirmishers
4 Round Shield Cavalry
Middle (expansion) stage Army
5 Scutarii
5 Iberian Infantry
5 Skirmishers
5 Round Shield Cavalry
Late (conquest) stage Army
7 Bull Warriors
5 Scutarii
4 Slingers
4 Long Shield Cavalry
These armies perform very well, in each stage, you may use your own strategies, as Spanish warfare has a huge variety of strategies. Just make sure your main Infantry units always stick together and all will be fine.
ROMANS!!! ARGH!!!
One of the biggest Spanish problems are the Romans. Many people seem to be having trouble killing the Brutii in later stages... The Roman's weakness is their back. By the time you start killing Romans you will have Lonng Shield Cavalry and Bull Warriors. Use your Bull Warriors to crash into Roman troops, and let your Long Shield Cavalry charge from the back, and all will be fine. Let your Bull Warriors finish off the Cavalry too (A Bull Warrior unit can kill a Praetorian Cavalry unit head on on Hard setting... take advantage of this) Just let your Bulls take care of everything and use your Long Shield Cavalry as support, and let your Slingers take care of Archers.
Your Scutarii are a good counter for the Romans Pila throwing units. Let your Scutarii do the same to them, and Crash your Bulls in, that works well against the stronger (Marian) Roman troops.
The problem I had with Spain was that their elite units took 2 turns to complete and I couldnt raise troops fast enough to fight the Romans and Carthaginians.
Icewolf
Spain sound good to play :)
I will try it :idea2:
Unfortunately Spain is one of the unplayable factions in the game, however you can easily gain access to them by altering the des cr_strat files. You should try the other playable factions though, they're awesome fun! :2thumbsup:
Welcome to the guild Rokando. :ave:
~:pimp:yeah, if mod the descr_strat files they're really fun to play
and welcome to the guild Rokondo :beam:
I mean , try to mod the descr_strat files