So, I thought I would chronicle my adventures in the gaming world here. First up is Crusader Kings II. I have been looking at this game for a long time, but dreading to dive in. The learning curve seems very steep.
Oh well. To make things interesting, Im starting in 860-something as a local Chieftain on Gotland.
Our story begins with Greger Blåe, hero of tale, returning home from a dreadfully failed journey to the south east. Instead of trading furs for silver in Byzans, the group of travellers got to spend two years looking at the inside of a Livonian prison cell. Greger will never talk about exactly what happened on Ösel, but he will physically start to shake with anger whenever someone mentions Livonia, Ösel, or pigs.
To Gregers surprise he returns not as a poor, failed trader who has had his goods stolen, but as a local hero and ruler over Gotland. His wife (intrigue 18) somehow has managed to have him appointed as chieftain during his absence. He also finds out he has two sons (he only had one when he left).
First, a look at the happy family:
Here follows a short recap of the first months of Greger Blåes rule.
Journal of Greger Blåe, February 20th, 867
Rain today. My wife seems to be up to something. I dont know what it is, but she rarely speaks to me and whenever I enter a room, all conversations die out. Im not complaining, plenty of time for me to drink alone. But still.
Anyway, this chieftain-business has been a godsend, thank Thor. Im planning to raise the levy come summer and attack that bastard at Ösel. Oh yes, my vengeance will come.
Journal of Greger Blåe, April 3rd, 867
Rain today. Miserable day at the keep. Both the kids seems to hate me. They just scream whenever I pick them up. Just like their mom.
Oh well. Been planning my attack on Ösel. Not sure whether to bring own torture instruments or just wing it when Im there.
Journal of Greger Blåe, April 23 th, 867
Rain today. Miserable day at the keep again. Saw the wife with some strange hooded figure down by the stables earlier tonight. When I tried to approach them, they vanished into the shadows. Going to talk to her about it tomorr...
The End of chapter 1
Actually the learning curve isn't that steep at all. It's probably the best game paradox ever put out.
Quote from: Razgovory on June 01, 2014, 05:56:58 PM
Actually the learning curve isn't that steep at all. It's probably the best game paradox ever put out.
Yeah. I'm really worried that they just got lucky with it.
More bad news for the Blåe-dynasty.
In September 875, Vagn - King of Smaland declare war upon us. Surely this is a despicable act. Alf Blåe is only 9 years old. And while the young boy shows alot of promise (gained traits temperate and ambitious) surely this will be an impossible war to win.
We have a pretty decent fleet, so our best hope is to defend our island off shore I think. And with that, we raise the fleet and order our 18 galleys out to sea.
Ships are a super weapon in CK2. Use them to gain local manpower advantage and smash them piecemeal.
Somehow the enemy just slipped through my ships, and they just appeared outside Visbys walls with over 800 men. My local levy was just over 500 men, and everything seemed lost.
Yet, by some miracle, my troops won the battle, and we managed to save the city. There will be a big blut held tonight in honor of Odin and Thor.
Two questions:
1) Why was my army led by a super-crappy courtier instead of my really awesome marshal?
2) How do I use the ships?
Never mind found out how to appoint the Marshal.
Siezing the moment, Steinn Gute, our Marshal, quickly followed the enemy to Kalmar. In the initial attack, we outnumbered the defenders, but reinforcements from Värend turned the tables and we lost the fight.
Again, the enemy army sailed right through my fleet. Why the hell are my ships not stopping his invasion?
Quote from: Bluebook on June 03, 2014, 02:15:01 PM
Two questions:
1) Why was my army led by a super-crappy courtier instead of my really awesome marshal?
2) How do I use the ships?
1) You can choose who the commander is (though under certain laws I think the highest ranked noble leads, or maybe it is military tech...I forget)
2) You use ships to move soldiers around. There are no sea battles or blockades or anything, but you can move at breakneck speed compared to land based troops and land in a matter of days. Generally I would sucker in an enemy army with a small army and then land the big army once the battle starts. You can crush much large opponents that way. Another trick is to use your personal levy or retinue to attack small enemy armies before they can assemble while your army is assembling. Navies are the ultimate weapon.
Quote from: Bluebook on June 03, 2014, 02:26:19 PM
Again, the enemy army sailed right through my fleet. Why the hell are my ships not stopping his invasion?
Ships just move troops around. They do nothing else.
Quote from: Bluebook on June 03, 2014, 02:14:04 PM
Somehow the enemy just slipped through my ships, and they just appeared outside Visbys walls with over 800 men. My local levy was just over 500 men, and everything seemed lost.
I cannot believe you won that battle, that is nuts. Very rarely do you see the smaller army prevail especially with no troop configuration or tech advantage.
I think I had a tech advantage on light infantry.
Anyway, our attack into Kalmar cost us, we lost the siege of Visby and now I am the vassal of the king of Smaland.
Now what? Can I still turn this around?
Quote from: Bluebook on June 03, 2014, 02:38:57 PM
Anyway, our attack into Kalmar cost us, we lost the siege of Visby and now I am the vassal of the king of Smaland.
Now what? Can I still turn this around?
I think pagan kings cannot remove a title from a vassal so you should be fine. You might want to try to get a claim to Smaland and overthrow your overlord when convenient. But there are lots of things you can do, you can even fight wars independently.
Good fortunes continue to evade the Blåe-family. Little brother dies of illness, age 12 :(
I have decided to seek fortunes to the east. Im betrothed to some Lithuanian lowborn (with great stats) and Im sending gifts that way to impress people. Then I think I will take a fleet up the river into Russia to try to raid for money.
How does that work, do I have to declare war before I go or can I just plunder my way as I go?
I dont get it. I am playing as Norse and get huge penalties for not being in a war every other year, yet I cannot declare war without casus belli? Nor can I just go plundering?
You can just go plundering. You just need to hit the raid icon. I think blue in troop screen (when you've selected the relevant unit) when not raiding then when pressed will turn red.
Quote from: Valmy on June 03, 2014, 02:26:53 PM
1) You can choose who the commander is (though under certain laws I think the highest ranked noble leads, or maybe it is military tech...I forget)
Generally I think it's the highest rated character in each wing that commands. There may be some exceptions. Also if there are multiple armies on a side in a battle it seems really poor at picking who leads.
Generally levies are raised with their lord in command if said lord is capable. Mercenaries are raised in three units under the command of the captain and two of his courtiers, not sure how these are chosen. If the character leading a unit dies or becomes otherwise incapable of command, the unit does not get a replacement leader.
Under any level of crown authority other than the lowest (I think) you can appoint commanders to a wing. There must be at least one of your units in that wing though, i.e. they can't all be mercenaries. That character then becomes the leader of one of your units in that wing.
At lowest crown authority you can still affect who leads by rearranging the units between the different wings.
Quote
2) You use ships to move soldiers around. There are no sea battles or blockades or anything, but you can move at breakneck speed compared to land based troops and land in a matter of days. Generally I would sucker in an enemy army with a small army and then land the big army once the battle starts. You can crush much large opponents that way. Another trick is to use your personal levy or retinue to attack small enemy armies before they can assemble while your army is assembling. Navies are the ultimate weapon.
They've made this more difficult in one of the more recent patches. Armies disembarking now start at reduced morale(half I think?) and entering and leaving port now takes much longer.
Quote from: Maximus on June 03, 2014, 04:58:16 PM
They've made this more difficult in one of the more recent patches. Armies disembarking now start at reduced morale(half I think?) and entering and leaving port now takes much longer.
Ack! My super weapon has been nerfed :weep:
Damn you Paradox.
It is still good enough if you vastly outnumber them.
Quote from: garbon on June 03, 2014, 10:26:29 PM
It is still good enough if you vastly outnumber them.
And obviously mandatory for the Canaries and similar.
So, after trying a Viking expedition to Kiev, and not being able to plunder anything, despite being raiders (same pagan faith?) we went to the English channel to find plunder. We ran into a 1000+ men army, and Alfr was captured. I paid his ransom, and upon returning to Gotland, he became ill.
At that point I decided to give up on the Blåe-family and start over.
Wimp! :P