Rex?
Ricimer?
Rex?
Ricimer?
From Fluvius Camillus for my Alexander screenshot
Ya know, I'm just going to throw this out here but massed HA beats both.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
Last edited by desert; 02-15-2009 at 04:36.
Cookie for you!Romulus?
And damn, you actually made me laugh with that one Super Market. Romeo... Ah!
Of course, the Romans had an almost infinite reserve of manpower
umm no it didn't during the punic wars after its epic defeat at cannae Rome was forced to withdraw all its remaining armies due the fact there where no more reserves left. they had to wait until their next bunch of kids grew up to raise another couple legions.
By the time of the third macedonian war, everything was in favour of Rome. Had Rome faced a Macedonia so strong as the one of Alexander The Great (prior to his conquest of Persia), for example, things would have been absurdly different
i don't really think so the organisation and execution of roman military strategy would have held him off or atleast forced him to return to macedon to raise a new army atleast once. once again italy is not the place to execute a phalanx like military formation in battle, nor are parts of greece for that matter. Alexander would have only been willing to fight on open ground and the romans wouldn't have. to negate his phalanx, you want to simulate an invasion of rome take your phalanx into the many ravines and forests of italy and the mountains of greece at the time on EB and tell me different. i sure did when i conquered rome on my eb campaign with macedon, even then it took me decades to take down the republic at the cost of thousands of troops.
Last edited by Husker98; 02-15-2009 at 18:41.
Uh? Thats a good thing for me to review, but from what i knew Rome was still able to muster multiple armies after Cannae - after Cannae Hannibal managed to gain new allies, but these allies were for the most part defeated because while Hannibal was busy somewhere, the Romans attacked them. Syracuse is one example, the Samnites are another, and even far away Iberia, the main source of Carthaginian manpower.umm no it didn't during the punic wars after its epic defeat at cannae Rome was forced to withdraw all its remaining armies due the fact there where no more reserves left. they had to wait until their next bunch of kids grew up to raise another couple legions.
And come to think of it... if they had to wait for the kids to grow up, Rome would have been defenseless and Hannibal would have taken it.
But yes you are right regarding the Phalanx - such formations required a wide open field. Still, both Hannibal and even Pyrrhus managed to lure the Romans into fighting battles under their conditions.
Oh and come on... Macedonia by Alexander's time was able to defeat the Achaemenid Empire, which was far, FAR bigger and could muster far more men then Rome... Now now, lets not exagerate. We all know that Rome was a Lernean Hydra that grew two heads for each one cut off, but even such a beast could be defeated. As it was.
Perhaps if Darius hadn't been assasinated after Gaugamela, it would have been more interesting...
And yeah, the Romans after losing 45,000 out of 80,000 raised another 80,000 men and divided them into four armies to deny Hannibal any more major pitched battles. They also invaded Iberia and Illyria during the same period.
It's always amused me as to how well the Romans multi-tasked.
Last edited by antisocialmunky; 02-15-2009 at 20:53.
Fighting isn't about winning, it's about depriving your enemy of all options except to lose.
"Hi, Billy Mays Here!" 1958-2009
If the Roman manpower advantage is universally acknowledged, shouldn't the Roman players get a few extra units in their stacks, going to 20 unit stack instead of a 14 uniter?
I'm kidding, I'm just Hellen baiting.![]()
And yeah, the Romans after losing 45,000 out of 80,000 raised another 80,000 men and divided them into four armies to deny Hannibal any more major pitched battles. They also invaded Iberia and Illyria during the same period.
exactly only those armies raised weren't roman more of their increasinly fewer local allies and remaining units. Scipio Africanus had been deployed with Roman Allies to Iberia to avenge Roman losses in the area. Illyria was a minor invasion to stop the Illyrian piracy that was raising heck.
And come to think of it... if they had to wait for the kids to grow up, Rome would have been defenseless and Hannibal would have taken it.
Hannibal, you know how to gain a victory; you do not know how to use it -- Maharbal
Hannibal didn't have a siege train or siege equipment with him and a siege of rome would have taken YEARS, this thought of mind prevented a march on Rome. oddly enough though if he had besieged Rome (he marched near to the city once) he might have forced their hand and thus a favourable truce. Hannibal had a chance and his indescisiveness saved rome and killed Carthage.
Hannibal had them on their knees thats why Rome was bent on destroying carthage once and for all in the third war.
Macedonia by Alexander's time was able to defeat the Achaemenid Empire
Yes it was a leaderless empire with alot of man power... Give those men at Gaugemala good General like Cyrus the Great and maybe Alexander doesn't conquer all of the Persian empire..... the persians problem is similar to the Macedonian one in the Roma vs Makedonian war, a powerful country with no leadership.
Last edited by Husker98; 02-16-2009 at 01:31.
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