I've never been a protectorate myself. Don't you have to pay them regularly? Iirc you get all the cash out of your protectorates, but perhaps it just works with AI ones?
I've never been a protectorate myself. Don't you have to pay them regularly? Iirc you get all the cash out of your protectorates, but perhaps it just works with AI ones?
Read about glory and decline of the Seleucid Empire... (EB 1.1 AAR)
from Satalexton
from I of the Storm
from Vasiliyi
Now the money that the protectorate has left at the end of a turn goes to the protector, IIRC.
They offer me to be a protectorate of them and I say give me 15,000 mnai and I will. They then beseige another one of my provinces within 5 turns which leaves me richer and in the same position as before they offered the Protectorate. Which is at war with them, accept I have a whole lot more money.
Be careful with that, as becoming someone's protectorate will cause large sums of mnai to be given from your coffers to your protector's. Just try and avoid becoming a protectorate as much as you can, unless of course you believe you have no other option.
I believe it is quite easy for the Hai to fight back the slow-moving Hellenic phalanxes through guarilla warfare in the Kaukasos and certainly with some of those damn good FM bodyguard units. With a few victories you'll get very experienced troops, so you will be able to use 1-2 3/4 or less stacks to repel any invading Hellenic army.
I have found myself in the same position playing as Makedonia right now, as I've foolishly decided to invade Ioudaia and Syria with an army of mine, in order to pillage every city of the AS (they have won the Syrian wars, confining the Ptolemaioi territories to just Aigyptos). Of course, Ptolemaic oportunists sent small stacks to take back the cities I left undefended, so they immediately declared war upon me. Now I have to fight them both, but I have the advantage of using Hellas as my base of operations, far away from any nearby Successor city.
I wish you lots and lots of fun,
Maion
Last edited by Maion Maroneios; 08-31-2008 at 10:57.
~Maion
Is that why my end of turn report shows weird numbers not matching up at the end. I started doing the add_money cheat to make up the difference in my numbers but maybe I shouldn't to play correct or right. I thought it was a mistake on the AI part? I wondered why my numbers never matched up after accepting a large sum of cash.
Well, now you know what it is!
Maion
~Maion
So you've taken over all of the hellas then? Launching your own pseudo-crusades? Otherwise I'd be wary of Sparta and her allies, and you've probably dealt with Pyhros I assume. I used the same tactic of Raiding the east (in my case Turkey) to fund my unification of Greece.
To fatsweets: I suggest you make peace with Ptolemy and join his war against the Selucids. If you can punch a hole through the Selucid empire and divide turkey from the rest of asia, then you can get in on some trade from Ptolemy, which will probably help. Also the AS will then have to deal with you more seriously, thereby dividing his thinly spread forces even more. then just spread west once you have a solid border with AS. Crush Pontus too and you'll have even more sea trade along the black sea. Also consider making an expedition to one of AS's prized cities, sack it, and retreat/disband your units. Not only will AS's forces have to move to counter your bold strike, but if you succeed in sacking their city, they will have to pump lots of money back into it and lose lots of future revenue, thereby disrupting their war effort against you.
Last edited by Celtic_Punk; 08-31-2008 at 12:26.
'Who Dares WINS!' - SAS
"The republic stands for truth and honour. For all that is noblest in our race. By truth and honour, principle and sacrifice alone will Ireland be free."-Liam Mellows
Who knows? If it's a enough day we may all end up Generals!"
fatsweets: You can avoid losing money to your "protector" simply by spending it. Construct buildings and train units untill you have almost nothing left before hitting the End Turn button. You won't be able to save up a big treasury, but on the other hand you get to build up your infrastructure and army for the few turns that the peace lasts, which will leave you in stronger position to face the inevitable return to hostilities.
Maion Maroneios: I would recommend that instead of trying to hold on to the cities you sacked, give (or better yet, sell) them to the Ptolemaioi/Seleukides, which ever of the two is doing worse at the time being. This way you can maintain the balance of power between them, keeping them at each other's throats and too busy to expand in your direction. All the while you fatten your treasury with the spoils of war.
good call conquorer. but try stacking up recruitment and construction, then when you need money, cancel it. that way no money goes to the grubby backstabbing bastards
'Who Dares WINS!' - SAS
"The republic stands for truth and honour. For all that is noblest in our race. By truth and honour, principle and sacrifice alone will Ireland be free."-Liam Mellows
Who knows? If it's a enough day we may all end up Generals!"
~Maion
Can't say I ever accepted protectorate status. Rather let all my cities burn but I will say one of the best campaigns I ever played was with Hayasdan. The silver death just kept coming and dying in the Causcuses. I never fought them where I didn't want to. No open ground etc, used spies and watchtowers and lightly defended forts to guide them just were I wanted. Didn't matter one bit the quality of my troops verses theirs (where did all those silver shields come from) they died by the thousand.......... oh the fond memories!
We have fed our sea for a thousand years
And she calls us, still unfed,
Though there’s never a wave of all her waves
But marks our English dead:
We have strawed our best to the weed’s unrest,
To the shark and the sheering gull.
If blood be the price of admiralty,
Lord God, we ha’ paid in full!
Kipling - and he makes exceedingly good cakes
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