Edit: this discussion was split off from this thread. The split may lead to some confusing comments and disrupted discussion, but overall should clean both threads up.
The Silk and Salt routes were traveled by small bands of caravans. Entire armies were never able to travel that far through such inhospitable terrain (it's no coincidence that they didn't). There simply wasn't enough water and food along the way.
Alexander the Great did the impossible and relied largely on local mercenaries and allies rather than Greeks most of the time. The Chinese sent an army out west a few hundred years later, and despite superhuman efforts to provision the army at every step, still 95% of the soldiers died simply from the journey (not counting battle losses).
The Mongols and Huns and the like were nomads, they travelled very light and lived off the lands they passed through. Often they sent out small bands of units as well, rather than huge armies. When they did send out large armies, they were like the Romans and many others: they expanded one territory at a time, never leaving the borders of their own (freshly conquered) empire far behind. And it's no coincidence the Mongol empire fell apart as soon as it did...
Even today few armies are capable of operating far away from home without local support. Very few countries (probably only the US and UK) have the capabilities to do it, but even they will only do so if all other options have been depleted. Remember how much of a fuzz there was about the Americans using bases in Iran/Saudi Arabia/Turkey/Jordan/Pakistan/various ex-USSR republics before the Iraq and Afghanistan wars?
I'm not saying it's an absolute must to implement support or similar in CtP2, but the current system most definitely doesn't reflect real history.
Let me think: You ever heard of the silk-street? You ever heard of the Salt-street? You ever heard of the Silver-fleet? You ever heard of Alexander the great (just to remind, he went till India)? You ever heard of the Roman conquests? You ever heard about the Mongols? Just a few questions……….. So this sounds a bit not real
Alexander the Great did the impossible and relied largely on local mercenaries and allies rather than Greeks most of the time. The Chinese sent an army out west a few hundred years later, and despite superhuman efforts to provision the army at every step, still 95% of the soldiers died simply from the journey (not counting battle losses).
The Mongols and Huns and the like were nomads, they travelled very light and lived off the lands they passed through. Often they sent out small bands of units as well, rather than huge armies. When they did send out large armies, they were like the Romans and many others: they expanded one territory at a time, never leaving the borders of their own (freshly conquered) empire far behind. And it's no coincidence the Mongol empire fell apart as soon as it did...
Even today few armies are capable of operating far away from home without local support. Very few countries (probably only the US and UK) have the capabilities to do it, but even they will only do so if all other options have been depleted. Remember how much of a fuzz there was about the Americans using bases in Iran/Saudi Arabia/Turkey/Jordan/Pakistan/various ex-USSR republics before the Iraq and Afghanistan wars?
I'm not saying it's an absolute must to implement support or similar in CtP2, but the current system most definitely doesn't reflect real history.
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