King of the World #11: Darius I

What follows is most of the account of the "200 Years' War" between the great empires of Persia and Rome.

And lo, the dawn of the year 1320 saw the Persian Empire threatened on many fronts. In the far east, the final remnants of the Chinese Imperial Army, along with a ragtag bunch of freedom fighters, huddled outside Guangzhou, threatening to repulse the hated invaders:

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These warriors were brave and highly skilled, but their primitive weapons were their downfall. They broke quickly with a simple application of Cannons and Riflemen.

In the west, Sparta had it much worse. After a scouting party of six Cuirassiers was easily wiped out, Caesar sent a proper army, intent on conquest:

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This was a proper battle, with losses on both sides. It was, in many ways, the mirror image of the conflict in China, with Caesar's state-of-the-art soldiers up against the largely archaic veterans of the Greek War. Thankfully, the Persians' defining military advantage, the booming Cannons, devastated the dapper Roman gunners, allowing them to be picked apart piecemeal. Sparta still stood, though not without cost. Several Persian bodies lay litterd on the battlefield alongside the Roman corpses.

It was to the north, though, in Moscow, where Julius Caesar made his greatest push:

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Xerxes sent waves of recruits to hold the line, and emptied the treasury re-equipping the garrisons already present. In his infinite wisdom, though, the god-king knew that defeat was inevitable. Despite this certainty, he vowed to make the Romans pay dearly for victory.

As the fixed battles took place along city walls, both empires shuffled troops from the quiet countryside to where they would do the most good. Xerxes noticed, poring over his maps, that the supply lines running from Scandinavia to Europe ran tantalizingly close to Odessa:

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The Persians leapt at the chance to inflict heavy casualties on the Romans in the open field, where they didn't have any cultural defense to hide behind. Strict discipline was required, though, to keep the army together. Any overeager units caught chasing routed foes would find themselves alone in enemy territory, vulnerable to counterattack. In holding together, the soldiers became a force that Roman generals shied away from engaging.

The costs of the war on the home front were staggering. Fields were ripped up and Pastures were torn down by marauding troops and cowardly Spies. Protestors and good citizens alike died under the whip at urban Forges, hammering out Rifles and Cannons for the front lines. Scientific progress slowed to a halt as the people were taxed mercilessly, their funds going toward new weapons at the front lines. And the baleful eyes of the Statue of Zeus loomed over all, magnifying the populace's desire to end the conflict.

In far-off Bangalore, though, not all was squalor and despair. Rich veins of gold had been found, setting off a population boom:

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Many of these people proceeded to die in the foundries, of course, but it was nevertheless an all-too-brief glimmer of hope in a dismal war.

In 1340, Moscow finally fell to the Roman hordes:

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Persian troops watched from a safe distance as the Romans consolidated power and quelled revolts within the city. The Roman people were nothing if not brutally efficient. The time would come for the city to be retaken, but Caesar's army would have to be broken first.

As the northern front collapsed, the Mediterranean front brought better news. Roman attacks on Greece had slowed to a trickle, so the army went on the offensive. As they slogged westward through the countryside, a messenger arrived in Persepolis:

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Qin Shi Huang, seeing Rome's military success against Moscow, had thrown in with Caesar, begging for protection from the Persian forces which had driven his court to Mongolia. Of course, any such oath would require jettisoning one's own vassals. So Wang Kon had become a free agent.

Xerxes moved quickly to secure peace:

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Wang Kon refused to capitulate, secure in the safety of his island fortress. Nevertheless, his gold fueled the Persian war effort and his promise of peace meant that Persian fishermen would be safe from his roaming Triremes.

Nevertheless, Qin Shi Huang kneeling to kiss the Roman ring was an affront to Xerxes. Besides, the Persian veterans were needed in the west. And the quickest way there was through Xian:

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It was an arid place, full of hardy folk who could, had things turned out differently, have been described as "Mongolian." Xerxes strongly considered burning the useless place simply to vent his epic rage, but he instead garrisoned it as a way station along the road.

Julius Caesar, not content with his domination of Moscow, sent his troops westward to make a push on Odessa. This time, the Persians were ready for him:

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Odessa was no longer nestled in primeval forests. The Roman army was forced to make camp in an open field, exposed to Persian Cannons. After their noisy work was done, the Riflemen and Cavalry tore apart the shell-shocked remnants. The Roman offensive army was no more. It was time for Xerxes to reclaim what was rightfully his... and to claim much of what was rightfully not.

The first order of business was to take control of the Eternal City itself:

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The gamble had paid off! The army had marched into the heart of Europe, suffering multiple strikes from well-trained Grenadiers, and had found Rome woefully underdefended. Rome was, indeed, a city of Wonders. The Colossus would provide a short-term boost to the Persian economy. The Pyramids unlocked a number of powerful Civics. Perhaps most important, though, was Chichen Itza. Its capture meant that its mystical influence would no longer shield the rest of Rome' cities. And with Caesar's main army shattered, Europa was ripe for the picking.

The Roman army's disastrous assault on Odessa also took much of Moscow's garrison with it. In 1380, Persian Cavalry finally put an end to 40 years of Roman domination there:

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If the people of Moscow were sorry to see the cold, expressionless Persian Riflemen once again roaming the streets, they didn't show it. Persian flags once again flew from every house, and Persian culture once again pushed far into the Roman north.

In the east, the Chinese government, relegated to squatting in rude huts in the former Barbarian city of Macau, was forced to flee yet again:

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And Wonsan, a coastal city on the Sea of Japan, also fell:

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The Chinese army was in shambles. The once-feared Longbowmen and Cho-Ko-Nus, trained since childhood to protect the Motherland, now withered before concentrated Rifle fire. Even victories in numbers had become hard to come by, as Chinese deaths on the battlefield exceeded their dwindling birth rate.

Elsewhere, the long-simmering tensions between Persia and Carthage finally erupted into true violence, with Xerxes finally sending a force along the Mediterranean coast:

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The city was largely useless, but Hannibal's infernal culture was starving Rome. And, of course, the easiest way to win a cultural war is through military means.

Not even Asoka's rocky new capital was spared the Persian lash:

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The city burned. As you can see, its cultural influence vastly outweighed its value as a city. With the northwest Indian Farms and Plantations once again available, the capture had achieved its purpose.

As Qin had outside Guangzhou, Caesar sent a last-ditch stack to attempt to retake Rome:

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And, like China's army before it, it failed in its mission.

By 1395, the triumphant far eastern army was fighting Romans instead of Chinese:

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They would be too late for any serious fighitng in Europe, but they nevertheless succeeded in bringing much of Siberia under Persian control.

Part II to follow.
 
In southern Africa, the indifferent Persian assaults on desperate Carthaginian strongholds began to bear fruit:

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Angola wasn't strategically necessary, but Carthage provided valuable battlefields on which to train green African troops. Those soldiers which succeeded and became veterans were then sent northward to the European fronts. And the occasional captured city was an added bonus.

In Europe, things were going well:

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The bulk of Caesar's modern army was spent. Rome's remaining core cities were largely staffed with Longbows and Muskets. The war was turning into a romp.

The Siberian front didn't fare much better for the once-proud Romans:

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Soon, the northern border would stretch from Mongolia to Odessa, and the Indian remnant would be completely surrounded.

It was only against Carthage that Xerxes' efforts were stymied, and that was more out of an indifferent allocation of troops than anything else:

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Kerkouane held, and the troops were forced to slink back to Persian territory to regroup.

In 1425, Cumae fell, and its Great Library fell into Persian hands:

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At this point, Persia was able to exert pressure on the Roman holdouts both from the Alps to the south and from the eastern plains.

In 1430, a minor disaster struck:

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The assault on Carthage was shattered when two Cavalry were killed fighting at 85+% odds. A minor holdout force remained, and the Cannons continued to prevent the city from rebuilding fortifications, but it would be years before sufficient reinforcements could be sent in to conquer it and free the Roman countryside from Hannibal's influence.

Sitting Bull was able to teach Xerxes the secrets of the stars in exchange for less mystical knowledge:

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Astronomy held great perils as well as great rewards, such as the loss of Stonehenge, but overall, Xerxes was pleased with the exchange.

By 1440, the feeble garrison of Neapolis offered only token resistance to the vibrant Persian conquerors:

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By now, even conquered cities were safe enough for Xerxes to ride his new, Steam-powered throne through. The Roman people were cowed, showing proper deference to a true god-king.

In 1450, Hannibal made a desperate play for peace:

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And the world voted with him. Unfortunately for the world, a sneering Xerxes defied the edict and continued to bring troops to the gates of Carthage.

The same year, the invaluable city of Antium fell to Persia:

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Hatred of war and panic over the unyielding gaze of Zeus had reduced the massive metropoli of the Persian core to abbatoirs of anger and starvation. Governors were forced to brutalize the population simply to keep the population low enough that they could feed themselves. With the Statue taken, the people were largely able to breathe a sigh of relief and return to their normal lives. A few protestors managed to hold demonstrations here and there, but the empire as a whole had moved on. In addition, Versailles offered a political presence in the midst of Europe that would not otherwise have been known. This reduced operating costs significantly.

Caesar's new capital city of Ravenna was no Rome, but it was nevertheless a fine capital, complete with significant infrastructure. Sadly for its people, it fell to Persia just as easily as the Eternal City had:

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It would make another fine jewel in Xerxes' crown-chains.

By this point, Persian Cavalry were taking Roman cities at a gallop. Mediolanum fell in 1465:

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This reduced Rome to Spain, Scandinavia, and a few straggling cities in northern Russia. And Persian might was converging on Spain. the Roman Empire had fallen.

It took 35 years, and the sacrifice of a noble Galley and her crew to roving Roman Frigates, but a small contingent of troops finally arrived to help take Carthage:

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As capitals go, it was quite bare, with only a few essential buildings. It did, however, hold the now-defunct Hagia Sophia, which doubtless had helped Hannibal to conquer the numerous jungles he doubtless had to deal with.

The fall of his capital made Hannibal finally see the light of reason:

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This offer was happily accepted. Hannibal was made warlord of all of Africa. The Barbarian hordes would kneel at his feet because he had knelt at Xerxes'. Hannibal was not utterly broken, either, and he knew of many technologies that were yet secret to Persian scholars. And, with his attitude easily brought back up to Cautious, he would be a most useful Vassal. As vassals go, anyway.

China, meanwhile, had broken from Rome, but refused to submit to Persia. Qin was willing to offer a valuable city for peace:

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Hangzhou on its own is a worthwile city. It is made even more valuable by the fact that its culture oppresses Xian, Beijing, and P'yongyang. It seemed to be a good offer, but Xerxes hesitated, and brought it before his advisors for consideration.

Also brought to his advisors were a bundle of documents, including a map of the Old World:

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Overwhelming forces stood on the outskirts of Spain. It would fall within a few decades. Tacape and possibly Kerkouane will be gifted back to Hannibal in order to secure his happiness.

Xerxes also brought out, with a smirk, a picture of shattered Europa:

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And a look at the Tech situation:

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It was odd that Rome, facing a war of annihilation, chose to traipse down the road to Physics rather than focusing on more pressing needs such as Rifling and Steel. As can also be seen, Hannibal had quite a bit to offer in the way of technology trades.

Xerxes broke out into a deep, low laugh as he slammed the Power Graph down on the table:

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Rome's dominion was utterly shattered! The world was Persia's for the taking!

But how would Persia claim the world? Diplomatically, Xerxes was regarded with more fear than love:

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So Diplomacy, by any means other than crushing all comers, was likely out.

The production was there for a military or scientific push:

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Populations were low from Slavery and wartime food shortages, but the inevitable postwar boom would replenish them quickly.

At this point, though, the question of victory was more one of want than need. So long as Sitting Bull was content to wallow in the West, Darius' conflicts had boiled down to simple housecleaning. Whatever Xerxes wanted, Xerxes would get.

Here is the save:
 
Way to go, Neal! :goodjob: This game is now effectively won.:)
 
Well, hurry up with it then, I want to read this before I have to go to school!

Very nice, you certainly showed those Romans/Chinese/Carthaginians/Indians who's boss eh? Will the Celts get their comuppance as well?
 
All right, Part 2 is up! The game is basically over at this point. It wasn't always pretty, but a win is a win.

Oh, and as an interesting challenge, I defy anyone to start from that 1320 save and not lose Moscow. I don't think it can be done, but you have a few turns to try. Any takers?
 
Well done. Land is power indeed.

Like you said, this game is won. With so few rivals left and those that remain are broken or backwards (or both), Conquest seems to be proper means of finishing this game. It won't take long to make Qin and JC kneel at your feet, the rest you'll need a navy for but that's that. You could feasibly get a "UN win" before you get the Americas to kneel but I think Xerses has indeed conquered the world.
 
YAY! Thats probably the biggest drop in power I have ever seen! BIG SODs FTW!
 
Look's Like neal learned the lesson of war: Siege, Siege, and..... NO! Not fighting units! More seige! :p

This will keep me trying to actually finishing a game instead of ending it early!
 
Great round Neal!!!! Never seen such a big drop in power without losing casualties!!!!

You sure this is Immortal???!?!?! :sarcasm:

:goodjob:
 
Great round Neal. I'd like to see a domination victory, it is just so fitting seeing how the game has gone so far. What percent are you at for land for the dom victory?
 
So in the shorter term, should I take Hangzhou for peace? Is Communism the next step after Railroads? And Rolo, what's that 2 missionary gambit you're talking about?
 
Great update Neal. Well written which made it great to read.

If you ask me don't stop fighting Qin. I'm sure your people are tired of war, but if you press him a little more he will certainly capitulate soon.
And yeh I certainly hope for a domination victory, which simply suits this game most.
 
So in the shorter term, should I take Hangzhou for peace? Is Communism the next step after Railroads? And Rolo, what's that 2 missionary gambit you're talking about?

I haven't opened the save, but I see no point in taking peace. I'm sure you have the necessary forces to take the few remaining cities needed for a win. If your people are unhappy then raise the culture a bit, and removing all the 'motherland' unhappiness will do wonders for the cities in Europe.

As for science, it is meaningless. Just win and go onto the next and this time don't neglect your military :D
 
A Domination victory would be fun, but why make Neal wait? The game is won.

Also, an earlier victory would give a higher score, which he totally deserves.

So, one vote for the missionaries.


Waldo
 
How far away are you from domination?
 
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