Seeking expert play advice (v1.3.3 + DLC)
Posted: Sat Jul 11, 2020 7:42 pm
I am playing Rome in the original campaign.
I see Rome's ultimate future in the area around the Hellespont: not Europe or North Africa. (This from v1.1.0 games where most of the challenge and wealth tended to congregate around the Hellespont.)
I am at year #104. I had tried to setup Helevetii and as a very good ally who would guard Rome from Europe. They failed both due to multiple attackers and internal unrest. Although I did not help them to fight, I did regularly feed them military units via transactions for no fee (a Helvetii lend lease program).
Now, I have this idea, and I want to know if it is crazy?
As it is early in the game and the states to the North are all weak ... so, I have time for distraction. I am thinking of forming one client state and then taking either barbarian or weakly held lands and ceding them to my client. Thus, my client will end up being a decent sized state. At the same time, I plan to continuously feed them military units.
My goal would be to get a large buffer state that would not make wars, but be there to intimidate upstarts from thinking that they could walk into Rome's back door. So rather than courting and grooming the perfect ally; I was planning to build the perfect ally.
What do you think?
Thanks.
I see Rome's ultimate future in the area around the Hellespont: not Europe or North Africa. (This from v1.1.0 games where most of the challenge and wealth tended to congregate around the Hellespont.)
I am at year #104. I had tried to setup Helevetii and as a very good ally who would guard Rome from Europe. They failed both due to multiple attackers and internal unrest. Although I did not help them to fight, I did regularly feed them military units via transactions for no fee (a Helvetii lend lease program).
Now, I have this idea, and I want to know if it is crazy?
As it is early in the game and the states to the North are all weak ... so, I have time for distraction. I am thinking of forming one client state and then taking either barbarian or weakly held lands and ceding them to my client. Thus, my client will end up being a decent sized state. At the same time, I plan to continuously feed them military units.
My goal would be to get a large buffer state that would not make wars, but be there to intimidate upstarts from thinking that they could walk into Rome's back door. So rather than courting and grooming the perfect ally; I was planning to build the perfect ally.
What do you think?
Thanks.