Why isn't there a land bridge between the modern-day cities of Dover and Calais on the EB map. Was the Strait of Dover made uncrossable by land units in order to protect the Casse from Arverni/Aedui/Sweboz aggression or was it simply more difficult to cross in the ancient times? If it is so, then it is doing a great job, but I am playing rtw.exe, not bi.exe and therefore the poor Casse stay in their own island stronghold with two territories and three armies that have not moved a millimeter for the last 40 years in my Romani campaign. That's 160 turns! I am still playing my campaign and those three armies are still refusing to budge (I have the FOW lifted in order to see the other faction's progress). After all, the Dardanelles (1.2km wide at its narrowest) and the Strait of Messina (5.1km wide at its narrowest) are passable and the Strait of Dover (6km wide at its narrowest) isn't.
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