The complete lack of any decent spear is going to suck.
Wish me luck.
The complete lack of any decent spear is going to suck.
Wish me luck.
Started a quick one last night, without a lot of planning, just to see how it went and, wow! I was out of $ fast and got hammered by the turks right after I got big C. What killed me is that 5 years in I still didn't have a single governor named. The luck of the draw gave me 1 3accumen and no 4 or higher accumen unit leaders. I restarted and am going to try things a little different. Will report back.
I never liked playing with them. Prob my least favorite.
Welcome to the Org, dickey1331!
Good luck, RRMike, you have chosen a torturous path indeed.![]()
The .Org's MTW Reference Guide Wiki - now taking comments, corrections, suggestions, and submissions
If I werent playing games Id be killing small animals at a higher rate than I am now - SFTS
Si je n'étais pas jouer à des jeux que je serais mort de petits animaux à un taux plus élevé que je suis maintenant - Louis VI The Fat
"Why do you hate the extremely limited Spartan version of freedom?" - Lemur
"MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone
I wouldn't call them very tough, one can manage them if you are cautious enough and make a blitz in the direction of Constantinople-Bulgaria-Greece-Serbia. I did, for once - in high. Never tried late - nor with any other faction. My belief that I wouldn't have time to conquer all the map hinders my attempts thereof.
I've managed to be successful with the Byz in High as well -- but only once (at least that I can recall). I still maintain they're one of the most difficult factions outside of the Early period.
Yeah, same here.
Another reason I've hardly ever played in the Late period is due to the prevalence of gunpowder units. Once they start to become common, I start to lose interest.
"MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone
I agree. I can call tough any high faction that is under immediate threat of the Horde. Thus, my list of tough factions in high (from the toughest and to the easier ones): Russians, Turks, the Byz, the Polish. I guess Russian game in high is the very essence of challenge. Never had the courage to try them myself. Another kind of tough faction in high is the French through having to split your attention between the sundered parts of the empire.
I never train gunpowder units - their efficiency is pathetic. When I reach the late I just disregard them (for myself) and make fun of them (for the AI).
“The majestic equality of the laws prohibits the rich and the poor alike from sleeping under bridges, begging in the streets and stealing bread.” - Anatole France
"The law is like a spider’s web. The small are caught, and the great tear it up.” - Anacharsis
And a "Welcome back!" to you as well.![]()
The .Org's MTW Reference Guide Wiki - now taking comments, corrections, suggestions, and submissions
If I werent playing games Id be killing small animals at a higher rate than I am now - SFTS
Si je n'étais pas jouer à des jeux que je serais mort de petits animaux à un taux plus élevé que je suis maintenant - Louis VI The Fat
"Why do you hate the extremely limited Spartan version of freedom?" - Lemur
Save it for later mate, for later.. ;)Originally Posted by Martok
The Caravel Mod: a (very much) improved
vanilla MTW/VI v2.1 early campaign
Please make sure you have the latest version (v3.3)
Since v3.3 the Caravel Mod includes customised campaigns for huge and default unit settings
Download v3.3
Info & Discussion Thread
My favourite faction. Playing high and especially late is tricky. In high, you still have the varangians. As I see you are searching for challenge, you can reduce their use once you survive the Horde 1-2 units per stack; not that you have much time to train many Varangians before the Horde arrives... But let's go back to surviving strategy.
Don't underestimate their power. They, not the byz infantry, are the infantry backbone of your late/high armies. Reason for that is simple: they are very effective in engaging the enemy troops such as other spears and esp. cavalry. They have also a large unit number, gain strength from the ranks so they do it better than the Byz infantry. Your other strength are the archers. Byzantines enjoy arbalests, which are anti-armour but also extremely reliable archer unit such as the Trebizonds (+1 valour in Trebizond) or the Bulgarian brigands, which are cheaper as an upkeep, + 1 valour in Bulgaria and have relatively the same status. These are excellent against less armoured targets and horse archers. Actually, the key fighting the horde is spears + many arbalests and archers. Varangians are your killing machines but are slow to train and it will take time to build the infrastructure in Constantinople or other places. Well, they definately have a good use. Urban militia is also a good shot: it can be used very well as a flanking unit vs. armoured troops. The Pronoiai and Byzantine cavalry are your best shots for cavalry. The second are mobile, multi-purpose horse archers, the second are your best mobile cavalry (Kataphraktoi are slow and with lower attack; they are also more vulnerable to armour piercing units; redundant, in my style for high/late; I only train them if I need to refill my general unit). Use Nicaea exclusively and only to build pronoiais and built there a Master Horse breeder to increase the valour bonus from the province. There could even be about 5-6 cavalry units (with the general) in each of your full stack army, later on.
Problem: spears, Byz infantry, urban militia have low morale. Solution: build churches, build armour upgrades (if the units are for the West) as well. Byzantines were pious people, actually their Empire was based on religion.
Byzantines used to have Eastern and Western Domestikos that assumes different type of organization as well. West is a challenge: in High, and esp. if you dare to play in late (no Varangians there as well), you will face challenges: Chivalric men-at-arms are one of the most dangerous units. You don't really have much to counter it. The Pronoiai don't always cope with them, the same is true for your other units. Kill it with arrows! It's not very honourable but it's effective. Fighting in the West you should try to bring high-star generals. And yes, you will see many costly victories. Key is to have the base to replace the huge losses you will have. That's why my eyes always look at the East, at least at first. In the Western stack, Byzantine infantry should be reduced to around 2 units per stack, and can even be completely replaced by the Varangians, if available.
East: Arid ground, hills, nice sights and weather, olives! What can a man not dream of? After I fulfil my duty and conquer Constantinople and try to take Greece and Bulgaria (but not at any rate); I prefer bribing one of them. Sometimes, I leave Greece to the Italians for the time being or Bulgaria to the Hungarians (when this happen it is for longer). So assuming you've captured Constantinople (defeat the army, starve it by siege or bribe it!), you move towards Trebizond and at the same time prepare for war against the infidels that is the Turks. Asia Minor is too small for both of us. Turks are dangerous and are getting stronger over time so you should kill them fast, preferrably in the first ten turns of your High/late campaign. Once you capture Constantinople, build spies as these guys are quite good in keeping the loyalty of your newly captured provinces high. In the High era, you still have a better armies than the Turks (which need infrastructure for their best units). Byzantine infantry is still a monster in the east. They do well against the muslim infantries, perfect in the forests. Your single unit of Varangians can fight perfect in arid (not desert) ground. You have decent cavalry, though you should try to engage the enemy bodyguards in the woods or with spears; you know what your foot archers do with enemy horse archers? Right! High duel with the Turks is a challenge as it requires fighting on numerous forms. I personally follow Shades Wolf advice and move from troops to Trebizond and then attack Rum (works perfect also for late). For High, I often attack also Anatolia. Sometimes, the enemy also attacks and you see how this chess-board system works... You will sometimes be outnumbered, in other times you will outnumber. I have quite good memories from resisting a Turkish raid in Nicaea with inferior army comprised of Byz infantry. These guys do well in the woods and the clock is always on your side and stimulates the attacker to be more active as it should be!
Once you finish with the Turks, you limit your hunger for lands, develop your economy, increase your army as much as you can feed it with spears, crossbows and archers and a little bit cavalry and Varangians. Armenia and Georgia offer excellent defensive ground vs. the Horde even in expert. Once you destroy the first waves of the Horde... Well, I would go for the Holy Land. As always, my motivation is not only religious. The Byzantine infantry are superior to the Muslim infantry! By the way, sometimes, the Byz infantry unit leader get good virtues, which increased its valour. In desert these are quite good.
I hope this helps!
Mercenaries: I use them in limited numbers. And mainly as... Billmen!!! I always hire these guys and keep them as a regular army. The other mercenaries are costly and the results are mixed. I am hiring Chivalric sergeants only in critical situation such as a French crusade (Late/Expert; that came as a shock after preferring the English as allies) in the opening turns of the game. Well, I won, and the Chivalric sergeants just fought decently; my other spears also did well. The reason I dislike these sergeants is their low morale. If morale is low, you are not really up to the honour to fight for the Rhomaioi!
Well, sometimes, I get exotic units such as ALan Mercenary or Almughavars. These are worth acquiring, if you have the money.
Governors: A governor is better than no governor at all. For the governor of Constantinople I don't always pick out the best administrator but one with more stars on it and make him a solid general. 2-3 feathers of acumen are just fine. Later one I can marry him for one of my princesses and strip him of titles and give him another title. Fine and happy! And don't forget to invest in agriculture and a little bit in trade (which is nevertheless sufficient if you start a trade with Egypt or Italy)
Last edited by Prince Cobra; 10-28-2011 at 13:01.
R.I.P. Tosa...
I played high Byz expert only once and in this game, while I headed westward, the Turks captured Trebizond on the vey first turn. I can't guarantee that it will happen in other games, but one must expect this sooner or later (in my case it was too soon. It reminds me of a historic fact - the Ottoman Empire once had a sultan called Bayzid Yildirim. The latter nickname signifies "lightning-fast" in Turkish. Perhaps the game sultan could be called that as well).
It happened once in a High campaign. Occupation of my beloved trebizond province is a move i can not forgive. The result was war very few turns after I recaptured Constantinople.
By the way, in Late Turks tend to attack Anatolia. I often make spy and send it there to gain stars and foment rebellions. I Unfortunately, unless you are very lucky with defeating the rebel army in Constantinople and bribing the remains quickly, I don't see how you would get a spy quickly. I love spies, by the way, and I am quite happy the Byz have a discount for them.![]()
Last edited by Prince Cobra; 10-28-2011 at 18:47.
R.I.P. Tosa...
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