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October 13th, 2007, 05:20 PM
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BANNED USER
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Join Date: Aug 2007
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Early Expansion Question
For Multi-player, what is a good amount of provinces to have at the beginging of the second year, after 12 turns?
7 Provinces? 10 Provinces? 14 Provinces?
This is without an expansion pretender or dual/triple bless.
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October 13th, 2007, 05:35 PM
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Captain
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Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Sweden, Ume�
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Totally depends on how your start is/what nation/strategy etc you are aiming for. As a rule of thumb, I discard any strategy that don't give me atleast 10 provinces at turn 10. So I guess the answer to your question is 12+ is an acceptable number of provinces at that point. With some nation you can look at 25+ if you are doing good.
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October 13th, 2007, 06:16 PM
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Major General
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Join Date: Sep 2006
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Yea, I agree completely with Evilhomer.
You should look to take a minium of 1/per turn in your 1st year. Anymore is a bonus.
There are some exceptions, such as Caelum with its mammoths and any nation with elephants. Those should look to expand at least twice as fast, ie 24'ish provinces by turn 12.
When taking a dual bless or starting with a awake combat pretender you should look for similar number of provinces ie...24 by turn 12.
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October 13th, 2007, 06:27 PM
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Sergeant
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Join Date: Aug 2007
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Re: Early Expansion Question
It depends on where on map you are, how many provinces per player on map, and how soon you want to fight. And of course, on graphs on/off :-)
If you are in middle of map, with six neighbors, and have three times as much provinces, because of a super fighting non-flying pretender... you may be in trouble.
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October 13th, 2007, 08:05 PM
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Colonel
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Dallas, Tx
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Re: Early Expansion Question
I'm partial to always expanding as fast as possible and usually base my strategy/build around taking 2/turn by turn 4 and hopefully 3/turn by turn 7.
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October 13th, 2007, 08:24 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Durham, NC
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Do you guys normally take a province on the first turn before seeing what's there? If you lost that would pretty much be a death sentence in MP wouldn't it? I only ask because one time the province next to my capital happened to have 3 dark vines and 3 bloodhenge druids along with 50 chaff, and blindly walking into that would be a very bad start.
I know it's very nation specific, but I don't see how some nations can support expansion like that. MA C'tis for example has relatively underpowered national units and a bless strategy isn't viable there. What kind of expansion technique would work for them? I normally recruit the elite lizard warriors, but I lose a few every battle and eventually I have to combine two armies into one. I've never been able to expand quickly with nations like that.
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October 13th, 2007, 08:38 PM
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Colonel
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Dallas, Tx
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Quote:
sector24 said:
Do you guys normally take a province on the first turn before seeing what's there? If you lost that would pretty much be a death sentence in MP wouldn't it? I only ask because one time the province next to my capital happened to have 3 dark vines and 3 bloodhenge druids along with 50 chaff, and blindly walking into that would be a very bad start.
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Typically I won't attack on the first turn unless I have an awesome, unbeatable pretender. You are right in that losing your inital army or *gasp* your pretender is very bad on turn 1.
Quote:
sector24 said:I know it's very nation specific, but I don't see how some nations can support expansion like that. MA C'tis for example has relatively underpowered national units and a bless strategy isn't viable there. What kind of expansion technique would work for them? I normally recruit the elite lizard warriors, but I lose a few every battle and eventually I have to combine two armies into one. I've never been able to expand quickly with nations like that.
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This is just personal preference on my part - I'm sure others disagree - but if the nation sucks (no bless - no easy way to quickly expand) in the early game I'll almost always take a pretender that can help with the expansion.
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October 13th, 2007, 08:44 PM
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BANNED USER
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Ok, so my Patala strategy is a little slow. This is bad because someone is going to be really mad if you take a province they have claimed, even if you can just slaughter their army. Need to claim quickly. Ok.
It kind of looks like, on a 15 province per person map, that by the end of the first year you are going to have contact on all fronts?
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October 13th, 2007, 08:49 PM
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Colonel
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Location: Dallas, Tx
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Re: Early Expansion Question
Quote:
Lord_Bob said:
It kind of looks like, on a 15 province per person map, that by the end of the first year you are going to have contact on all fronts?
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Usually - yep.
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October 13th, 2007, 08:54 PM
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Sergeant
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Join Date: Aug 2006
Location: Near Allentown, PA
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Re: Early Expansion Question
How do players maintain an expansion rate of 2+ provinces per turn early in the game? With the initial limitations of resources and gold, I typically don't have what I consider a reasonable beginning army until turn 3 or so. Plus, I often recruit a leader suitable for prophethood on turn one, raise him on turn two, and then he's ready to go with my first army on turn three. At that point you have no other troops and it will take another 3-5 turns to get a second force big enough to attack indies.
Bottom line, I don't see how you can have 12+ provinces on turn 12 without an awake SC pretender, or elephants.
Here's a related question. How would MA Shinumaya have the most provinces, about 7 turns into a giant MP game? Aren't their basic goblin troops just fast dying chaff? Isn't that too early to have their good summoned troops going?
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"You're never more vulnerable than when you have both hands wrapped around your opponents throat." -Ubercat
"I'm not convinced that faith can move mountains, but I've seen what it can do to skyscrapers." -William H. Gascoyne
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