Oh I do that at turn 1 ;). However I'm unfortunate enough to be at war with Ptollies and KH and, from time to time with Carthage, leaving all my ports blocked, since they all have massive fleets ;)... But who cares, when I smash them on land.Originally Posted by Cambyses
Generally, I've never really used naval warfare, unless playing a naval powerhouse like Carthage - if fx I'm invading Greece, I'll leave Kydonia and Rhodes till I've completely defeated mainland Greece. The isles are then unlikely to be well-guarded and have nowhere to recieve reinforcements from, so I build a few ships, send over exactly enough units to take the towns AND garrison them, and then disband the boats right afterwards again. Same with other isles, like Cyprus and the settlements in Crimea (which I always take by sea, since I otherwise have no affairs in the northern wastelands)
EDIT: Don't think blocked ports are the reason for low cash flow, since I focused mainly on mines. Have been playing another Seleucid campaign here at my mum's, and my ports are all blocked, but in this campaign, my empire still overflows with wealth, even though its not even as large as the poor one I left at my father's. But I think perhaps I expanded too soon in that game, so infrastructure suffered, leading to numerous riots and general instability, fx in Iran. In my present game, I made Iran love me using cultural structures, BEFORE invading the east. Then I took Baktria first and Parthia second - whereas I was forced earlier to take them at the same time. This means I've been able to secure my possessions instead of just steamroll everything, which leads to less need for anti-riot garrisons = income!!!!
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