Early Successor = Asiatic Successor?
Moderators: philqw78, terrys, hammy, Slitherine Core, Field of Glory Moderators, Field of Glory Design
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
Early Successor = Asiatic Successor?
just a slight worry. my copy of immortal fire is turning up soon, but wondered if i'm getting what i thought i was.
is the early successor list equivalent to the dbm asiatic successor list?
or should i be looking at rise of rome?
is the early successor list equivalent to the dbm asiatic successor list?
or should i be looking at rise of rome?
-
nikgaukroger
- Field of Glory Moderator

- Posts: 10287
- Joined: Tue Aug 22, 2006 9:30 am
- Location: LarryWorld
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
-
babyshark
- Field of Glory Moderator

- Posts: 1336
- Joined: Fri Feb 02, 2007 6:59 pm
- Location: Government; and I'm here to help.
Nik:nikgaukroger wrote:It covers the DBM Asiatic Successor as well as the early period Seleukids, Ptolemaics, Lysimachids, etc. I.e it covers all the early successors before the various lists in Rise of Rome start - I think the blurb with the list essentially says this
The DBM army lists found reason to do a lot of differentiation between the different Successors, and Rise of Rome did some as well. Why none for the earlier period?
Marc
-
nikgaukroger
- Field of Glory Moderator

- Posts: 10287
- Joined: Tue Aug 22, 2006 9:30 am
- Location: LarryWorld
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
ah. that's interesting.nikgaukroger wrote:Because they could easily be handled within a single list so why use more? what benefit is there to multiple lists for the sake of them? Which lists would you have dropped from Immortal Fire to get separate successor lists?
the reason i'm after the asiatic list is the eastern cavalry. i want to be able to use units from a later achemeneid persian army in with the macedonians.
will i be happy? or will i start using the greaco-bactrian? (which probably wouldn't be a bad option...)
-
nikgaukroger
- Field of Glory Moderator

- Posts: 10287
- Joined: Tue Aug 22, 2006 9:30 am
- Location: LarryWorld
-
rbodleyscott
- Field of Glory 2

- Posts: 28411
- Joined: Sun Dec 04, 2005 6:25 pm
They are differentiated, they just don't have completely sepearate lists in the early period. They get different maxima for various thingsbabyshark wrote:Nik:nikgaukroger wrote:It covers the DBM Asiatic Successor as well as the early period Seleukids, Ptolemaics, Lysimachids, etc. I.e it covers all the early successors before the various lists in Rise of Rome start - I think the blurb with the list essentially says this
The DBM army lists found reason to do a lot of differentiation between the different Successors, and Rise of Rome did some as well. Why none for the earlier period?
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
-
rbodleyscott
- Field of Glory 2

- Posts: 28411
- Joined: Sun Dec 04, 2005 6:25 pm
-
Quintus
- Administrative Corporal - SdKfz 232 8Rad

- Posts: 152
- Joined: Wed Feb 20, 2008 7:34 pm
- Location: Welsh Marches
This makes it a particularly good setting for a wargames campaign. One of these days I will find other players who wish to field other armies from this period.rbodleyscott wrote:Well its a pretty morphable set of armies since essentially it was just a civil war.
Incidentally will the Early Successor list include the forces available to Pyrrhus prior to his Italian campaigns?
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
pyrrhus is in Rise of Rome.Quintus wrote:This makes it a particularly good setting for a wargames campaign. One of these days I will find other players who wish to field other armies from this period.rbodleyscott wrote:Well its a pretty morphable set of armies since essentially it was just a civil war.
Incidentally will the Early Successor list include the forces available to Pyrrhus prior to his Italian campaigns?
i recently read "The Hellenistic World" by f.w. walbank. good little overview of the alexandrian/successor period. kindled my interest in this period, instead of say, north east asia.
-
Quintus
- Administrative Corporal - SdKfz 232 8Rad

- Posts: 152
- Joined: Wed Feb 20, 2008 7:34 pm
- Location: Welsh Marches
The Pyrrhus list in Rise of Rome states that it commences with his Italian campaign.OldenTired wrote:pyrrhus is in Rise of Rome.
i recently read "The Hellenistic World" by f.w. walbank. good little overview of the alexandrian/successor period. kindled my interest in this period, instead of say, north east asia.
I must have a look at Wallbank. I bought a good book on the subect by Carey a couple of decades ago but it was an old book then! The Hellenistic World is fascinating - and, I hazard to say, largely unknown to most people. Rome dominates the history of that time much as it came to overtake the Greek East.
-
babyshark
- Field of Glory Moderator

- Posts: 1336
- Joined: Fri Feb 02, 2007 6:59 pm
- Location: Government; and I'm here to help.
Thanks for that. It is just exactly the information I was looking for.rbodleyscott wrote:They are differentiated, they just don't have completely sepearate lists in the early period. They get different maxima for various thingsbabyshark wrote:Nik:
The DBM army lists found reason to do a lot of differentiation between the different Successors, and Rise of Rome did some as well. Why none for the earlier period?
Marc
-
OldenTired
- Sergeant First Class - Elite Panzer IIIL

- Posts: 435
- Joined: Tue Jan 22, 2008 4:53 am
heh. roman culture owes pretty much everything to the hellenes.Quintus wrote:The Pyrrhus list in Rise of Rome states that it commences with his Italian campaign.OldenTired wrote:pyrrhus is in Rise of Rome.
i recently read "The Hellenistic World" by f.w. walbank. good little overview of the alexandrian/successor period. kindled my interest in this period, instead of say, north east asia.
I must have a look at Wallbank. I bought a good book on the subect by Carey a couple of decades ago but it was an old book then! The Hellenistic World is fascinating - and, I hazard to say, largely unknown to most people. Rome dominates the history of that time much as it came to overtake the Greek East.
but for fear of starting a flame war i'd say they were little more than a b@stardisation of the greeks!