Just wondering when I might expect to be able to move to the next tiers of roman reforms i.e early republican/late/early Imperial etc, is it date related or does it rely on certain prerequisites like the marian reforms in vanilla?
Just wondering when I might expect to be able to move to the next tiers of roman reforms i.e early republican/late/early Imperial etc, is it date related or does it rely on certain prerequisites like the marian reforms in vanilla?
There are two reforms in EB: Polybian, when you switch from early hastati etc to hastati proper; and Marian, like in vanilla. They are currently date determined - IIRC 209 and 107 BC or thereabouts. I think they just happen at that time, unlike in vanilla when there is a chance they will happen at that time or every year thereafter.
There are also an Imperial reform, but as yet there is no trigger for it, so early Imperial units are only available in custom battles.
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that wil change tough. I don't know on wich they will be based but I'm quite sure they will.Originally Posted by Simon Appleton
One bug with the Marius reforms. The units are unavailable outside of Italy, and not in Rome. And wow are those units great, the antesignani are gods.
Last edited by BigTex; 02-18-2006 at 19:10.
Wine is a bit different, as I am sure even kids will like it.
"Hilary Clinton is the devil"BigTex
~Texas proverb
Yeah we know. But the bug is already fixed. So we'll only have to wait on the patch. Wich shouldn't take to long anymore.Originally Posted by BigTex
On the subject of romans how come I cant train any roman units outside any of my original cities, in fact most of the cities have no troop option in the slightest, what am i missing?
Your not missing anything, its a bug. If you go into the export buildings folder and look at the roman units all of them require a type 1 government. Delete that requirement and they should be available to you elsewhere, worked with the marius units.
Wine is a bit different, as I am sure even kids will like it.
"Hilary Clinton is the devil"BigTex
~Texas proverb
ok cool thx is there a fix or bug report that shows how to do this, almost had an epileptic fit scrolling through the file :(
What is the intent of the restrictions? I assume we are supposed to be able to recruit post-Marian units in the homelands (type I govt) and provinces (type II govt), but not in the others?Originally Posted by BigTex
*wonders if there is an FAQ somewhere that he can read and learn about this stuff*
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
The intention is to show that the early Romans drew their troops from the home areas only, and to give the later Roman player a choice - some government types will alter the province to be more Roman-like, allowing the training of legions, others auxilia, others local allies.
One of these days I'll write up a long discussion about the governments and what we are attempting to show with their implementation.
It is NOT a bug that the Romans can't build outside of their home areas, though recruitment of foreign troops is something we had not implemented at all for the Romans in the past build.
Making the Camillan Romans available outside of the home areas is not something we recommend for accuracy reasons.
Khelvan is so sexy.
And mofos who moderate, thanks a lot for screwing up my wonderful screename. I quote a fantastic song from one of the greatest albums from one of the most eclectic bands ever, and I'm punished. Alright, so it was overtly filthy, but hey, everyone on this forum has already been violated by rendered Gaesatae wangs. What was a cheesy sexual reference going to do? Other than show my immature sense of humor.
And yes, Khelvan, even if it was you, you are still sexy.
I look forward to that discussion! The government system is one of the most interesting things about EB I think.Originally Posted by khelvan
I would ask what you mean by "home" though? Does "home" mean type I government controlled areas, or does it mean type I and II? Or does the definition change based on the reform phase (with Legion recruitment being expanded as the reforms proceed)?
P.S. Sorry if I am asking for easy answers to painstakingly crafted scripts. ;)
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
*raises hand*Originally Posted by We all need someone
Point of Order: Relevance?
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
In this case "homelands" is a short hand for where romans recruited legions before the Marian Reforms. Basically the central Italian peninsula.Originally Posted by Trithemius
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Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
Didn't mean any direspect to the Eb crew. I had just gotten round to allowing marius units outside Italy in my game so I thought the info might be of use. Werent leve's taken from cities conquered outside of Italy?
Wine is a bit different, as I am sure even kids will like it.
"Hilary Clinton is the devil"BigTex
~Texas proverb
Plenty of relevance. Khelvan obviously watches over us all in all these topics, so everyone should know of his uttermost sexiness.
And Rebel against the Smilies!
Ah, thanks for that.Originally Posted by QwertyMIDX
Am I correct in assuming that the intent is for Camillan and Polybian legions to be recruited from type I government areas, for Marian legions to be recruited from type I and II government areas, and for Imperial legions to be recruited from type I, II, and III government areas? Or something in this mould?
I'm trying to work out what's a deliberate feature and what's an undocumented feature. :)
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
Originally Posted by We all need someone
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You anger them...
Originally Posted by Trithemius
Naw, that's not quite it. Camillan and Polybian are recruited in a slightly smaller area than type 1's (although we'll see what happens with that, Roman colonization of southern italy is a debate right now). Marian and Imperial are both type II AFAIK, I don't think you get much in type III in the way of legions proper, romanized auxilia is the order of the day out there I think.
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
Thanks!Originally Posted by QwertyMIDX
I look forward to the Spreadsheet of All-Knowing alluded to by Khelvan in his stickied government post. :)
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
I should note that we are currently debating the dynamic triggers that will lead to the three Roman reforms. Camillan to Polybian, Polybian to Marian, Marian to Imperial. And the eventual fourth, Imperial to Augustan.
Some factors being tossed about are: Exposure to the fighting styles of certain cultures, large defeats and/or conquering large areas, and other factors.
We're hoping to reflect, somewhat, the driving forces behind these real reforms, though of course they did not happen overnight in history. We are welcome to new ideas on how to do this within the limitations of the game engine.
I was thinking about this myself. While not scholarly works, I often use wargaming references for "casual reference" purposes so I had a look at the D.B.M. List Book#2; they are not especially detailed by any stretch but the tend to be rigorously savaged by hordes of pedants... er historical wargamers... on a regular basis.Originally Posted by khelvan
Their (relevant) sections are:
Camillan Roman, 400 BC - 275 BC
Polybian Roman, 275 BC - 105 BC
Marian Roman, 105 BC - 25 BC
Early Imperial (presumably Augustan) Roman, 25 BC - 197 AD
Their lists suggest the war against Pyrrhos as the catalyst for the Camillan->Polybian shift - on the basis that a revision was required for dealing with the sorts of forces deployed by the Epeirotes; while Marius and Augustus were reponsible for initiating the major changes for the periods that are associated with them.
I was actually wondering for a while "Should I let myself lose to the Epeirotes?" in order to spark a change in military pattern. ;)Originally Posted by khelvan
I suppose the downside of having defeat as a trigger is that some players won't ever get the trigger which, while making some sense (if you can conquer the world with hastati, why do you need evocati?), also means that some people might not see the fancy unit models.
I think the big decision would probably be: do you use historical triggers (i.e. those things that brought about the changes in actual history); or do you base them on the flow of the game (assuming that it is an exercise in speculative history). Historical triggers might be something like facing a large Epeirote army in battle (or even losing to one), or even dates? Game triggers might include having unrest in Rome coincide with a certain number of estates or larger farm improvements being built, or the faction's territory reaching a certain extent (all of the Italian Peninsular for Camillan->Polybian; or a whole lot of provinces for Marian->Augustan)?
EDIT: Some pedant I turn out to be...
Last edited by Trithemius; 03-05-2006 at 01:01.
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
Post-Marian units should, perhaps, be recruitable in Type III areas. For example, many of Caesar's legions were recruited from amongst the Spanish regions (like his beloved X Fretensis).
Spain has type 2 gov'ts for the Romans, in fact about 50% of the map can take type 2 gov'ts for the Romans.
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Last edited by QwertyMIDX; 02-25-2006 at 06:04.
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
I would advocate against large defeats as a trigger for the Romani reforms, for the simple reason that they are quite rare, if not impossible, for most players blooded on RTW and EB in the past months. Exposure to other cultures or to a particular unit would be nice.
And, though this isn't very relevant, is it possible to script the appearance of large eleutheroi armies at certain set times, e.g. to duplicate the Yuezhi moving into the northeast in the future when they are eliminated as a faction, or to duplicate the Cimbri-Teutone migrations? If that were possible then you would also be able to trigger off the reforms quite easily.
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I was also thinking - is there some way of allowing units to be "retrained" into their reform versions? I always found it a bit of a pain in vanilla RTW when my reform came through and I suddenly could not refit my veteran legions.
Do the script experts have any ideas about how this could be done? Or is it pipe-dream material?
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
Just to make you feel mroe at ease, our current plans for the Polybian reforms are control of portions of Sicily and the Celtic Provinces in Northern Italy and a minimum date. The Marian ones are looking like control of distant, hostile, underdevloped provinces, establishment of slave estates in Italy, and a general with some sort of 'reformer' trait.
History is for the future not the past. The dead don't read.
Operam et vitam do Europae Barbarorum.
History does not repeat itself. The historians repeat one another. - Max Beerbohm
Pipe-dream I guess. Oh well. :)Originally Posted by Trithemius
Trithemius
"Power performs the Miracle." - Johannes Trithemius
Did you mean 197 AD? If you did, then does this mean that Septimius Severus changed the military after securing his power to form the BI roman legions?Originally Posted by Trithemius
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