Welcome to my first NES. Sorry this is getting started a few days late, but the weather in my town was awful, and the internet got knocked out and I was snowed inside. Still, I hope that this turns out to be a long and fun NES for everybody.
This NES starts in 1865. Here is the background.
Map
Rules
Sample Nation Statistics
Byzantine Empire
Capital: Constantinople
Leader: Emperor Isaac Tiberios IV Doukas
Constitutional Imperial Monarchy: Liberal Senate
Dissent: 22%
Global Opinion: Neutral
Base IC: 32
Military Spending: 15
Public Spending: 6
Private Enterprise: 11
Army: 30 Divisions, 15 Cavalry Divisions
Army Quality: 6
Navy: 12 Battleships, 25 Squadrons
Navy Quality: 8
Background: After Manzikert, the Byzantines entered into a new age of prosperity that continues to this day. Despite minor losses in the Crusades and the occainsonal revolt in the Balkans, the Empire is doing very well. In the early 1800s, the Imperial Army invaded Egypt to oust Napoleon and has since occupied and used the country as a base to explore and colonize the Indian Ocean. It's major conflicts today lay with the Kingdom of Jerusalem which an increasingly large faction within the Imperial Senate wish to see absorbed back into the Empire, The Timurid Empire with whom it compete for influence in Ukraine and the Caucauses, and the Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth with whom it competes for influence with in the Balkans. It has lately been looking to Germany and and Japan as good strong allies to help them enclose their enemies.
Government and Elections
Government
You can change your government anytime provided you have good reason. Changes in government of course create dissent and unrests. Especially if they are changed too often. For the most part you have freedom to decide how exactly your government works, and explanations in orders or through stories will be appreciated.
Ruling Party/Ideology/Leader
This is your nation’s leader, ruling party and their general ideology. You will notice at the start of the NES most are conservative, but this can be changed through elections. I require you to have a leader so I know who to talk about in the updates.
Elections
I am going to let players decide most of the stuff about their elections. You can pick who is running, their platforms and even who wins. If you want a sense of chance in the equation however, you can ask me before an update, and I’ll pick.
Dissent
Dissent is the key indicator of your success and the stability of your government. Dissent rises in the following circumstances:
1. When you radically shift economic policies.
2. When you shift government types.
3. When a republic shifts control from one party to another.
4. When you lose a war
5. Other types of unfortunate events which can surprise you and have a wide variety of styles in which they are introduced.
Dissent falls in the following circumstances:
1. When a government successfully shifts to a more publicly preferred form.
2. when spending in welfare policies and public spending increases.
3. when you win a war
4. when a party is reelected to government
5. Other types of fortunate events
When you are over 25% dissent , you lose 1 IC in income. For every 5% more you go over 25%, you lose another 1 IC in income as well.
Economy
Base IC
This is the total income of your nation. Its split between several areas. How you spend each area is up to you, and there is only a few requirements. Once IC is banked, it cannot be shifted. If you are banking, please tell me otherwise it will just go to waste
Military- How much goes to your armies, navies and other branches of defense. Defense units must be bought with this. You cannot spend military IC on anything except defense units and military research. This can be banked up to 50 IC.
Public- How much goes to your public works projects. Infrastructure, Schools, Roads etc. If you have a project you want done, a good part of the income should come from here. This can be banked up to 50 IC
Private Enterprise- How much of your income is going to private contractors. This can be spent on nearly anything, but first think about if its something you would want to put in the hands of a private contractor. (For example its probably not a good idea to privatize your intelligence network, while its probably ok to use it towards a national railroad This system.) Private Enterprise Money can be put towards both Private and Military research. This cannot be banked.
Shifting IC Emphasis and Spending IC
Shifting IC
Your Base IC determines the total amount of IC per turn you gain, and from that the IC is divided into different aspects of your economy. You can shift the amount you want to have per turn in each section very easily, just put the shift into orders and it will be done. Beware, however, the consequences that a major shift will have upon your people and your dissent rating. War would provide reasonable basis for a radical shift in economic policy.
Military Units
Militia Division: 1 IC for 2 Divisions. These are moderately better forces than Irregulars, but still become mutinous if they are sent out on the offensive. They will be better during peacetime than irregulars, and they do put up almost as good of a fight on the defensive as regular Infantry.
Infantry/Mountain/Marine/Division: 1 IC for 1. These forces provide the standard military forces to most nations. Please describe what you are buying or they will be placed as regular infantry. A standard force includes all necessary support units, including artillery, medics and engineers.
Cavalry Division: 2 IC for 1: These mounted forces provide the first mobile force available to the nations of the world.
Naval Forces
Battleship: 2 IC for 1. Top of the line, modern fighting ships. They are large and pack a huge punch on the sea.
Squadron: 1 IC for 1. These forces are vital support for capital ships in that they provide protection against smaller and faster ships which can evade the larger guns of the dreadnoughts and battleships.
Global Opinion
Your nation's global opinion is the reflection that your empire gives to the rest of the nations of the world. If your global opinion is higher it will help in getting one of your citizens elected to the Council of Nations and make it more likely for popular rebellions in support of your nation, it will also make it easier to make alliances or trade deals. On the other hand, if your nation is feared or hated, all those things will be that much harder to do.
Attacking a nation which is more globally hated than your own will have a less negative effect on your own global opinion. If you attack a nation that is far more beloved, you will bring the wrath of global opinion down upon ye.
Scale:
Beloved-Admired-Respected-Liked-Neutral-Disliked-Resented-Hated-Feared
Military and Its Use
Warfare
Therefore, I must ask that when you send orders, describe your plan for the whole war, and leave the specific strategy to the generals in charge. On a related note, your generals can and will get better over time, so remember their names and keep them fighting to get a better military.
Artillery and early armor will both be considered automatically a part of divisions which are in your army, supporting part of Infantry and Cavalry divisions only. Research into these aspects of war will significantly increase the strength of your divisions in comparison to your enemies. These effects are reflected within your Military Quality section of the stats.
Military Quality
Your military quality demonstrates how well advanced, experienced, or trained your armed forces are. This can be modified in several ways, including through Projects which revolve around military training, fighting wars, and researching new military technologies. Some nations have naturally higher qualities than others, Germany and Switzerland being the prime examples. Research is the best way to decrease the gap, and winning wars will have a positive effect on your military's quality as well. Losing wars could possible decrease quality, but it is far easier to increase than decrease. Remember to keep up with modernization or you could find yourself horribly beaten if you go to war.
It goes on a scale from worst the best at 1-10.
Research
There is no research funds yet, though they can be developed in time. You may trade blueprints of a tech you have to another nation. Please say what you are trading them (money, another tech's blueprints, both etc) and for what/why you are giving it. When trading blueprints, you may give them a 50%, 25% or 10% advancement on their tech. For example, say Japan is researching Early Electricity, a 100 IC tech, and Britain who already has this tech gives them blueprints for a 50% discount it. It will now cost Japan only 50 IC to research it. This also works if the nation has already started researching the tech. Say Japan has 50 IC into Early Electricity and again Britain gives them blueprints for a 50% discount. Japan will immediatly finish the tech next turn.
Money will always be rounded up to the nearest IC on the discounts.
If you suggest a tech, and I like it, your nation might also get a slight head start on it. Information on techs which discounts their cost can also be gained through espionage and captured military equipment.
Stories/Nation Development
Stories are encouraged. Also developing characters and such for me to mention in the update is a bonus. Writing backgrounds for how certain things in your nation work in your orders is also a good idea.
Projects
You can work on projects, in anyway you choose. You can even tie them into techs you have just researched. (Say you just researched, reinforced concrete and now you want to build a skyscraper.) Most projects should be paid with through public and possibly private spending. You tell me what you want, I’ll tell you the cost.
This NES starts in 1865. Here is the background.
Spoiler :
In our timeline, The Turks smashed the Byzantines at the Battle of Manzikert leading to their eventual take over of Anatolia and the rise of the Ottoman Empire. One of the reasons for their loss was the still unexplained disappearance of Byzantine general Joseph Tarchaneiotes. But what if Emperor Romanus, the commander at this battle hadn’t decided to split his army and send Tarchaneiotes off to probably be massacred by the Turks? Had Emperor Romanus marched to Manzikert with his full army and an extra commander at his side, he might have been able to crush the Turks, and eventually lead the way for a campaign eastward. Eventually capturing back the Middle East and forever crippling the Turkish Menace.
After the Byzantine victory at Manzikert, the Middle East was recaptured and their rule extended to the borders of Persia. Still this couldn’t last. A brilliant Kurdish commander named Saladin began to beat back the Byzantine armies, eventually recapturing Jerusalem. The Byzantines were forced to call to the Catholic West for help. In 1180, The Pope launched a Crusade to recapture the Holy Land. French, English and German Knights poured into the area to wage war on Saladin’s armies and retake Jerusalem. Many years of war followed, and Saladin won amazing victories over the Crusaders and Byzantines, but in the end, their combined strength was too much. Upon Saladin’s death, a ceasefire was signed that surrendered most of the Middle East to the Arabs, but left Anatolia to the Byzantines and Jerusalem to the Crusaders.
Following the Crusades, The Byzantines entered a period of growth and stability. Occasional wars with the Arabs, Crusaders and Hungary to the West were fought, but overall things were peaceful. That is until the Mongol-Turkic Hordes of a man named Timur came to the footsteps of the empire.
The Empire of Timur existed out of the power vacuum left in Central Asia after the decline of the Il-Khanate and Golden Horde. Timur conquered nearly all of the Middle East and Russia and his empire stretched from Kiev to the western portions of China. Still however, the Timurids were never able to conquer the Russian city-state of Novgorod, though since it was nudged between them and Sweden, much greater powers, its status as any sort of threat was very little.
Despite The fearsome appearance of the Hordes of Timur, the Byzantines managed to hold their own against them. Timur made attempt after attempt to subdue the Byzantine Empire to his will and despite at one time advancing as far as Constantinople, he was never able to take the city. Timur died of old age in his campaign against the Byzantines, but not before placing his strongest son in charge of the Empire. The Byzantines would have attempted to take advantage of the death of Timur and attack the Timurids, but they were having their own problems with the growing power of Hungary.
While the Byzantines were busy fighting wars in the Middle East, Hungary and Poland, both now under the control of branches of the powerful Lithuanian Jagiellon Family, were consolidating their power in Europe. In 1465, at the Union of Lublin, a Polish Princess was married to a Hungarian King, uniting the two crowns into the Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth. A new superpower was born in Europe.
Farther to the west, the 100 Years War between England and France was coming to a close, Spain was in the process of finishing up their Reconquista in Iberia and an age of Nation-States and colonization was only right around the corner.
When the New World was discovered by Christopher Columbus a new age of Colonization began. British, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch colonist poured into the new continents as their respective nations attempted to set up Global Empires. Most of the Native Populations were wiped out by disease and war, however sizable populations remained in Peru and Mexico.
On the other side of the world, a similar scramble for trading posts was taking place in East Asia. European colonist continually defeated the various nations of Asia and set the terms of trade to favor themselves. Eventually the only nations to withstand the full onslaught of European technological superiority were the China, due to its vast size and Japan, who were at a similar level to the Europeans due to a flow of technology through Byzantium and then the Timurids.
As the colonial empires of the various nations grew, so did tensions among them. In 1754, war broke out between Great Britain, Prussia, The Byzantines and France, Spain, The Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth and Austria over various border disputes with the latter alliance’s defeat. The French Empire in the Americas was dismantled and Spain was severely weakened. Prussia was also able to secure control over much more of Germany, replacing Austria as the new dominant power in the area.
Despite Britain’s victory in the war, her colonies in North America also learned at this time that they were able to govern and defend themselves. In 1776, a large segment of Britain’s colonies rebelled in the America with the goal of establishing independence. By 1783 they were successful and the new nations of the American Union, with a strong federal government and anti-slavery laws, and the American Confederation, with a weaker central government and legal slavery, emerged.
The successful rebellion in Britain paved the way for similar revolutions in Spanish colonies, and eventually France itself. In the 1790s, France erupted into revolution to throw off the Bourbon Monarchy. The revolution here was also successful, largely due to the victories of a man named Napoleon Bonaparte.
Napoleon’s military victories in the revolution against at first French loyalist and later British, Austrian, German and Polish-Hungarian Troops lead to the continuation of France’s power in Europe despite being in chaos. In 1792, Napoleon invaded Egypt with the intent to use it as a base to destroy the French Royalist allies of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and Byzantium and eventually use it as a base from which to attack British possessions in India. Not long afterwards, the Byzantine Senate voted to attack Egypt to keep the French from gaining too much territory in the region. The Byzantine Imperial Army invaded and attacked Napoleon defeating him at several major battles, forcing him to retreat home.
Once back in France, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor, and then proceeded to attack and attempt to conquer most of the other powers in Europe. Prussia, Spain, Sweden, The Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth, Britain and the Byzantines all failed to defeat Napoleon in a divisive battle. In 1811, Napoleon concluded a secret treaty with the Byzantine Empire, to attack and divide up the Timurid Empire and then march to India. In 1812, He invaded, marching as far as Kiev before word finally reached that the Byzantines had betrayed him and not attacked. Nonetheless, Napoleon chose to continue his campaign eastward. By winter, he had sustained horrible casualties and found his supply lines stretched. Word also reached him of renewed attacks by Britain and Germany in the West. With no choice but to end his war, Napoleon retreated. By the time Napoleon reached France, he found his nation a wreck and his enemies united against him. Combined assaults from Britain, Prussia, Poland-Hungary and the Byzantine Empire eventually lead to the fall of his Empire, but with a conditional surrender. Napoleon was forced to step down as Emperor and instead took the position of Consul of the Second Republic. A position he held until his death in 1825.
The Napoleonic Wars greatly effected the world. It convinced the Germans that Prussian leadership would be needed to keep them safe, leading the way for the German Union to be born in 1815. Not long later, Similar actions took place in Italy. The Northern Italian Republic was born under Piedmontese and Tuscan leadership in 1821. The War also lead to the exile of most of the former French nobility to Haiti and eventually New Orleans, where they proceeding in setting up their own Bourbon Kingdom of Louisiana in the area, with the intent to eventually reclaim the throne of France. The wars also defocused European concentration on the Americas, allowing Japan to successfully annex lands from Alaska to California. Most of South America and Mexico also gained independence from Spain at this time.
Following the Napoleonic Wars, peace prevailed in Europe and the Americas. Colonization grew, as Britain sought to secure it’s hold in India, and the Byzantines began to use Egypt as a base from which to colonize and explore the Indian Ocean. In 1850, The California Republic entered the stage as the world’s newest country.
Now its 1865. The world has been without a major war for nearly 50 years, but tensions are growing. The French are seeking revenge for the losses, Russian nationalism threatens to tear apart the Timurid Empire, and all of the various American Nations are seeking to be the first to unite their continent. Can peace prevail or is war inevitable?
After the Byzantine victory at Manzikert, the Middle East was recaptured and their rule extended to the borders of Persia. Still this couldn’t last. A brilliant Kurdish commander named Saladin began to beat back the Byzantine armies, eventually recapturing Jerusalem. The Byzantines were forced to call to the Catholic West for help. In 1180, The Pope launched a Crusade to recapture the Holy Land. French, English and German Knights poured into the area to wage war on Saladin’s armies and retake Jerusalem. Many years of war followed, and Saladin won amazing victories over the Crusaders and Byzantines, but in the end, their combined strength was too much. Upon Saladin’s death, a ceasefire was signed that surrendered most of the Middle East to the Arabs, but left Anatolia to the Byzantines and Jerusalem to the Crusaders.
Following the Crusades, The Byzantines entered a period of growth and stability. Occasional wars with the Arabs, Crusaders and Hungary to the West were fought, but overall things were peaceful. That is until the Mongol-Turkic Hordes of a man named Timur came to the footsteps of the empire.
The Empire of Timur existed out of the power vacuum left in Central Asia after the decline of the Il-Khanate and Golden Horde. Timur conquered nearly all of the Middle East and Russia and his empire stretched from Kiev to the western portions of China. Still however, the Timurids were never able to conquer the Russian city-state of Novgorod, though since it was nudged between them and Sweden, much greater powers, its status as any sort of threat was very little.
Despite The fearsome appearance of the Hordes of Timur, the Byzantines managed to hold their own against them. Timur made attempt after attempt to subdue the Byzantine Empire to his will and despite at one time advancing as far as Constantinople, he was never able to take the city. Timur died of old age in his campaign against the Byzantines, but not before placing his strongest son in charge of the Empire. The Byzantines would have attempted to take advantage of the death of Timur and attack the Timurids, but they were having their own problems with the growing power of Hungary.
While the Byzantines were busy fighting wars in the Middle East, Hungary and Poland, both now under the control of branches of the powerful Lithuanian Jagiellon Family, were consolidating their power in Europe. In 1465, at the Union of Lublin, a Polish Princess was married to a Hungarian King, uniting the two crowns into the Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth. A new superpower was born in Europe.
Farther to the west, the 100 Years War between England and France was coming to a close, Spain was in the process of finishing up their Reconquista in Iberia and an age of Nation-States and colonization was only right around the corner.
When the New World was discovered by Christopher Columbus a new age of Colonization began. British, French, Spanish, Portuguese and Dutch colonist poured into the new continents as their respective nations attempted to set up Global Empires. Most of the Native Populations were wiped out by disease and war, however sizable populations remained in Peru and Mexico.
On the other side of the world, a similar scramble for trading posts was taking place in East Asia. European colonist continually defeated the various nations of Asia and set the terms of trade to favor themselves. Eventually the only nations to withstand the full onslaught of European technological superiority were the China, due to its vast size and Japan, who were at a similar level to the Europeans due to a flow of technology through Byzantium and then the Timurids.
As the colonial empires of the various nations grew, so did tensions among them. In 1754, war broke out between Great Britain, Prussia, The Byzantines and France, Spain, The Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth and Austria over various border disputes with the latter alliance’s defeat. The French Empire in the Americas was dismantled and Spain was severely weakened. Prussia was also able to secure control over much more of Germany, replacing Austria as the new dominant power in the area.
Despite Britain’s victory in the war, her colonies in North America also learned at this time that they were able to govern and defend themselves. In 1776, a large segment of Britain’s colonies rebelled in the America with the goal of establishing independence. By 1783 they were successful and the new nations of the American Union, with a strong federal government and anti-slavery laws, and the American Confederation, with a weaker central government and legal slavery, emerged.
The successful rebellion in Britain paved the way for similar revolutions in Spanish colonies, and eventually France itself. In the 1790s, France erupted into revolution to throw off the Bourbon Monarchy. The revolution here was also successful, largely due to the victories of a man named Napoleon Bonaparte.
Napoleon’s military victories in the revolution against at first French loyalist and later British, Austrian, German and Polish-Hungarian Troops lead to the continuation of France’s power in Europe despite being in chaos. In 1792, Napoleon invaded Egypt with the intent to use it as a base to destroy the French Royalist allies of the Kingdom of Jerusalem, and Byzantium and eventually use it as a base from which to attack British possessions in India. Not long afterwards, the Byzantine Senate voted to attack Egypt to keep the French from gaining too much territory in the region. The Byzantine Imperial Army invaded and attacked Napoleon defeating him at several major battles, forcing him to retreat home.
Once back in France, Napoleon crowned himself Emperor, and then proceeded to attack and attempt to conquer most of the other powers in Europe. Prussia, Spain, Sweden, The Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth, Britain and the Byzantines all failed to defeat Napoleon in a divisive battle. In 1811, Napoleon concluded a secret treaty with the Byzantine Empire, to attack and divide up the Timurid Empire and then march to India. In 1812, He invaded, marching as far as Kiev before word finally reached that the Byzantines had betrayed him and not attacked. Nonetheless, Napoleon chose to continue his campaign eastward. By winter, he had sustained horrible casualties and found his supply lines stretched. Word also reached him of renewed attacks by Britain and Germany in the West. With no choice but to end his war, Napoleon retreated. By the time Napoleon reached France, he found his nation a wreck and his enemies united against him. Combined assaults from Britain, Prussia, Poland-Hungary and the Byzantine Empire eventually lead to the fall of his Empire, but with a conditional surrender. Napoleon was forced to step down as Emperor and instead took the position of Consul of the Second Republic. A position he held until his death in 1825.
The Napoleonic Wars greatly effected the world. It convinced the Germans that Prussian leadership would be needed to keep them safe, leading the way for the German Union to be born in 1815. Not long later, Similar actions took place in Italy. The Northern Italian Republic was born under Piedmontese and Tuscan leadership in 1821. The War also lead to the exile of most of the former French nobility to Haiti and eventually New Orleans, where they proceeding in setting up their own Bourbon Kingdom of Louisiana in the area, with the intent to eventually reclaim the throne of France. The wars also defocused European concentration on the Americas, allowing Japan to successfully annex lands from Alaska to California. Most of South America and Mexico also gained independence from Spain at this time.
Following the Napoleonic Wars, peace prevailed in Europe and the Americas. Colonization grew, as Britain sought to secure it’s hold in India, and the Byzantines began to use Egypt as a base from which to colonize and explore the Indian Ocean. In 1850, The California Republic entered the stage as the world’s newest country.
Now its 1865. The world has been without a major war for nearly 50 years, but tensions are growing. The French are seeking revenge for the losses, Russian nationalism threatens to tear apart the Timurid Empire, and all of the various American Nations are seeking to be the first to unite their continent. Can peace prevail or is war inevitable?
Map
Spoiler :

Rules
Sample Nation Statistics
Byzantine Empire
Capital: Constantinople
Leader: Emperor Isaac Tiberios IV Doukas
Constitutional Imperial Monarchy: Liberal Senate
Dissent: 22%
Global Opinion: Neutral
Base IC: 32
Military Spending: 15
Public Spending: 6
Private Enterprise: 11
Army: 30 Divisions, 15 Cavalry Divisions
Army Quality: 6
Navy: 12 Battleships, 25 Squadrons
Navy Quality: 8
Background: After Manzikert, the Byzantines entered into a new age of prosperity that continues to this day. Despite minor losses in the Crusades and the occainsonal revolt in the Balkans, the Empire is doing very well. In the early 1800s, the Imperial Army invaded Egypt to oust Napoleon and has since occupied and used the country as a base to explore and colonize the Indian Ocean. It's major conflicts today lay with the Kingdom of Jerusalem which an increasingly large faction within the Imperial Senate wish to see absorbed back into the Empire, The Timurid Empire with whom it compete for influence in Ukraine and the Caucauses, and the Polish-Hungarian Commonwealth with whom it competes for influence with in the Balkans. It has lately been looking to Germany and and Japan as good strong allies to help them enclose their enemies.
Government and Elections
Government
You can change your government anytime provided you have good reason. Changes in government of course create dissent and unrests. Especially if they are changed too often. For the most part you have freedom to decide how exactly your government works, and explanations in orders or through stories will be appreciated.
Ruling Party/Ideology/Leader
This is your nation’s leader, ruling party and their general ideology. You will notice at the start of the NES most are conservative, but this can be changed through elections. I require you to have a leader so I know who to talk about in the updates.
Elections
I am going to let players decide most of the stuff about their elections. You can pick who is running, their platforms and even who wins. If you want a sense of chance in the equation however, you can ask me before an update, and I’ll pick.
Dissent
Dissent is the key indicator of your success and the stability of your government. Dissent rises in the following circumstances:
1. When you radically shift economic policies.
2. When you shift government types.
3. When a republic shifts control from one party to another.
4. When you lose a war
5. Other types of unfortunate events which can surprise you and have a wide variety of styles in which they are introduced.
Dissent falls in the following circumstances:
1. When a government successfully shifts to a more publicly preferred form.
2. when spending in welfare policies and public spending increases.
3. when you win a war
4. when a party is reelected to government
5. Other types of fortunate events
When you are over 25% dissent , you lose 1 IC in income. For every 5% more you go over 25%, you lose another 1 IC in income as well.
Economy
Base IC
This is the total income of your nation. Its split between several areas. How you spend each area is up to you, and there is only a few requirements. Once IC is banked, it cannot be shifted. If you are banking, please tell me otherwise it will just go to waste
Military- How much goes to your armies, navies and other branches of defense. Defense units must be bought with this. You cannot spend military IC on anything except defense units and military research. This can be banked up to 50 IC.
Public- How much goes to your public works projects. Infrastructure, Schools, Roads etc. If you have a project you want done, a good part of the income should come from here. This can be banked up to 50 IC
Private Enterprise- How much of your income is going to private contractors. This can be spent on nearly anything, but first think about if its something you would want to put in the hands of a private contractor. (For example its probably not a good idea to privatize your intelligence network, while its probably ok to use it towards a national railroad This system.) Private Enterprise Money can be put towards both Private and Military research. This cannot be banked.
Shifting IC Emphasis and Spending IC
Shifting IC
Your Base IC determines the total amount of IC per turn you gain, and from that the IC is divided into different aspects of your economy. You can shift the amount you want to have per turn in each section very easily, just put the shift into orders and it will be done. Beware, however, the consequences that a major shift will have upon your people and your dissent rating. War would provide reasonable basis for a radical shift in economic policy.
Military Units
Militia Division: 1 IC for 2 Divisions. These are moderately better forces than Irregulars, but still become mutinous if they are sent out on the offensive. They will be better during peacetime than irregulars, and they do put up almost as good of a fight on the defensive as regular Infantry.
Infantry/Mountain/Marine/Division: 1 IC for 1. These forces provide the standard military forces to most nations. Please describe what you are buying or they will be placed as regular infantry. A standard force includes all necessary support units, including artillery, medics and engineers.
Cavalry Division: 2 IC for 1: These mounted forces provide the first mobile force available to the nations of the world.
Naval Forces
Battleship: 2 IC for 1. Top of the line, modern fighting ships. They are large and pack a huge punch on the sea.
Squadron: 1 IC for 1. These forces are vital support for capital ships in that they provide protection against smaller and faster ships which can evade the larger guns of the dreadnoughts and battleships.
Global Opinion
Your nation's global opinion is the reflection that your empire gives to the rest of the nations of the world. If your global opinion is higher it will help in getting one of your citizens elected to the Council of Nations and make it more likely for popular rebellions in support of your nation, it will also make it easier to make alliances or trade deals. On the other hand, if your nation is feared or hated, all those things will be that much harder to do.
Attacking a nation which is more globally hated than your own will have a less negative effect on your own global opinion. If you attack a nation that is far more beloved, you will bring the wrath of global opinion down upon ye.
Scale:
Beloved-Admired-Respected-Liked-Neutral-Disliked-Resented-Hated-Feared
Military and Its Use
Warfare
Therefore, I must ask that when you send orders, describe your plan for the whole war, and leave the specific strategy to the generals in charge. On a related note, your generals can and will get better over time, so remember their names and keep them fighting to get a better military.
Artillery and early armor will both be considered automatically a part of divisions which are in your army, supporting part of Infantry and Cavalry divisions only. Research into these aspects of war will significantly increase the strength of your divisions in comparison to your enemies. These effects are reflected within your Military Quality section of the stats.
Military Quality
Your military quality demonstrates how well advanced, experienced, or trained your armed forces are. This can be modified in several ways, including through Projects which revolve around military training, fighting wars, and researching new military technologies. Some nations have naturally higher qualities than others, Germany and Switzerland being the prime examples. Research is the best way to decrease the gap, and winning wars will have a positive effect on your military's quality as well. Losing wars could possible decrease quality, but it is far easier to increase than decrease. Remember to keep up with modernization or you could find yourself horribly beaten if you go to war.
It goes on a scale from worst the best at 1-10.
Research
There is no research funds yet, though they can be developed in time. You may trade blueprints of a tech you have to another nation. Please say what you are trading them (money, another tech's blueprints, both etc) and for what/why you are giving it. When trading blueprints, you may give them a 50%, 25% or 10% advancement on their tech. For example, say Japan is researching Early Electricity, a 100 IC tech, and Britain who already has this tech gives them blueprints for a 50% discount it. It will now cost Japan only 50 IC to research it. This also works if the nation has already started researching the tech. Say Japan has 50 IC into Early Electricity and again Britain gives them blueprints for a 50% discount. Japan will immediatly finish the tech next turn.
Money will always be rounded up to the nearest IC on the discounts.
If you suggest a tech, and I like it, your nation might also get a slight head start on it. Information on techs which discounts their cost can also be gained through espionage and captured military equipment.
Stories/Nation Development
Stories are encouraged. Also developing characters and such for me to mention in the update is a bonus. Writing backgrounds for how certain things in your nation work in your orders is also a good idea.
Projects
You can work on projects, in anyway you choose. You can even tie them into techs you have just researched. (Say you just researched, reinforced concrete and now you want to build a skyscraper.) Most projects should be paid with through public and possibly private spending. You tell me what you want, I’ll tell you the cost.