There is nothing historical about medieval warfare having to be a plodding affair.
Ancient warfare was a plodding affair between petty kingdoms until the Assyrians. Then it was a plodding affair again until the Persians and Cyrus the Great. Then it was plodding until Philip, Alexander and the Macedonians, then until the Romans, etc. etc.
The 100 Years War would have ended a lot sooner if Henry V had lived a little longer, and not just because of Agincourt. He was as great a diplomat and, once he'd learned a thing or two, a strategist as he was a soldier: Allying with Genoa to drive the French ships from the channel, playing the French royal factions against each other like a master, and so on. He was living proof that the only reason the dynastic wars between France and England lasted so long is because neither side had a king like Harry before or after. He was on the brink of accomplishing things his forebearers and successors could never acheive. If the man had lived 10 more years, he could have been the Alexander of his day.
If you're rolling your eyes at the "great man" theory of history, fine. You can believe, like Tolstoy did, that nations are swept like ships by the winds of greater forces and that the "great man" has no more function than that of the figurehead on a ship. However, all this talk about how going slowly is a sign of depth and realism is obvious rot. This is a game set in the time of the Mongols, the Ottomans, Saladin, the Western Crusades, and the Timurids -- all of whon pulled off major military expeditions that transversed continents and would be a challenge to pull off today with detailed staff planning following the same routes and studying those medieval campaigns as precedents. The idea that conquering a village or two a year is the best that could be done is absurd on its face.
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