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February 9th, 2005, 08:32 AM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Province Size?
How big are provinces?
I am trying to imagine this and am having problems. On the one hand, a province must be large enough to encompass at least one decent size town and take a troop of, say, 20 one month to move through it. On the other hand, it must be small enough so that a province defence of, say, 10-20 men can patrol it and automatically meet any force moving in; it must be small enough so that an invading army of, say, 10-20 men automatically meet up with some defending force of, say, 10-20 men on some field.
This seems incompatible. But I want to try to figure it out.
I think provinces which are portrayed in the �world� map are much too large � a PD of 3 can never patrol an area the size of Wales � or Texas � and hope to meet up with anything. What are the chances of you successfully finding a friend with whom you agree to meet �next Thursday� in �New York City�, or �Chinatown�? You�ll never find her.
No, provinces have to be smaller.
But now let us imagine something like... some Alms somewhere between Unterammagau and Oberammagau. Unterammagau has a population of about 5,000, Oberammagau of about 15,000. It would be unlikely that a troop of 10 men would meet up with an enemy troop of 10 men on some alm there, but if you give them a month, it is sure to happen. Perhaps a patrolling PD force of 10 would have a chance of finding incoming strangers, given a month of time. Yet it takes about 1 to 1 and a half hours to walk between the two. Let�s say it would take 5 hours to walk if wearing full plate mail and carrying all your gear, that at a slow pace and looking for enemies hiding behind cows and trees and whatnot. But not a month. (Province type: Farmlands, Mountains.) In a month, even heavily armed troops can move from Texas to Nevada.
So it seems that a province is either too small to limit troop movement to anything under 10 and too large to give troops a snowball�s chance in hell of finding one another.
So what do you think?
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February 9th, 2005, 10:48 AM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: Province Size?
I always think of a province as being the size of a US county. That would also seem to about fit the "beginnings of medieval" 1-castle small made-myself-king province, which later became duke-doms swearing fealty to one of the kings?
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February 9th, 2005, 02:13 PM
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Re: Province Size?
Not an expert on medieval populations, but 10,000 is a lot of people for, say, a 12th century English county, unless it contained a large city. Wilderness regions like, say, the Auvergne in France, could easily have a couple thousand folks scattered over hundreds of square miles. OTOH, China had many cities of over 100,000 at that time, and a couple over 1,000,000.
My handwave is to accept that individual units of normal troops are actually company-sized (i.e., 100 men). Then large scale battles of 200+ units might be armies of 20,000, which is about right for the biggest medieval land battles. Magical units are what they are, of course. But it's easier to imagine that dispossessed spirits are company-sized, while a Lord of Hell is just one bad mutha----a.
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February 9th, 2005, 02:51 PM
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Re: Province Size?
Hmm, let's see. Typical infantry can move through two friendly no-terrain penalty provinces in a month. Assuming that a typical infantry unit can traverse 15 miles in one day, that would come to 450 miles in one month.
So a typical province should be about 225 miles across.
Of course, the 15 miles in one day might be high. If you factor in the time spent on making encampments and foraging, it could easily drop to 10 miles per day. This would reduce province size to 150 miles across.
Gandalf's probably right for counties in the Western U.S. In the eastern part of the country, it would be about five counties or so in size.
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February 10th, 2005, 08:30 AM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: Province Size?
I would like to think of it as a county as well, since this feels right in terms of population, magic sites, etc.
However, militia and heavy troops can only move 1 province in a month. If such a unit can march only 10 miles per day (which is shabby), that would still be about 300 miles a month, or about 450 kilometers.
That is somewhere between the breadth of England and Germany.
See what I mean? Either province is too small to allow meaningful map-movement restrictions, or it is too large to be a platform which can handle PD and battles.
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February 10th, 2005, 09:11 AM
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Re: Province Size?
OK but do we have any choice? Should movement be more restricted? A game like this doesnt like to keep information from one turn to the next. It wants to read the info for each turn processing. So if we made it that "forest" ability allowed movement of 1 province a day, and non-forest capable moving thru forest areas took 2 or 3 turns to do it, I think we are looking at an entirely new non-PbEM style game.
Which they can do if they want but I think it would be another game, not an "improvement" of this one. (Not arguing, just thinking as Im typing)
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This game is NOT suitable for students, interns, apprentices, or anyone else who is expected to pass tests on a regular basis. Do not think about strategies while operating heavy machinery. Before beginning this game make arrangements for someone to check on you daily. If you find that your game has continued for more than 36 hours straight then you should consult a physician immediately (Do NOT show him the game!)
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February 10th, 2005, 10:09 AM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Re: Province Size?
Sorry, I should have made myself more clear.
There is one other option, of course, which is purely for RPG purposes, but which I am bringing up because the dev team has let slip the "aging" principle for dom3....
*Turns represent 1 week, not 1 month.* (Or even: 1 day)
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February 10th, 2005, 11:28 AM
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Captain
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Re: Province Size?
The german version of the Wikipedia article about the battle of Kadesh says that one of Ramses II major mistakes was to have the divisons of his army marching 10km apart from each other and states that this meant a whole day of marching at that time, thus preventing the latter divions (who were just marching along the path of the previous devision) to reach the battle!!! The army consisted of 4 mixed divisions, each counting 5000 men. Well, you never know about wikipedia's truth, but I believe that one so far...
One should also consider that heavy rain, snowfall, etc. might furthermore prohibit marching at all!
Then I think there was a delay due to wait for short-range scouting: Where can the army pass? Where are suitable places for the night? Could there be places for ambushes?
The lack of proper roads poses another problem: An army of 5000 cannot march like ducklings one after the other along a mere trail. So how do they cross smaller rivers (I suppose Dom2-Maps show only major rivers, but not smaller brooks which already present a problem in the absence of big bridges!) or hills??? I thought armies of those times were sometimes even required to breach their way through smaller forests, no?
I am not speaking of mountain or forest provinces, since I suppose that "plain"-terrain type entails terrain having some smaller woods, smaller rivers (floodplains), dales and hills, but not a real huge wild forest without any trails! Likewise I imagine mountain provinces to be like the alps. BTW, how long did it took Hannibal to cross the alps?
I am no military expert and neither am I a historian, but by the considerations above I doubt that a roman army could traverse the breadth of england or german in a single month. Thus I guess that this all severly limits the size of those provinces even further. Also, not all provinces are of the same size, so some are easier to traverse than others, despite having the same terrain modifier. Who is an experts for mediaeval warfare here?
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February 10th, 2005, 12:18 PM
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Re: Province Size?
I got this little bit of info from this site:
Quote:
The first thing the soldiers were taught to do, was to march. The historian Vegetius tells us that it was seen as of greatest importance to the Roman army that its soldiers could march at speed.
Any army which would be split up by stragglers at the back or soldiers trundling along at differing speeds would be vulnerable to attack.
Hence right from the beginning the Roman soldier was trained to march in line and to keep the army a compact fighting unit on the move.
For this, we are told by Vegetius, during the summer months the soldiers were to be marched twenty Roman miles (18.4 miles/29.6 km), which had to be completed in five hours.
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I presume this speed was over a Roman road, rather than rough terrain. It also mentions that a legion was expected to begin a campaign with 16 days' rations, which, along with other equipment, weighed in at somewhere between 66 and 93 pounds (30-41 kg). So, theoretically, in sixteen days, a legion cold march ~480 kilometers (300 miles) without resupply. I imagine that actual pace was slower, since sustaining that kind of speed over that long would probably kill the unit as a fighting force.
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February 10th, 2005, 12:32 PM
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Captain
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Re: Province Size?
Impressive! Maybe strat move should change during summer and winter. That would make a nice complex addition to the game. Maybe non-storm-fliers should be grounded in winter as well...!
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