Not the southern two-thirds.Doesn't Neo-Kadria count as a conqueror of Mesopotania?

'Cause there are damned few of us left! We need everyone we can get.Neverwonagame3 said:Anyway, why should this Hammurabi be a tactical genius?

Not the southern two-thirds.Doesn't Neo-Kadria count as a conqueror of Mesopotania?
'Cause there are damned few of us left! We need everyone we can get.Neverwonagame3 said:Anyway, why should this Hammurabi be a tactical genius?
Not the southern two-thirds.Y'all are more like Assyria or Syria anyway, being as you are in the middle of the desert around the OMD Iraqi-Syrian border.
'Cause there are damned few of us left! We need everyone we can get.Look at it this way: it's better than him being a genial grand strategist.
So you were planning on conquering Mesopotamia too, in addition to royally pissing me off with that minor war?had Hammurabi not existed, Neo-Kadria would count as something close to a conqueror of Mesopotania.
Who else would they put in charge of their armies? Some random yutz who doesn't know how to fight? I mean come on, so the NPCs aren't pushovers. Sounds like real life.Neverwonagame3 said:There is no reason for him to be a tactical genius.
So you were planning on conquering Mesopotamia too, in addition to royally pissing me off with that minor war?You'd still have been on the fringes of Mesopotamia even had you taken over Babylon. Just consider this "stirring up the hornet's nest"; you can try to grab land from the 'barbarians', but this will give them an impetus to unite and fight against you even stronger. It also serves as a good reminder that despite all of the underhanded stratagems and reforms in the world, you can't overcome a good economic base with a terrible one.
Who else would they put in charge of their armies? Some random yutz who doesn't know how to fight? I mean come on, so the NPCs aren't pushovers. Sounds like real life.
For the record, though, I'm a little interested in knowing how the Kadrians could take advantage of us being distracted in a war that was supposed to take place before midcentury, and then have their same military leader (who already had spent a good deal of time on reforms) lose a war to a "military genius" who hasn't yet died or launched his final campaign by the end of the hundred year update. That timescale don't work out.
Northern China is a terrible economic base, I agree.Genghis Khan had a terribe economic base, and yet he build an empire larger then that of the Romans,
Neverwonagame3 said:and while they probably would unite against Neo-Kadria, they wouldn't have had an impetus to fight me if I hadn't attacked.
And you attacked. So the kingdom of Babylon rose from its torpor of the past few centuries and rallied under a military leader against this new threat. None of which sounds particularly implausible to me.jalapeno_dude in the update said:In his last years, Kirp-atal turned to the south, attempting to expand Neo-Kadrian rule to the whole of the Euphrates. This proved to be his undoing, though--at the city of Sippar, the northern outpost of a small state based around Babylon, the Neo-Kadrian forces, including Kirp-atal himself, were slaughtered by the tactical genius and Babylonian ruler Hammurabi.
It's not statistically impossible for such a person to be born and take power in Babylon, and so long as that's the case the mod can do it.Neverwonagame3 said:And not every region has a tactical genius- the chances that between them the states had one are not that significant.
Why does the battle need to take place far from the capital to involve outmaneuvering? Have you ever read Vom Kriege or, hell, even an account of the life of Julian the Apostate? The concept of "defense in the heart of one's country" is a very old, tried and true method of getting your enemy to string out his supply lines and waste away along the march before smashing him. Too, it sounds as though the Babylonians were fighting at the edges of their kingdom, so they had fresh troops while Neo-Kadria had already had to fight its way through independent city-states to get there.Neverwonagame3 said:MORE POINTS:
My army would not have fought a conventional battle unless the Kadrian forces appeared to have the upper hand or they had been outmanuvred- and it's not likely the battle would have happened near the capital of Babylon if they had outmanuvred.
Northern China is a terrible economic base, I agree.You're not fighting the same way he is, and I seriously doubt that you're attempting to compare yourself to Genghis Khan in terms of military skill.
And you attacked. So the kingdom of Babylon rose from its torpor of the past few centuries and rallied under a military leader against this new threat. None of which sounds particularly implausible to me.
I really don't see what your complaint is. Are you whining because you have to fight an NPC that isn't a pushover? None of what jalapeno_dude has done here, as the mod, is impossible or even all that improbable. And he is the mod, so you're really not supposed to complain.
It's not statistically impossible for such a person to be born and take power in Babylon, and so long as that's the case the mod can do it.
Why does the battle need to take place far from the capital to involve outmaneuvering? Have you ever read Vom Kriege or, hell, even an account of the life of Julian the Apostate? The concept of "defense in the heart of one's country" is a very old, tried and true method of getting your enemy to string out his supply lines and waste away along the march before smashing him. Too, it sounds as though the Babylonians were fighting at the edges of their kingdom, so they had fresh troops while Neo-Kadria had already had to fight its way through independent city-states to get there.
For the record, though, I'm a little interested in knowing how the Kadrians could take advantage of us being distracted in a war that was supposed to take place before midcentury, and then have their same military leader (who already had spent a good deal of time on reforms) lose a war to a "military genius" who hasn't yet died or launched his final campaign by the end of the hundred year update. That timescale don't work out.
Well, that's one way to do it. More details may mean something works better, but it could also mean that I'll look for flaws. There's a risk-reward tradeoff.About the orders, I just assumed you wanted a general outline and to let the generals of the army decide what to do depending on the situation, because 100 year turns are vague and I thought you wanted military orders to be vague, too, with just the goal listed, then let the military leadership go about doing their job to get it done.
Hey man, my country hasn't existed for the entire NES like the ones in China.don't you think it's time for bad things to happen to Carchemish, Hadir Unicus, and Men-nefer? They seem to have been blessed for quite a long time.![]()
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I'm still interested in 100 year turns. (Or even longer BT-type stuff.) Given how little we know about this period in OTL, I think that making a 10-year turn IT would disturb play mechanics too much and keep us from getting very far in the timeline.Can people give a verdict on whether they want 10-year turns or another 100-year turn?
Hey man, my country hasn't existed for the entire NES like the ones in China.![]()
Hey, it's not my fault that jal looked up the bireme date.And jal, I actually like azale's idea of 200 year turns!For the same reasons too. When I get the ram, bireme, and fireships *shakes fist at dachs*
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