Everyone always seems to make their campaigns seem exciting, whereas mine tend to feel like a hard slog and a chore at times!
Everyone always seems to make their campaigns seem exciting, whereas mine tend to feel like a hard slog and a chore at times!
Improving the TW Series one step at a time:
BI Extra Hordes & Unlocked Factions Mod: Available here.
Awesome, frederick.It looks like the HRE is off to a great start, with promises of a glorious future!
Oh, and I agree with Ciaran that launching a Crusade so soon was a very bold move on your part. Looks like the risk paid off, though.![]()
"MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone
The Conquest continue...
1126 A.D.
News of Egyptian forces gathering to retake Antioch reaches Prince Herrmann. He can only wait and wonder what the Egyptians will throw at his worn crusaders. Meanwhile men of the cloak pour in to the harbor at Palestine and make the journey north to the re-claimed holy land.
Back at home informants report that the French have pushed the English into the the sea having secured the provinces of Normandy, Brittany, and the Aquitaine.
1127 A.D.
Emperor Conrad III rendezvous with hundreds of swordsmen at Franconia. Then he marches north with them to rejoin the veterans of the Pomeranian campaign. Reunited they strike at the warlords of Prussia.
Out numbered more then three to one the elite soldiers of the Empire march confidently towards the enemy. In the distant they spot the banners of the rebel leader Adolf von Mahren.
The forces of the Empire maneuver and strike at Mahren's unit.
With Mahren slain the rebels loose their will to fight.
Having suffered few casualties the Emperor pardons the prisoners.
1129 A.D.
Word from Poland reaches the Emperor that they are under siege by Lithuanian rebels led by Herrmann von Lothringen. The Emperor immediately marches towards Poland. They are joined by the Brandenburg garrison. At this show of force the rebels take flight and Poland is relieved without a fight.
Meanwhile in the Middle East rebels strike at the Egyptian province of Palestine.
Emperor Conrad III follows in his fathers footsteps as a powerful leader.
1130 A.D.
The sultan chooses to ignore the rebel raids in his southern lands and marches on Antioch.
The Second Battle at Antioch
A small unit of horse archers is dispatched from the main German force to scout the enemy.
The scouts watch as the enemy force, outnumbering them nearly two to one, approaches.
German archers send volley after volley to the ranks of the aggressors. The enemy forces turn out to be largely untrained and poorly equipped. After being cut down by numerous volleys the attackers take flight.
Several months after the battle, word reaches Prince Herrmann that Turkish decedents have rallied troops to the south in Palestine.
1132 A.D.
Emperor Conrad's only son, Prince Otto, is knighted.
War breaks out between the Spanish and the Aragonese. The Emperor chooses to side with the strongly backed Spanish.
The Emperor dispatches his veteran swordsmen from the Prussian campaign to Switzerland to gather for another crusade.
Prince Otto, having looked up to his successful brother Prince Herrmann, put forth much effort into his studies of warfare. He is sent south to protect the rich lands of Provence.
1137 A.D.
The crusade departs for Edessa led by the Emperor's brother Prince Lothair.
1143 A.D.
The Third Battle at Antioch
The keep at Antioch is completed just months before the attack.
Scouts reveal that again the crusaders are outnumbered two to one and that the enemy has brought cavalry this time.
After sequestering the enemy cavalry's attempts to flank. German swordsmen repel the poorly trained enemy foot soldiers.
1144 A.D.
The crusaders march into Edessa without a fight.
The Turkish declare Jihad on the German forces at Edessa.
1145 A.D.
Prince Otto reaches Provence.
1148 A.D.
The Great Emperor Conrad III dies. Prince Otto is coronated at the age of thirty-two. To support his brothers, the Emperor and his honor guard sneak out of the kingdom and sail to Antioch disguised as simple merchants. The following year the new Emperor marries the daughter of one of the Antioch elite.
1149 A.D.
The Emperor takes advantage of hostilities between the Turks and the Egyptians and marches in to Tripoli. The garrison holes up in the castle but the Turkish army quickly marches in to lift the siege.
The Battle for Tripoli
Turkish calvary press the western flank of the Emperor's forces while the Sultan's foot soldiers move on the eastern flank.
Archers keep the Turkish calvary at bay while the veteran German swordsmen engage the Turks in melee. The Turks are no match for the rugged Crusader veterans.
The Sultan falls during the battle of Tripoli. With no heirs, the lands of Syria and Palestine are left ungoverned.
1150 A.D.
Lesser nobles in Bavaria abuse the discovery of the Emperor's absence inciting the peasants to revolt.
Will Lord von Dassel, Imperial Chamberlin of the Empire, be able to quell the peasant dissent in the absence of the Emperor?
Tune in next time!
fredrick
Awesome, frederick! I'm really enjoying this tale describing the sagas of the HRE; you're a good storyteller.![]()
"MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone
Thanks, glad you like it!
Hmm, I don't know why but after the Emperor died the heir that was in Provence mysteriously appeared in Antioch.
New faction leaders always appear in the most developed province: the computer assumes that is you capital. Beware though that loyalty will plummet if your emperor becomes seperated from his empire. Getting him back may not prove easy however.Originally Posted by fredrick
Great story, BTW.
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Very neat. But what´s up with your arky display? It seems to show the total number of one troop type, not the individual units (or at least I think so, seeing the 1127 picture, as even on the highest setting I doubt any unit would have 360 soldiers) and their strength.
I´m looking forward to the next update.
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