Results 1 to 14 of 14

Thread: Parthian lineup with Elephants

Hybrid View

Previous Post Previous Post   Next Post Next Post
  1. #1

    Default Re: Parthian lineup with Elephants

    Against Egyptians with Parthia.. The only thing you have that can effectively kill chariots in melee is elephants.. Too bad I guess. You can pin them with Desert Cavalry and then charge them with Catas, but that path is costly..
    What about infantry? A large mass of semi-upgraded Eastern Infantry can take down a few chariot units. Chariots are vulnerable to even weak infantry. Especially when they are spearmen and recieve a combat bonus, but of course depending on what difficulty you play, your Eastern Infantry can rout quite easily, because chariots already cause a devaluation in morale to foot units.

  2. #2

    Default Re: Parthian lineup with Elephants

    Eastern Infantry work, but more costly and risky. IMO.
    "Cry, the beloved country, for the unborn child that is the inheritor of our fear. Let him not love the earth too deeply. Let him not laugh too gladly when the water runs through his fingers, nor stand too silent when the setting sun makes red the veld with fire. Let him not be moved when the birds of his land are singing, nor give too much of his heart to a mountain or a valley. For fear will rob him of all if he gives too much."

    Cry, the Beloved Country by Alan Paton.

  3. #3
    Philosophically Inclined Member CountMRVHS's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    USA
    Posts
    481

    Default Re: Parthian lineup with Elephants

    Well, after a few turns of war with Egypt things have really quieted down, so I'm not worried about facing their chariots anymore. I took Petra from them easily, which left them with the 3 Nile cities plus Siwa. From Petra I took a young family member and an all-cav, mostly HA army towards the Nile to pick off Egyptian armies in the field. There were a few close battles, where the Egyptians had several units of heavy chariots & chariot archers, but I managed to win them all thanks to my HA superiority. I knew I'd take some losses from the slingers and chariot archers, but I simply had so many HAs it didn't matter in the end. Heavy chariots fell very quickly to my HAs; chariot archers took longer but fell just as surely. A few turns later that army besieged and took Alexandria; I followed up with another army from Petra and took Memphis. Now that army is besieging Thebes and there are no large Egyptian stacks in sight. Once Thebes falls I'll regroup, then send a force to take Siwa and finish them off. That will put me up against the Scipii, who have taken all of Western Africa.

    The war in Anatolia proceeds apace, and just as I had predicted, as soon as my faction leader took Sardis, Pontus declared war. Actually, they didn't so much "declare" it as fail an assassination attempt . At this time I had finished training my first War Elephant unit in Susa, and sent them west with 2 cats, 6 Persian cav, 6 HAs, a general, and some Scythian and Sarmatian mercs. I've only had one battle involving the elephants, and they didn't play a part. I was relieving Tarsus by attacking the besieging Pontic army, and used my standard "HA-envelopment" tactic. The elephants, my shock-cav and general I left back while the HAs and Persian cav did their work. After a few minutes of getting shot up and some inconclusive skirmishing the Pontics had enough and quit the field. I pursued them north into Anatolia and that army is now laying siege to Mazaka. Hopefully the enemy will sally out and I'll be able to use my units to best effect, but my general is young and has the time to wait out the siege if need be.

    Elsewhere in Anatolia, as soon as Pontus declared war I pulled together an army from Armenia and sailed them down to Sinope. I could see that the Pontics had, typically, left their cities lightly defended and had their full-stack armies near their southern borders, so I was able to quickly take their capital. This distracted the Pontics enough for me to raise some Persian cav and HAs in Sardis and send them north to meet up with the Sinope army. En route, however, they were attacked by a small Pontic force, beat them, and I got a "man of the hour" quite unexpectedly -- a 4-star 20-year-old! With some mercs and reinforcements from the Sinope army, that force is now besieging Pergamum, which holds a full stack and seems to be one of only 2 areas of serious Pontic resistance (the other being the full-stack near Mazaka). Once those 2 towns fall it should be a leisurely mop-up operation.

    I still haven't won the short campaign because Seleucia is still around on Salamis and Sidon, but I think I'll try to play through the long campaign on this. Once Anatolia is secure my next major offensive will be to push through Africa, which means fighting the Scipii. I can't wait to fight Romans. After that I'll probably hop over the Bosphorus into Greece, try to get my 50 provinces, and take Rome for the win.

    CountMRVHS

  4. #4
    Typing from the Saddle Senior Member Doug-Thompson's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2003
    Location
    Fayetteville, AR
    Posts
    2,455

    Default Re: Parthian lineup with Elephants

    Quote Originally Posted by x-dANGEr
    Eastern Infantry work, but more costly and risky. IMO.
    Than elephants? I've never known EI to stampede.
    "In war, then, let your great object be victory, not lengthy campaigns."

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Single Sign On provided by vBSSO