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  • #31
    You should use BeBro wonders, and objectives shouldnt be the only use for wonders: strategy should be included.
    Suggestions:
    Alexander' Army (sun tzu) = Caesar's Gallic cavalry,
    => Caesar used heavily gallian cavalry in his legions.
    Put it somewhere in Gallia Cisalpina or Gallia Narbonensis. Heavy objective for Pomp. to conquer!

    Do not include Senat as wonder, palace is more proper,
    also coz at time Rome had two senats (one for C., another for P.). Capitolium Hill is also a mere joke, one cannot build a hill. and romans did had that hill from beginning.

    Another problem in that kind of scenario: no sieges!
    Everything decided in battles. You could consider extremely low stat defence units.

    For Caesar the civil war was a piece of cake anyway,
    so maybe you could make Pompeius (and republicans) only playable side. Put most happiness wonders in Italy as easy gain for Caesar and give no temples for Pompeius. Or give real sh***y legions for Pompeius at start, which can improve in time.

    As Caesar, scenario could start at Gallic wars, to gather forces to conquer Rome. And starting cities in Narbonensis and Cisalpina. Plus bunch of legions.
    Time could be worst enemy against Caesar: Pompeius can build an army in Italy or gain crucial units.
    Put that Gallic Cavalry wonder in middle of Gallia to be a huge gain for Caesar. In that case many civs must be Gallic tribes.

    Egyptians were no power at that time. they had their fleet in Antony's time, but hardly no army. But dont forget that egyptians executed pompeius for caesar.

    You can consider Asia Minor countries not as parts of republica but as vassals. Maybe as allies for Pompeius.

    Sicily must be very hard conquest for Caesar, Pomp. Junior ruled Sicily as pirate state until times of Augustus.

    Comment


    • #32
      Gaius, thanks for your comments. The description of this scenario began on the graphics showcase thread about 6 pages back, so you probably missed it. It's a scenario of the Roman Civil War starting with the formation of the 1st Triumverate. There would be 7 playable civs: Caesar, Pompey, Crassus, the Senate (Cicero), the Gauls (Vercingetorix), the Egyptians (Cleopatra), and the Parthians (Orodes).

      It'll run from 55 to 44 BC (the Ides of March) and will be intended for multiplayer. Rome has 4 factions at the start. Caesar, Pompey and Crassus were ambitous men with control of various provinces and Legions who formed a temporary alliance to further their own interests. Cicero represents the Senate, by far the largest Roman faction, but hampered by unrest and limited military forces. Gaul, Parthia and Egypt will also be playable. Barbarians will represent Numidians, Judeans, Thracians, Armenians, Germans, Dacians and Britons.

      It will only be a piece of cake for Caesar if that player is better than his opponents! But there were indeed seiges in the Civil Wars: JC conducted several, including Brindisium and Massila. Still I agree, multiplayer games are more fun with rapid movement, good offensive units and lots of trade. This one will have all of these, and I hope some good hard seiges as well.
      Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios

      www.tecumseh.150m.com

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      • #33
        really missed that at graphics thread, thanks.

        Anyhow i can see some problems with playable sides.
        1st crassus died very unfortunately, his "provinces"
        were more like tribute-paying vassals (IMHO).

        Egypt was very much at the lowest of the low at time, so how can she play any importance at stage... And once more they didn't have more army or manpower than to suppress possible rebels.

        I wondered how will You divide Rome between Cicero and Pompeius. Pompeius stood in Rome as consul, and he controlled all Italy and Greece. (confronting Crassus and Caesar who were given status of proconsul and therefore provinces) Or will Cicero be in Italy as ally for other sides?

        Will Parthia be only as counterpart for Crassus?
        How prevent Gauls from conquering Iberia or G.Cisalpina?
        Will You add house-rule -- no alliance btw. foreigners and romans?...

        best regards...

        Comment


        • #34
          Cicero (the Senate) controls Italy, Greece, Africa and part of Asia Minor at the start. Geographically it's quite large, but militarily it's weak. Caesar controls Cisalpine and Transalpine Gaul (north Italy and southern France). Pompey controls most of Spain. Crassus has Cyprus and Syria.

          One problem is that Parthia may be too powerful, particularly because it has no enemy behind it. Armenia was an ally of Crassus, so I'm thinking of ways to give Crassus Armenian reinforcements via events.

          Egypt may be weak, but it will have a fleet, money and lots of food - something that will be of some value, esp. for large cities.

          The finer points of Roman politics cannot be duplicated by the Civ game engine (eg. the Senate offering Pompey the command against Caesar). These things will have to be resolved the usual way - by diplomacy and war.
          Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios

          www.tecumseh.150m.com

          Comment


          • #35
            Veneti

            Here´s what I´ve done so far, you only have to cut/paste it into the ToT format/units file.

            Hope you like it
            Attached Files
            Blah

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            • #36
              Wow
              No Fighting here, this is the war room!

              Comment


              • #37
                Very nice. Thank you.
                Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios

                www.tecumseh.150m.com

                Comment


                • #38
                  I've determined most of the wonders: The Senate, Circus Maximus and the Forum Romanum in Rome, the Spanish Mines in Hispalis, The Parthenon in Athens, The Statue of Zeus in Olympia, The Pyramids in Memphis, the Pharos and Great Library in Alexandria, The Temple of Artemis in Ephesos, the Mausoleum in Halicarnassus, The Ishtar Gate in Babylon, the Golden Throne in Ctesphion, Zoroaster's Temple in Ecbatana and the Colossus of Rhodes - 15 in all.

                  I'm thinking of a couple more: the Treasury in Petra, and Caves of Mithra, somewhere in Armenia.

                  I can't help feel that there should be some wonders in Italy outside Rome. Also in North Africa - aside from the ruins of Carthage, was there anything "monumental"?
                  Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios

                  www.tecumseh.150m.com

                  Comment


                  • #39
                    Hey tech, I received your PM, and I've given that some thought.
                    In addition to those you already have, you may want to consider including the royal tombs or the temple complex of Nisa (near today's Ashghabad in Turkmenistan).
                    Maybe "Zoraster's Temple" is inappropriate. I'd suggest something like "Zoroastrian faith" situated somewhere in the region around modern-day Kerman or the Zagros mountains (in that case, Ecbatana is propably the best choice).
                    Let me also correct a common-held misconception: Ctesiphon wasn't the Parthian capital, it was only a winter residence, and around 50 BC. The Parthian capital was based around Nisa/Ashghabad at that time, one source claims a city called "Abiward", which might even be Ashghabad 'itself', though I cannot guarantee that. Maybe a palace there and a palace in Ctesiphon will do justice. Let me also suggest Bisotun (near Ecbatana) for a WoW, as it was a very important place for the Achaemenian Persians and the Seleucid Greeks, and there are many inscriptions and carvings of immense historical and archaeological value.
                    If you agree with my suggestions, I'll do what I can do get you detailed descriptions and icons.
                    Follow the masses!
                    30,000 lemmings can't be wrong!

                    Comment


                    • #40
                      Around this time Sicily was the "Granary of Rome" (later Egypt would fulfill that function). So you might consider renaming the Pyramid Wonder and placing it somewhere on Sicily. A different Wonder could be used to represent the Pyramids in Egypt.

                      If Ptolemy's "War on the Pirates" is part of the scenario, you could even tie the two things together. By the time Ptolemy was given this mission, Piracy was totally out of control, Rome was practically starving, and many merchants had been driven to the brink of ruin. In fact you might be able to tie the Pirate War to another Wonder such as "Smiths", since that will add cash to the Roman Economy. So you have a couple options there.
                      To La Fayette, as fine a gentleman as ever trod the Halls of Apolyton

                      From what I understand of that Civ game of yours, it's all about launching one's own spaceship before the others do. So this is no big news after all: my father just beat you all to the stars once more. - Philippe Baise

                      Comment


                      • #41
                        Originally posted by Kull
                        Around this time Sicily was the "Granary of Rome" (later Egypt would fulfill that function). So you might consider renaming the Pyramid Wonder and placing it somewhere on Sicily. A different Wonder could be used to represent the Pyramids in Egypt.
                        Since Egypt was called a Nyle's gift, you can use Hoover Dam to represent it , and replace Pyramids in Sicily... or viceversa rename it Latomie and let Pyramids stay in Egypt, since Sicily - and southern Italy, too - was an higly developed manufacturing area at this time....

                        PS Latomie were Siracusa's stone caves, used by Siracusa's tyrants as opposers' jails.
                        "Io non volgo le spalle dinnanzi al nemico!!!" - il Conte di San Sebastiano al messo del comandante in capo, battaglia dell'Assietta
                        "E' più facile far passare un cammello per la cruna di un ago che un pensiero nel cervello di Bush!!!" - Zelig
                        "Live fire, and not cold steel, now resolve battles" - Marshall de Puysegur

                        Comment


                        • #42
                          Infos on Roman armies



                          A couple of webpages about Pharsalus battle - and a little more infos...
                          "Io non volgo le spalle dinnanzi al nemico!!!" - il Conte di San Sebastiano al messo del comandante in capo, battaglia dell'Assietta
                          "E' più facile far passare un cammello per la cruna di un ago che un pensiero nel cervello di Bush!!!" - Zelig
                          "Live fire, and not cold steel, now resolve battles" - Marshall de Puysegur

                          Comment


                          • #43
                            whoops... Roman Legionarius, civil war period - Cesarian Army, i believe...
                            Attached Files
                            "Io non volgo le spalle dinnanzi al nemico!!!" - il Conte di San Sebastiano al messo del comandante in capo, battaglia dell'Assietta
                            "E' più facile far passare un cammello per la cruna di un ago che un pensiero nel cervello di Bush!!!" - Zelig
                            "Live fire, and not cold steel, now resolve battles" - Marshall de Puysegur

                            Comment


                            • #44
                              Originally posted by Prometeus
                              whoops... Roman Legionarius, civil war period - Cesarian Army, i believe...
                              Prom - I don't think legionaries would have worn an iron Gallic coolus helmet at this time - they would have worn bronze Montefortino helmets. Coolus and Imperial-Gallic helmets were adopted in the 1st cent. AD

                              PS I know I'm a sad bastard for knowing this
                              http://sleague.apolyton.net/index.ph...ory:Civ2_Units

                              Comment


                              • #45
                                That's interesting. Some of the pics I've found show Roman legionaries of the Civil War with steel helmets and square shields.
                                Tecumseh's Village, Home of Fine Civilization Scenarios

                                www.tecumseh.150m.com

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