
Curses Artois for sneaky, underhanded dealings, forgeries, and insults to the Duke of Burgundy's own wife.
Offers the strength of Burgundy to the French King in the upcoming struggle.
(P.S. Agrees about the English meat and such.)
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The two kings. You declare...they accept and that makes it formal. Hopefully, if you've chatted and agreed in private, they go along with what was planned!!!76mm wrote:so how do I know if I'm entering into an informal alliance with a faction, or a formal alliance with France or England? Who has the authority to bind them?




Great questions. 1. Once you join an alliance you can leave at any time (at the appointed time in the turn sequence each season) by way of rebellion. It costs 150 silver to rebel. 2. Yes, the informal is just that. Say you join France in an informal alliance, France could march an army into one of your provinces, or any French alliance member, and still attack you (treachery). If you are formally aligned, non of the alliance members can attack you. France would have to kick you out of the alliance first, thus making you neutral and giving you a chance to join England. 3. Once your in an alliance, its up to the alliance to protect you. They may do this real well, or not. If France or England are no able to help thier alliance members, I suspect kingdoms will not see any benfit to standing with them.76mm wrote:I have a question about alliances for neutrals--if a neutral joins an alliance with one of the factions of the major powers (english or french), what are the consequences:
1) can the neutral then leave the alliance at at time, or is it committed for the duration of the campaign?
2) is there a difference between a formal alliance with France or England and an informal alliance with one of their factions?
3) depending on the answer to #2, if I am allied with one faction, how much protection do I get from other factions of the same major power?
Thomas of Hainault
During the first phase of the first season there will be a declare formal alliances time. If you and say England have reached a deal and your to join, England will tell me you have joined the alliance, and I will post it and your in. Then at some point if you decide you want out, you will have to rebel, during the rebel phase, pay some money, and then you out. But England might be a bit mad and go after a rebel!76mm wrote:so how do I know if I'm entering into an informal alliance with a faction, or a formal alliance with France or England? Who has the authority to bind them?
I am working on a way to make the map bigger, and then show the armies on the map. But is proving very difficult, as I "borrowed" the map outline from online and its not resizing well. Once all the armies are placed, when we start everyone will see them. Movement will be simultaneous, so everyone will move their armies, and I will place them, then battles etc will take place.RyanDG wrote:Do we PM you the starting army information such as location, names, and such? Or post openly here?

Each province has an inherent garrison, but not one that fights DAG battles. It just hold the castles against seige for the 4 seasons. I wouldn't worry too much try to garrison all your areas, there just are not enough armies to cover it all. If someone comes in and starts a seige to one of your castles, you should have time to try and expell them.deadtorius wrote:Quick question before I can start a build, are castes given an inherent garrison or do we need to provide army points for a garrison.
Also do you need just a list of how many army points are in a given location or do you need an actual army list break down of troop types and numbers?


