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Tinto Talks #23 - 31st of July

Hello everyone to another Tinto Talks, the Happy Wednesday, the day of the week where we discuss details about our super secret game with the codename Project Caesar.

This week we will delve into the glorious world of logistics and sieges. You all know the saying “amateurs talk tactics, professionals talk logistics”.

Leader Assignment
First of all, one thing we have added is what we refer to as commission time. If a character has been assigned to lead an army or navy, you can not remove him from command before at least 12 months have passed. This removes the “teleport a leader around the world” exploit, and also makes it more of a choice of how to deploy your characters.


Reinforcing Regiments
While your levies do not reinforce, your regular regiments will attempt to reinforce if you still have manpower, and get access to the goods they require. A regiment that is part of an army that is retreating, is in combat, loaded on a ship or currently taking attrition losses will not be able to reinforce.

A regiment can only reinforce in your owned locations and in a location owned by someone you are fighting a war together with, when that location is currently not occupied.

reinforcement.png

Not many soldiers, but 5 a month is enough here …


Army Movement
When people talk about logistics it is usually intrinsically linked to the movement of armies, and movement of armies in Project Caesar has some changes in it compared to what you may be used to.

One thing that has taken its inspiration from the Hearts of Iron series is the fact that when an army is moving they will slowly be losing morale. This creates the natural flow of armies marching and then resting, and not just marching across Europe and immediately joining a battle, like the march has had no impact at all.

We also have added the fact that an army that is beyond a certain size will be marching slower, where the size is based on its total frontage it is fielding. While you can attach units to other units, this makes the attached units move slower, as military organization in the late medieval era was rather limited. In later ages you get advances that reduce this penalty significantly, completely limiting it in the Age of Revolutions, and speaking particularly about that age, we have an advance there that makes multiple corps combat more interesting, making them to ‘March to the Sound of the Guns’. This advance allows an army to automatically react, if another army of ours in an adjacent location enters combat, and then quickly march to join that battle.


advances_AoR.png

Guess which is my favorite advance from this part of the Age of the Revolutions tree?


Food and Armies
Now you are wondering, that is fine, but an army can not march on an empty stomach? That is entirely true. Each army has food it needs to consume every month, else they will start deserting and dying. If you run out of food during a siege, you are basically forced to abandon the siege very quickly as your army evaporates.

A standard infantry regiment can usually carry a few months of rations with them, but when they are gone, they are gone. Here the new category of units comes into place. One major type of the Auxiliary Category is the Logistic units, which can carry far more food than any other type of unit.



camp_followers.png

They might be bad at fighting, but they will provide some food…



So how do you get food for your armies then? Well, if they are stationed in your own locations they will take food from the local provincial supplies, so you sometimes have to be careful about where you station your armies, so as to not cause the local population to starve. If you want to get the food from your allies or countries you have military access with, you need to negotiate a treaty that allows you to take their food supplies. This is not always something every country will accept. Your subjects have no say in this though, as most types of subject give this access implicitly.



food_supply.png

Maybe we should have more than a single A’Urughs…


Food Supply
When you are at war, you can steal food from occupied provinces. If you control the capital of a province, you can steal the food of the local populace there to feed your armies.

If your army is at an hostile location, where you can not get local food, you can try to trace access up to 2 locations away, through controlled locations to get the food. If you can’t reach your own locations at that distance there are two ways to get food to your armies.

First of all, if there is a Supply Depot within that range, your army will draw food from it. A Supply Depot can be created by any army and you can deposit food until its maximum storage capabilities, and any army within range can withdraw from it. Any army can gather food from their homeland and deposit it into the depot if there's space. There are advances increasing the capacity of your depots as well.

You also have capacity for the navies to provide logistic support as well. There are two unit abilities that can be done for them, gathering food and distributing food. Gather food will take food from any adjacent province you own, and your fleet can store food depending on the food carrying capacity of the ships. Distributing food allows a navy to act like a floating supply depot that your armies can get food from.

While we do understand that not every player may enjoy caring much about logistics, for those you can assign logistic objectives to supporting armies and navies, and then they will solve it for your main armies.

You also steal food from your enemy in a battle when they are defeated, as a defeated army can not protect their entire baggage train as they try to escape.

Sieges and Occupations

Now let's turn to the second part of this talk, where we will talk about how sieges will work. First of all, there are two different types to talk about here, as not all locations are equal. Locations without any fortifications will not have any long siege, but an army with a single full strength regiment is enough to take it in a few weeks. A location with some sort of fortifications requires a full siege though.

siege_progress.png

Having an offensive societal value is not ideal to defend your sieges..

Food has a significant impact on how you plan your military campaigns, as it affects how long you can sustain a siege. The key thing here, and this is something I am a big fan of, is that sieges are gambles. You don’t know when a fort will fall, and now with the fact that if you run out of food you will run the risk of actually losing and failing a siege. About every 30 days there is a chance for something to happen in the siege, with chances of it getting worse for defenders or another month of holding out.

siege_outcome.png

It won’t surrender immediately, but maybe we can avoid disease amongst our troops..

With these changes, the assault is now a more potentially viable option, as either you win, and save time and food, or you fail the assault, and have taken casualties and thus preserving your food supply longer.

While besieging a coastal location, it is not only important to blockade it making the siege faster, it can also at the same time supply your army with food.

Automatic Control
As the map is more granular than in previous games we have made, warfare would turn into a massive slog to manually siege or occupy every single location. Now while we have automation systems, it still would not be very fun. Project Caesar has two different ways to automatically gain control over several locations at once. First of all, if you take a fort, all locations in its zone of control will start changing control to you. This is also valid for forts owned by an enemy if we have taken it. Secondly, if you take the capital you will start getting control over all locations in that province. Of course, this is blocked by hostile armies and forts.

As mentioned in previous posts on the forum, we have the zone of control system in Project Caesar as well, but the one with far less complicated rules that was used in Imperator Rome. As you might have noticed earlier, there is an advance in the Age of Revolutions that allows you to ignore Zone of Control. While that may be useful to chase down enemy armies, you often want to take forts and cities anyway to get your logistics sorted out.

Recruitment Options
One thing that has not been mentioned yet about the military is that we have different recruitment methods for regiments, where you can either rush the training so a regiment can be ready much quicker, but at far less strength, or spend more time in training and start with higher experience.


recruit_methods.png

So training does pay off!


Next week we will talk about ships, and some aspects of the naval part of the game.
 

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if you beat the army you are breaking the siege so yes.
Can you have the garrison sally out to reinforce like in eu4?
 
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I have 2 questions:

1) The morale recovery tick is still monthly?
2) If you keep too long an army on a transport ship, it starts to take attrition?

Thanks.

1 daily
2 yes
 
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does a army always take priority for food from a location or is there a option or something for the local population to give 'enough' to the army and not starve?
and does having a army standing on a location where it makes the population starve makes them more rebellious?
 
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can a general die during a siege or battle? and if he dies you have to withdraw your army to the province you control and wait months for a new one to arrive?

yes, if you really want a leader.
 
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in theory yes
soooo

any chances we could get that?

given by how you explained your system I can still assign a leader to my arm by teleport half a world away, that army is just stuck with that leader for a year. It's not that realistic.

Furthermore if you are a small princedom in the HRE you shouldn't take the same time in having your general to arrive to your army in your capital as Spain assigning a general to an army in America.
 
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Okay but, is it possible for an army that recently lost their general in enemy territory to have a second-in-command or a popular regiment leader step up and take over? It would be illogical for an army culture based on disciplinary values and norms to not follow someone, instead wandering around anarchistically without direction or leadership. From a historical perspective, in situations like these, it was very common for second-in-commands or popular soldiers to take over in a power vacuum. Of course, the situation would still be hectic, and not everyone would accept the new, self-proclaimed, or chosen general. This scenario could be represented by a modifier such as ‘new general’ or ‘unpopular general,’ indicating that these individuals might not be experienced generals.

Edit: or ‘unofficial general’
 
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yes, if you really want a leader.
What is the gameplay reason for this now that there is a delay to reassignment?
 
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First of all, if you take a fort, all locations in its zone of control will start changing control to you.
This begs the question about everyone's favorite point of confusion: what about overlapping ZoC? Or has PC done away with that issue and guaranteed that every province just has a single fort (perhaps via some kind of weighting calculation)?
 
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you said you can make supply depots and they will supply your army from 2 provinces away. Can you "chain" supply depots by making them 2 provinces of distance each and if you occupy an province with an enemy depot what happens?
 
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How does looting work?
 
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This all sounds great, my only real concern is the idea that you cannot replace generals in hostile territory. Feels gamey and ahistorical.

A smaller note: if in a long war I've controlled a province (not locations but entire province) next to mine for three years, I still cannot reinforce armies in it? Seems like there should be some sort of consideration for how long I've controlled an area.

Finally--since food stocks were perhaps THE key element to sieges in most of this era it feels wrong that there is no ability for the player to influence how much food is stocked and for those decisions (also made by the AI) to affect siege length. In particular this would be important for restocking a fort once a siege is lifted. It sounds like the game is just going to consider it immediately OK which feels more like EUIV than how this game treats food and supplies.
 
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there is an advance in the Age of Revolutions that allows you to ignore Zone of Control

Oh, no. If this means that this advance will basically turn off all the zones of control for all of the units of the country that has researched it, then I fear wars will quickly devolve into Benny Hill-like chases all across the map (like in CK3, for instance), which I personally find time consuming, attention diverting and absolutely annoying...
 
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how do you mean?
So you would have tab with 2 window bars, like in HOI4, where on left side you can have what unit types and categories you can add into that template and right side shows the numbers, like quality and what resources it uses aka how expensive it will be (since each unit type uses different resources and also the amount of it, as I understand).
like in HOI4 :) sort of.
 
This begs the question about everyone's favorite point of confusion: what about overlapping ZoC? Or has PC done away with that issue and guaranteed that every province just has a single fort (perhaps via some kind of weighting calculation)?


As the map is more granular than in previous games we have made, warfare would turn into a massive slog to manually siege or occupy every single location. Now while we have automation systems, it still would not be very fun. Project Caesar has two different ways to automatically gain control over several locations at once. First of all, if you take a fort, all locations in its zone of control will start changing control to you. This is also valid for forts owned by an enemy if we have taken it. Secondly, if you take the capital you will start getting control over all locations in that province. Of course, this is blocked by hostile armies and forts.