So...if I make a faction which has 50,000 mnaii in the treasury my protectorate, I would be a very rich man the next turn?
So...if I make a faction which has 50,000 mnaii in the treasury my protectorate, I would be a very rich man the next turn?
It would be a violation of my code as a gentleman to engage in a battle of wits with an unarmed person.-Veeblefester
Ego is the anesthetic for the pain of stupidity.-me
It is better to keep your mouth shut and be thought of as a fool than to open it and remove all doubt.-Sir Winston Churchill
ΔΟΣ ΜΟΙ ΠΑ ΣΤΩ ΚΑΙ ΤΑΝ ΓΑΝ ΚΙΝΑΣΩ--Give me a place to stand and I will move the earth.-Archimedes on his work with levers
Click here for my Phalanx/Aquilifer mod
Yes, I do believe I remember people saying there was something wrong with the money script because after one turn they gained many 100's of thousands of mnai....turned out a protectorate of theirs was the donor IIRC.
I've never had a protectorate in EB though, and only once in vanilla...
SSbQ*****************SSbQ******************SSbQ
ptolemy demanded that i become their protectorate, but i declined for two reasons: personal pride, even if it is a game i like to act like a REAL leader ie, no ones bitch. and the other reason was a war against the ptolemies could earn money in the long term. thinking ahead children![]()
I rarely even get the option to make them my protectorate, are there any special conditions?
"Something can be done, by careful analysis, to sort out truth from propaganda and legend. But this is where the real difficulties begin, since each student inevitably selects, constitutes criteria, according to his own unconscious assumptions, social, ethical or political. Moral conditioning, in the widest sense, plays a far greater part in the matter than most people- especially the historians themselves-ever realize."
-Peter Green
How about pwning their armies and being the resident of most of their former cities?
I do that but for some reason protectorate option never comes up![]()
"Something can be done, by careful analysis, to sort out truth from propaganda and legend. But this is where the real difficulties begin, since each student inevitably selects, constitutes criteria, according to his own unconscious assumptions, social, ethical or political. Moral conditioning, in the widest sense, plays a far greater part in the matter than most people- especially the historians themselves-ever realize."
-Peter Green
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