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Thread: roman legionary and infantry
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Pedro 06:00 05-02-2011
well i want to comment this: why the roman legionare are so polemic? i mean they conquered a lot but in the game there is a lot of unit better , and everyone knows they were the best infantry !! i didnt want to toned up in game and be more easiest with the romans i just want to said that the thigs that make him the best wasnt the equipment (it was very good but not my point) wanst the brilliant generals and wanst the courage beacuse there was a lot brave men in ancient , there was only one thig , the most important thig in the roman society = the discipline and the pragmatism !!! that made they conquer and won ! that is why i think that the romans mut have one of the best morale and stamina like infantry , stamina because they fight in turns the front line soldier wen was tired goes to the backward an that way every one rest in the fight that discipline havent the gauls and other so the were excellent and brave soldiers but fight alone not as a group so they tired earlier than a legionare. when i read about naval battles wiht cartaghe i realized the pragmatism of the romans they werent a sea people so they lose every battle against the cartaginian navy but in the field they win ! so they invent : boarding the ships wiht hooks and the roman infantry won in the sea !!! so that makes the roman infantry extremely flexible and adaptable no like the phalanx and the hoplites or the spearmen . so i think better way is to toned up the morale and the stamina and the others stast you decided becuase i believe with a better morale and stamina they could be more effective in close and long time battles.

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Ca Putt 13:05 05-02-2011
sorry chap but you're compareing roman legionaries with elites of other factions, which is just wrong. you have to compare them with units with a similar price and similar standing - Hoplitai not epilektoi, Pezhetairoi not Argyraspidai, Dugunthiz not Xorjonoz Dreugondijoz, bataroas not Soldurus, Dorkim Liby-Ponnim Kbedim not
Dorkim Leebi-Feenikim Aloophim... the latter mentioned are either Nobles or senior Veterans, often both. Cohors reformata are "raw recruits" of the middle class.
because if you do so you will see that roman heavy infantry is often more cost efficient and most of the time much heavier than their counterpart in other factions. and please Cohors reformata has moral 14(15 would be elite and there are elites with less ;) ) have both highly trained and diciplined, are hardy, have an AP Pilum, 10 armor, 4 shield, what else do you need?!!? a falx as secondary weapon? fear effect? two hitpoints?

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moonburn 14:47 05-02-2011
you can´t compare warriors with soldiers warriors had alot more to loose or gain while the roman soldiers where just better then their counterpart plebeians but not the elites

for instance a dunaminaca unit was probably never more then 2.000 men while the romans could loose 10.000 and next year they would return because they had the manpower

rome´s secret was manpower they had enough to replace lost armies while for instance the spartans in their final days couldn´t even amass 700 hoplites and had to rely on those "citizens" who hadn´t been able to finish the agoge or couldn´t pay for their mess seats so a spartan army in the end was around 10% spartiates 30% homoi and 60% slaves and others conscripted in a hurry to serve rather as haploi or skirmishers and thats around what you can imagine in a regular army of non romans so no you can´t compare the 10% "elites" with the regular roman raw recruit

cesar took 10 years in gaul building up his army the entire roman politics revolves around the "veterans" because the freshly recruited legionaire wasn´t as effective as people think they where just better then the fresh recruit of other people but never better then the veterans of other people and certainly not better then the elites who where born and raised to war (also the romans always had a choice to enter gaul and until cesar never did because they knew they could be outnumbered cesar took big gambling on his divide and conquer politics and in the end had to kill 1million people and enslave 2 millions before it was done and at the time the population in italy was around 3 millions)

romans = best rank and file (cost effective) not elite units

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TheLastDays 16:07 05-02-2011
Well... and it's not like they get slaughtered ingame... in my opinion they fare pretty well against most opponents...

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Arjos 17:01 05-02-2011
Also let's be fair, is not like a roman army was composed 100% by roman born citizens behind a scutum with a gladius...

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anubis88 19:04 05-02-2011
Like Danny Glover said... I'm too old for this ****. I think this must be the 100th thread like this in my time on this forum

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Ca Putt 19:13 05-02-2011
surely but this time I answered first :D

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Omegoa 22:32 05-02-2011
See: Pyrrhus of Epirus or "Pyrrhic victory."

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fomalhaut 23:49 05-02-2011
Roman Infantry are balanced perfectly in my opinion, a very well made faction. They are simply the best standard infantry due to a myriad of reasons, one of them AOR, cost ratios, etc.

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Constantius III 05:07 05-03-2011
Originally Posted by fomalhaut:
Roman Infantry are balanced perfectly in my opinion, a very well made faction. They are simply the best standard infantry due to a myriad of reasons, one of them AOR, cost ratios, etc.
Well, the cohors reformata and late units have great AoRs. Pre-Marian units' AoRs suck.

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Omegoa 21:54 05-03-2011
Originally Posted by Constantius III:
Well, the cohors reformata and late units have great AoRs. Pre-Marian units' AoRs suck.
That's why they're pre-Marian :D

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General Aetius 20:23 05-05-2011
Originally Posted by :
there was a lot brave men in ancient , there was only one thig , the most important thig in the roman society = the discipline and the pragmatism !!!
Firstly the Roman society was only notably disciplined and pragmatic during the Republic. In converse The Imperial Roman society was known for impracticality and extravagance. You seem to be implying that the more disciplined and practical the society the better the warriors they produce. I doubt this is the defining factor of "great" soldiers as many other nations shared the same values and never formed great empires.

History can't always be divided into clear cut reasons for everything and I'm sure the Roman Empires expansion and military prowess were effected by many variables including but not exclusive to: manpower, economics and resources, timing, social structure, technology, and their infamous (but clever) "borrowing" from other cultures.

Originally Posted by :
when i read about naval battles wiht cartaghe i realized the pragmatism of the romans they werent a sea people so they lose every battle against the cartaginian navy but in the field they win ! so they invent : boarding the ships wiht hooks and the roman infantry won in the sea !!!
Although the Roman did at first use the corvus extensively and somewhat successfully it was soon removed from common use. It proved a liability during rough weather and limited deck space, maneuverability, speed and versatility. Thereafter they trained their marines to board enemy vessels in the traditional manner.

That said I think The Roman Troops, in EB, are well balanced decent line soldiers who seem to be able to put up a good fight at a relatively low cost.

General Aetius

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Cyclops 23:22 05-05-2011
I think the Roman soldioers won their empire because they stayed in wars when they weren't going well, and were prepared to stay at war for lengthy periods. I guess they trusted that their homes were not being pillaged by their neighbours.

I blame the Gauls. Everyone in Italy was so scared of the Gauls that once they were beaten by the Romans and offered Borg-like absorption they went "oh well its better than being trampled by naked torc wearing barbarians on a semi-regular basis".

Dunno how to represent this in-game: there doesn't seem to be a morale-based strategic attrition or war-weariness component, although troop (and merc) refresh rates might go some way to representing this.

I think the Romans kept their empire because they evolved a professional military, but it meant heir empire became a monarchy rather than remaining a republic.

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fomalhaut 23:57 05-05-2011
nothing can be explain so simplistically, just the 'evolving a professional military' is a result of hundreds of years of various developments, strokes of luck, economics, politics, everything. NOTHING is so simple

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Cyclops 03:27 05-06-2011
Originally Posted by fomalhaut:
nothing can be explain so simplistically, just the 'evolving a professional military' is a result of hundreds of years of various developments, strokes of luck, economics, politics, everything. NOTHING is so simple
What if I were to disagree, and say yes it is that simple, in fact Rome became great because one day Camillus woke up and said to himself "I know, three lines of infantry in quincunx with spearman in the rear! That will surely lead to the Principate and limes and proconsuls and immortal fame" and all because he had a dream about a chequerboard mosaic floor due to too much garum with dinner the night before? Hmmm? Hmmm?

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TheLastDays 07:55 05-06-2011
Originally Posted by Cyclops:
What if I were to disagree, and say yes it is that simple, [...]
Then, my friend, you'd be wrong...

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General Aetius 10:13 05-06-2011
Originally Posted by :
What if I were to disagree, and say yes it is that simple, [...]
As TheLastDays said:" Then, my friend, you'd be wrong...". Even you, in your previous post, gave several (not so simple but limited) reasons for the rise of the Roman Empire: determination, national security, Gallic collapse, and exploitation of fear.

A single change in battlefield tactics is useless if the whole nation, society and military hasn't reached a stage where it can use the tactic effectively. For example: Hannibal repeatedly conquered the Romans but even so Carthage didn't win the war. So although Hannibal had the correct tactics his nation, as a whole, wasn't able to take advantage of his victories.

General Aetius

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Leon the Batavian 01:07 05-13-2011
Its not only about manpower when it comes to Romans. Also a great deal comes to politics and diplomacy but lets not forget the Romans were a willing people to learn from others and they had also their fair share of able generals and officers.

I think its a myth to think the roman soldier was only a tool not capable of getting the job done without a good general leading him. And its not like the romans were outnumbering their foes on every occasion.

Romans were not only muscle but they were brains (not always) as well. Its way to simple to put it on manpower alone. Hannibal was great(test) but Scipio who learned from him was in my opinion greater because he did defeat that genius and more.

Another thing the romans had was willpower (arrogance maybe) to come out on top. But now they are all gone and part of history.

It was an reply to moonburn that their secret was manpower which is true for most part (I agree) but its not the whole story.

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Thunder Mist 04:03 06-17-2011
Originally Posted by TheLastDays:
Then, my friend, you'd be wrong...
I believe he was speaking in jest. I found it amusing.

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Gaius Sempronius Gracchus 21:31 06-17-2011
Originally Posted by General Aetius:
As TheLastDays said:" Then, my friend, you'd be wrong...". Even you, in your previous post, gave several (not so simple but limited) reasons for the rise of the Roman Empire: determination, national security, Gallic collapse, and exploitation of fear.

A single change in battlefield tactics is useless if the whole nation, society and military hasn't reached a stage where it can use the tactic effectively. For example: Hannibal repeatedly conquered the Romans but even so Carthage didn't win the war. So although Hannibal had the correct tactics his nation, as a whole, wasn't able to take advantage of his victories.

General Aetius
Yes, the whole war with Hannibal and the Carthiginians is quite important. I think that the Republic, at this time, was so competitive that an element of 'arrogance' and determination was almost inevitable, compared to the state of Carthage at that time. Carthage seems to have been at the nadir of its republican constitution, such that it had coalesced to two major power centres (The Barcids and Hanno). This wouldn't happen until much later in Rome. At the time of Hannibal's invasion power was balanced between many factions - oligarchical familial (and class based) as well as a strong Plebian mandate. There was just too much competition for power for there to be surrender. One could not risk one's position within the power structure by showing weakness.

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Basileus_ton_Basileon 07:11 06-20-2011
I've been playing SCII for the last couple of months and have only just recently returned to playing EB (at last!) as the Romans. My 2-cents for this thread would be that I've found the Romans to be remarkably similar to the Zerg, minus the Kerrigan. Legions, on this regard, are very similar to 'lings (not bane, since romans cannot explode). They are numerous, individually expendable, yet extremely effective (A siege tank, would be kinda like a keltoi warrior nob). Pyrrhus of Epirus would indeed be the classic example of (a protoss) being zerged by wave after wave of 'lings (and other zerg horror).

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Julianus 13:54 06-20-2011
I have just finished an excellent book about Greek and Roman military, Soldiers and Ghosts - A History of Battle in Classical Antiquity.
The author argues that the Roman legions are by no means really so disciplined as everyone believes it to be, they were reckless, arrogant, self-centered, childish, they threatened to or even did disobey or at least ignore their commanders all the time. Their poor commander almost always had to appease them one way or another to ensure their obedience, no matter if he was named Scipio or Caesar.

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Moros 20:18 06-20-2011
Teleological history ftw!

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HFox 21:11 06-20-2011
And they all wore segmata......

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Populus Romanus 21:19 06-20-2011
And EBII was released in 272 BC but there were no computers so we never get to play it.

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Randal 13:02 06-21-2011
I think the Romans in Europa Barbarorum are somewhat underpowered. Not because their stats are wrong or their enemies statted too strong or anything, but because the total war engine is bad at modelling the advantages the Romans had and good at modelling the advantages their enemies had.

The Romans for example were able to operate in more tactically sophisticated formations than tribal enemies, who due to limitations of command essentially had to deploy in a big block. The Romans could keep large portions of their force in reserve, including veterans like the Triarii. Those highly skilled Gallic nobles on the other hand had to be on the front lines or they'd lose the respect of their followers. Same with generals. A Roman general encouraged his troops from behind the lines, watched for weaknesses, send reserves where they were most needed. A Germanic warlord would be on the front lines hacking and stabbing because that's how he proved his courage. Even Hellenistic generals fought like this in imitation of Alexander the Great. There are plentiful accounts of Hellenistic or tribal armies breaking through the first line of a Roman force only to be checked and routed by reserves.
Another thing would be unit structure. The legion was divided in well-organised sub-units led by junior officers who could take the initiative and respond to developments that no general could be aware of due to lack of communication. Many of Rome's enemies had nothing compared to centurios.

Julianus undoubtedly is correct that even the Romans had far from perfect command over their armies and soldiers. They still had more than the vast majority of their opposition, though, and that I think is a large part of what made their armies so effective.

But in the Total War engine everyone has perfect command over all their units, everybody can deploy in multiple lines and execute complicated flanking manoeuvres. That rather erodes the advantages the Romans had.

(Edit re: Recklessness: especially in the mid-early republic, lots of Roman armies were, far more so than armies led by generals trained in the Hellenistic tradition. And I do count Hannibal here. Hannibal taught the Romans what happens if you don't take care to choose your ground. A lot of the advantages I describe above only developed over time.)

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Ptolemaios 16:51 06-21-2011
Another aspect of Roman warfare in the later era that can´t be displayed in the game is the the building of fortifications. Of course you can build a camp, when you have a general leading an army, but we all know that sieges are not a streght of M2TW or RTW. You also can´t build a wall arround a besieged city, like Ceaser did at Alesia. So another advantage that the Romans had over Gauls and other armies (which has nothing to do with stats or morale) is gone.

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Arjos 17:45 06-21-2011
Add to that internal divisions, most of the time caused by the Romani...

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Randal 18:15 06-21-2011
Though to be fair, the Romans had plenty of those themselves at various times. Ask king Mithridates of Pontus about how to exploit them sometime...

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Arjos 20:31 06-21-2011
Absolutely, all these features should be added by CA in new games...

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