Don Deity: Warlords 2.08, huge random continents map, epic speed

I have read the whole story the last two days. And i have to say that this is really the best story concerning CIV i have ever read. You did a very good job as a storyteller Snaaty!

And now for the quote above:
(Perhaps someone in this forum knows a little bit about Warhammer40k ;) )



This could be also a quote from DD or GS. :) Let the "Kampfpanzer" crush the Zulu forces to dust!

Welcome to the forums, Bill Payer.

And, frankly, as for the war with Shaka, I still smell doom...
(but, as always, nukes would help. :D)
 
If you want, we can have a polite and calm debate elsewhere so it won't seem like you don't go without a word.

Also, update soon, Snaaty!

You, Sir, are a Troll. Please move on and pollute something else.
 
Nice post but I wish you would cover more ground of the war in your posts.

If you had actually read this story all the way through, you'd know that the information about the Zulu war is the same as that given to all Don Diety's modern wars.

Why bother to have a sig, when you can't post more than 1 line? Move on troll, move on.

We all know about the seemingly endless supply of Zulu units. Bad luck combined with wave after wave of Zulu can seriously deplete your offensive stack which you'll need for the Mongolians. Have the vassals actually contributed any units to this war?
 
Two updates since I last checked!

I really like you tactics of isolating the beach head from the Zulu transport network till you have Modern Armour. Very nice indeed.

Keep it coming!
 
Plan is to finish the writeups for the Zulu war... ...this year:lol:

(I already played it some weeks ago, but havent had the time to finish the writeups so far)

YES! <11 days! We can finally finish the story! Wooh!
 
If I don't get the chance, what with my crazy family in town, Happy Non-Denominational Festive Assosciation to all, and especially to Snaaty. Now put down the nog and finish this thing already. :D
 
thanks to everybody reading and following so far, and merry christmas to all of you...

I´m already working on the last Zulu chapters and chances are pretty high that I will be able to finish them during the work-free periode to come:D

...

P.S:
I cant play out the war against the Mongols, due to my notebook not beeing able to cope with the ammount of units any more... ...damn huge maps... ...but if anyone is interested in doing so it would be great... ...I played up to 1 turn short of the war, just declare and try to win (will be hard, outnumbered 3:1, but well, with proper strat. planning it should be at least possible, I will add a little strat. planning to the save, because I already did some thinking, how to crack open the mongolian fortress...).

If somebody is willing to take on the final enemy and mails back the final save to me (winning or loosing save, doesnt matter, so all of you are invited to do so, no matter at what level you play:goodjob:) I will finish the story according to the save you provide me with. The first to PM me his email will get the save. I will only give out the save to one person, because I dont want several endings to the story, so the first PM gets the save... ...but remember: NO NUKES ARE ALLOWED:nuke:

Thanks in advance for helping me out:)
 
Bloodbath in Zululand, Part 3:

...

General Supersnaat was up very long that night. After he had received the loss statistics of the initial invasion of kwaDuwhatever from his leading officers, he was very worried. The losses had been far higher then expected… …Until WAG 1 and 2 would arrive, he would be completely outnumbered by the approaching Zulu forces, which the USoF secret service had numbered with 100 mobile battalions of various type…

In total, the invasion on kwaDuwhatever had cost 8 battalions of artillery and 2 battalions of tanks, leaving him with altogether 39 battalions to hold kwaDuwhatever. In numbers, that meant being outnumbered 3:1 and even with the advantage of having the first strike thanks to the cut infrastructure in the Kwadumbo Mountains it would be very hard to hold the city, because the Zulu army contained lots of artillery… …and artillery was already known from the wars on the other continent with the weird name to be able to bring down any enemy with enough numbers alone, no matter of what the enemy would field…

…

When the door to his quarter burst open only some hours later the next morning, General Supersnaat felt like he hadn’t slept at all… …in his bedroom all of a sudden where standing 3 of his communication officers:

“General Supersnaat, we have very worrying news…”

“I hope it’s important for waking me up that early…”

“Um… …yes… …we fear yes…”

“What is it then man… …YAWN… …stop stuttering and give me a proper report then soldier!”

“Umh… …SIR… …sorry… …SIR… …we have lost contact with WAG 1 and 2… …and we received a communiqué from London, from the Mongolian embassy… …Mongolia apparently has closed borders on us and is retreating all his diplomatic staff form USoF soil…

“WHAT???”

“Umh… …SIR… …sorry… …SIR… …we have lost contact with WAG 1 and 2… …and we received a communiqué from London, form the Mongolian embassy… …Mongolia apparently has closed borders on us and is retreating all his diplomatic staff…”

“Sh** up idiot… …I have heard you… …but that’s terrible… …what has happened then to WAG 1 and 2? They were still in Mongolian territory I guess when Kublai has closed the borders?”

“Yes Sir… …the last confirmed position of them was here:

136-1.JPG
Red: Where WAG 2 stranded and retreated. The X mark the battle sites described in the story to follow
Green: Where WAG 1 stranded and retreated. The X mark the battle sites described in the story to follow
Blue: Where the western fleet got attacked

…

WAG 2 just had arrived in Kazan and WAG 1 just had passed Almarikh in the railroad rented from Kublai…”

“Do we know what happened to them? Where they attacked by Mongolian forces? Are we at war with the Mongolians now?”

“No sir, apparently we aren’t at war with Mongolia, but we don’t know either what happened to our troops…”

…

In the harbour-office of Kazan, the commander of WAG 2 and some guy from the Mongolian authorities:

“WHAT??? We cant pass through Mongolian territory and we cant go back on our ships either???”

“Like I said sir, this has nothing to do with you, I really liked to help you, but we received the order directly form the Mongolian high command…”

“So what are we supposed to do now???”

I have orders to allow you and your men save passage on a direct way to the Zulu borders… …this is all I can do for you… …IF you don’t accept that offer, it would be considered an act of aggression from your side from the Mongolian high command and would mean WAR…”

“But I have to inform my leading officer about this… …and you are blocking ALL of our communication…”

“Like I said before, I would like to help you out, but I can’t… …all has been decided by the high command…”

…

2 Hours later, at the Zulu side of the border near Kazan, the commander of WAG 2 and his officers:

“Sir, I still think it was wrong to accept the Mongolian terms…”

“We didn’t have any other chance man… …open your eyes… …we cant even dare to retreat one step into Mongolian territory… …have you not seen the HUGE army they were fielding right outside Kazan, to back their demands?”

“But what do we do now Sir?”

“To be honest, I don’t really know… …I think our only chance is to try and reach WAG 1… …they must be somewhere near Almarikh… …if we manage to unite forces with them, we might have a chance to survive this after all… …we are 21 battalions strong and the WAG 1 contains of 25 battalions… …if we are able to dig in together with them in the right location (like a forested hill), we should stand a chance…”

“So we are heading towards Almarikh now?”

“Yes, we are staying as close to the Mongolian border as possible… …ALL men should stay together and be at guard… …the Zulu might attack us at any time now… …this will mean a huge detour, but it might very well be our only chance…”

…

2 days later, near Nongoma, at the wester bank of the Nongoma River:

“Sir, the Zulu have destroyed all brides crossing the river…”

“We have to cross it anyways… …have the men build a provisional bride…”

“But we will be easy prey for the Zulu artillery when we try to cross the river then… …and they have gathered a quite large army in Nongoma, our scouts report… …25 battalions right now and constantly growing…”

“We have to try… …if we do nothing we will be trapped here… …and once we run out of supplies, we are even easier pickings for the Zulu…”

…

6 hours later…

“Sir, we have finished erecting the provisional bride…”

“Any news about the Zulu forces in Nongoma?”

“They aren’t showing any activity… …but they have increased their strength again… …there are now more then 30 battalions there… …and the new arrivals are mostly artillery…”

“Let’s go then… …now or never…”

35 minutes later…

“The Zulu, the Zulu are coming… …we have to retreat back to the western shore…”

“No, we cant, the bridge is already at fire… …trying to cross it now would mean sure death…”

“But they are massacring our men there… …we have to help them…”

”We cant help them… …we now have to run for our own lives… …IF we manage to reach WAG 1, there still might be hope, we are still 11 battalions strong and the Zulu will have to regroup after this attack…”

…

3 days later, near Almarikh:

“Don’t you think its strange that the Zulu didn’t attack us during the last 3 days? We are severely weakened and many are wounded… …but they only seem to watch us…”

“I don’t know… …and I don’t really care… …we have covered a lot of ground… …we must be very close to WAG 1 now… …we only have to reach WAG 1, then we are save…”

“SIR… …SIR… …our scouts just have spotted some kind of battleground…”

“WHAT?... …what do you say?”

“2 kilometres ahead, a major battle seems to have taken place… …the valley we just entered narrows down there… …do we go ahead? It might be a trap…”

“We have to… …we have to reach WAG 1, to be save…”

“But Sir, very likely there is nothing left of WAG 1…”

“NO… …it’s our only chance… …we move on…”

…

2 hours later:

“We can confirm now that WAG 1 got caught in a trap here… …we have found some survivors in the woods… …everything is lost, the Zulu managed to trap them here, approaching from both sides and sealing off the valley…”

“Like I said Sir… …it IS a trap… …and now WE are caught in it…”

“THE ZULU, THE ZULU ARE COMING…”

…

In the base of operation in kwaDuwhatever:

“General Supersnaat, we have just received bad news from our western fleet… …apparently the Zulu navy was just waiting for the Mongolians to close borders… …our whole western fleet got sunk, they got caught completely by surprise, only one Zulu cruiser got destroyed, and we lost 2 battleships and 4 transports…”

“Oh my god… …it all was a big trap… …we have to do something to help WAG 1 and 2… …they will be trapped in Central Zululand…”

“We cant do anything right now… …the Zulu are advancing on kwaDuwhatever… …we have to fight for our own lives now…”

“How many battalions are they sending?”

“36 battalions… …and 17 of them are cavalry…”

“This isn’t the assault we were expecting… …we can easily cope with that… …engage the Zulu’s once they are within reach… …we have to change strategy now… … we will try to advance into Central Zululand to cut a corridor for WAG 1 and 2…”

…

The first mayor battle in the Kwadumbo Mountains was a mayor success for General Supersnaat. The Zulu army got destroyed completely after two days of heavy fighting and only 9 USoF battalions perished.

Then General Supersnaat received news that the first tests with the new composites were a major breakthrough already, they new material even proved to be stronger then expected. The first shipment to kwaDuwhatever was sent on it’s way the same day. When they arrived 3 days later, the remaining tanks in kwaDuwhatever were immediately equipped with the new armour, making them almost invulnerable for the Zulu ammunition and General Supersnaat immediately decided to start the offence towards Central Zululand to help WAG 1 and 2:

137.JPG
Green: USoF troops controlling strategic hills, passages and the newly conquered cities

…

There was surprisingly little Zulu resistance, and Nobamba and Nodwengu were taken without losses… …but then the communication officers stormed General Supersnaats office again:

“Sir… …we just have received something… …and it might be coming from WAG 2…”

“So they are still alive? That’s great news…”

“Well… …umh… …I feat the news isn’t that great… …what we received was the following:
We just have found the leftovers of WAG 1. They got destroyed completely… …and now our commander has led us in the same trap as WAG 1… …we are outnumbered and surrounded by Zulu forces… …we are under heavy fire… …they are advancing from all sides… …we will all…
There the communication broke…”

…

I’m happy for any feedback, suggestions, tips and hints concerning this game...

IMPORTANT NOTE:

If you want to play along or ahead feel free to pick any save you like. Only thing you REALLY should do is to use spoiler tags for anything AHEAD of the actual story.

The saves for this game I will post every 3-4 turnsets from now on

YOU WILL NEED THE WARLORDS 2.13 PATCH TO OPEN THE LAST SAVES

...

See you Soon

Snaaty
 
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