• We have updated our Community Code of Conduct. Please read through the new rules for the forum that are an integral part of Paradox Interactive’s User Agreement.
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN: War, Unexpectedly (December 1609-August 1618)
CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN: War, Unexpectedly
|-|
(December 1609-August 1618)

We start a new play session with some good news. We get a free stab from an event which brings us back up to +3. That’s a good omen.


Picture1.jpg
Picture3.jpg

Morrocco is separate peaced for some money and reparations. Timbuktu cedes all of Fulo’s cores to them, and 2 provinces for ourselves. They’re left with just their capital.


Picture4.jpg
Picture5.jpg

One of the provinces, Do, is fed to Fulo. From the other, we release a new vassal, Segu. Segu has 3 cores inside Songhai.


Picture6.jpg

I also un-ally Naples to keep us below the relations-limit. We’re at 7 right now, with our ally Spain and 6 vassals: Segu, Air, Fulo, Pangasinan, Deli, and Jambi. CNs don’t take up a slot.


Picture7.jpg

After that, England annexes most of Scotland, leaving them with just the Outer Hebrides. Once England finishes coring their conquests, we will see Great Britain form.


Picture8.jpg

More Universities are queued up in Midlands, Kildare, Ulster, and Tyrconnell. Soon all of Ireland will be covered.

Our colony in Leyte completes, letting us move to Wiradjuri in Australia.


Picture9.jpg

Now it is time to prepare. We’ll soon be fighting the largest war of this campaign. France is still far, far in the future. But England will get a large power boost once they form GB. I’d like to attack them now, before that happens.

First, I slacken recruiting standards (Chapters 29 & 32) to both fill up our manpower and lower our Professionalism.

We’re going to need mercs to win against England. And since those will decrease our Professionalism anyway once hired, we might as well get some free manpower out of it beforehand.


Picture10.jpg

Our army from Africa (21/3/10 composition) is shipped to Ireland.

We also start annexing Jambi to free up a slot. What do we need a slot for?

Well, in further preparation for the coming war with England, we attack and force vassalize Scotland. We even capture a heavy ship from them. We now also have access to all their cores.

In the meantime, Spain attacks England on their own. This will be a nice distraction for our soon-to-be enemies. We still have the toggle enacted to not join Spain’s offensive wars and aren’t called in.


Picture11.jpg

Unfortunately, I don’t notice that d’Elbene has attacked Creek. Our CN wins easily and annexes the last native on the East Coast. Our plans for a French or Portuguese CN in the region are foiled. But at least we fooled the Danes.

At this time, I think Al Esperans a Anne is strong enough to take on Portuguese Mexico in a 1v1 (they outnumber the other 2-1). We won’t need their help against England, so I tell them to declare.


Picture12.jpg

We’ll see how this goes.

Our inflation is finally bought down to 0 using 426 admin points. We’re 10 years ahead on admin tech, so can afford to do so. That’s another problem dealt with.


Picture13.jpg

(I was shocked how much the inflation was increasing our expenses by. Glad we've finally dealt with it).

The Ottomans have sacked Vienna. Their advance seems unstoppable. We’re luckily nowhere near them.


Picture14.jpg

After our colony at Cagayan completes, we next claim Zamboanga also in the Philippines.


Picture15.jpg

And before our plans for England come to fruition, Brittany suffers a loss. Richard, our glorious king, is dead.

Long live King Jean the Seventh!


Picture16.jpg



The blanket was lain over the body. The body of a once great man.

The sheet was white, pure. Unlike how the body was in life, Jean thought.

Jean the Seventh was not a young ruler, not as young as his father had been when he took the throne more than fifty years prior, but still he wasn’t ancient…

But still, fifty!

Woe to me should I ever reach that age. Jean paused. When did I become so cynical?

King Richard had not been a bad father, Jean admitted. Nor a bad king. Perhaps, sometimes, he had even been kind.

But he was ambitious. And ambition breeds a special man, a ruler meant for more than idle family matters.

Jean at this time had no children of his own. Not even a wife!

King Richard had left him to take care of that. And now Jean was King. He had the power, the ability to rule as he saw fit, much like his predecessor had done.

The vassals feared father. Feared him so much to not even plot rebellion. But then, they feared the French and English more. As they should.

Will they fear me?

Curse me?

Love me?


The room was empty now, save the new King of Brittany and the sheet that covered his father.

Did he dare tempt a look? A last glance?

Jean knew he had authority, but he had not been crowned yet. All his power came lingeringly from his father’s fingertips. Just as Richard’s power had come from King Henri. And Henri’s from Francois.

And all their powers from God.

Would God grant him strength? Jean knew Richard’s relationship with the Pope had been…less than cordial.

Jean the Seventh knelt beside the sheet under which his father lay. Spying a wrinkle in the fabric, he smoothed it.

It was colder than expected.

Jean shivered. He said a prayer. He stood and walked out of the room.

Before the door closed, he gave a long look.

It was best to let the dead lie, Jean knew. They knew nothing save ashes and dust.

And Jean knew it was time for his rule to begin.

He would forge his own path, and do his best for the proud people of Brittany.


Sensing weakness upon succession, our rivals come a-knocking. Portugal intervenes against Al Esperans a Anne.

Our two spheres have finally, fully come to blows!


Picture17.jpg

We’re the stronger power, but our England war is now delayed. I ferry our small army in Asia to the Portuguese colonies of Aru and Sula. Both are soon occupied.


Picture18.jpg

Our European fleet is merged and moves with an army in tow towards North Africa.

11 months into the war, North Africa is ours. Madeira and the Azores are about to be occupied.


Picture19.jpg

Even though we’re in a major war, that doesn’t mean we forget to expand our holdings in Australia. Woolna is next after our colony in Kurrama is cancelled because of a native migration.


Picture20.jpg

Our army in Asia occupies Wake Island. We’ve also occupied Portuguese South Africa and their province in Angola.


Picture21.jpg

Since we have mil access through Spain, I land our army in Sevilla. Then, I let half the Portuguese army cross into Tangiers. Our army engages the other half in Gibraltar and destroys it. And we attack the Tangiers force afterwards.


Picture22.jpg

(Yes, Portugal is currently unoccupying Tangiers. But as long as our battle in Gibraltar is over quick enough, they won't be able to cross in time).
Lisbon and the Portuguese mainland is defenseless and under siege.

In the meantime, we’ve started colonies in the Philippines at Samar and Bikol. Zamboanga has finished.


Picture23.jpg

Our Portuguese war has also had a knock-off effect on European diplomacy.

France, seeing Austrian weakness against the Ottomans, attacks the HREmperor. Portugal was allied to Austria but refuses the call. Austria and Portugal were also both allied to the Papal States. Both have similarly refused to defend the Pope against a Venetian attack.

England also loses heavily to Spain. Most of Argentina and some of Brazil is ceded to the victor. Spain also takes Buru and Yamdena in the Moluccas and Tuvalu and Nauru in the South Pacific.


Picture24.jpg

Furthermore, England is unable to defend Sweden from a Russian attack, seeing them lose most of Finland. Denmark attacks as well.

The only upside is that, since England is now at peace, they can form Great Britain. We were too slow with Portugal to prevent that from happening.


Picture25.jpg

(I'm curious. Here's a side-by-side between England's and GB's Ideas. Which do you think is better? Are they equal?)

Speaking of Portugal, the war is going well for us in every theater except North America.

I’ve shipped over a small army and quickly occupied the wargoal of Borrado. With that, the warscore jumps to 23%. We peace out.


Picture26.jpg

(As you can see, things aren't going to well in America. But we have the wargoal now, so none of that matters. We don't need complete victory. We will eat Portugal slow and steady, one bit at a time).

Portuguese Mexico cedes 4 provinces to Esperans a Anne (2 of which are gold provinces). 2 provinces are ceded to Douar-font Dreux (1 of which is gold).

The 2 Portuguese provinces in the East Coast Colonial Region are ceded to d’Elbene.

And Haiti is given to EDB.


Picture27.jpg

(The yellow "G" is a gold province. This increases our own Treasure Fleets and decreases Portugal's).

We seize some Crownland once at peace, bringing us above 50%. This gives some minor boosts to Reform Growth and Max Absolutism. These bonuses will continue to improve as our Crownland increases (at 60, 70, 80, 90, and 100%).


Picture28.jpg

And we’ve reached the end of another part, stronger and (hopefully) ready to attack England barring any distractions.
 
  • 6Like
Reactions:
"Ashen Crown" from the game, Kingdom: Two Crowns
Interesting.

Not to overlook the other choices, such that King's Court of the Guns, Drums & Steel of eu4 in one of the previous chapters, but this one suits the story told in the short excerpt fine, or rather, can finally hear the world of the authaar through the words of the tale as they flow. Kudos.
 
  • 1Love
Reactions:
Good result against Portugal! Sorry it delayed your plan of conquest.

Curious what your thought is on the Spanish war. Are you happy Spain weakened the English colonial empire, or would you rather have had that colonial empire to conquer and/or gain warscore against Great Britain in your upcoming war?

Rensslaer
 
  • 1Like
Reactions:
We now also have access to all their cores.
one of the things I like most about this AAR is the cold calculated optimized moves

The Ottomans have sacked Vienna. Their advance seems unstoppable. We’re luckily nowhere near them.
I still cannot believe natural enemies of Ottomans and Russia teamed up

And before our plans for England come to fruition, Brittany suffers a loss. Richard, our glorious king, is dead.
He will be remembered well, he prepared Brittany well for the revenge we'll take against England and France

Lisbon and the Portuguese mainland is defenseless and under siege.
will they rue the day they meddled or this war type only allows land exchange in the colonies in question?

And we’ve reached the end of another part, stronger and (hopefully) ready to attack England barring any distractions.
yes!
 
  • 1Like
Reactions:
Big catch up to do! But have managed it over the last few days in some patches of downtime :)
To him, the burdens of rulership felt almost like one large game.
Haha, I can almost imagine him looking at the camera knowingly in one of those spoof movies :D
King Richard is Excommunicated.

Those Iberian fiends!
Devils, Antichrists and Swine! The uppance will come.
To rub salt on the wound, we lose 1 Stability from an event.
Ouch, that smarts - but more of an irritation than an injury.
Our nation is truly great.

Don’t, for some reason, believe me? Here, have a look:


Picture9.jpg
Wow, that’s a rapid rise.
Even though Norway is a subject of Denmark, their colonies can still fight each other as normal. I’ve never seen this before, so thought I’d share.
Interesting factoid re eagled.
We’ll want all of North America eventually anyway, regardless of who owns it.
I like it: no small thinking in this campaign.;)
letting us move to Wiradjuri in Australia
I live there! Be nice to us.
Richard, our glorious king, is dead.
Vale, but …
Long live King Jean the Seventh!
… Jean looks very effective on the stats. Especially on the military side - very useful.
 
  • 2Like
Reactions:
Someone wrote the forum was glitchy this week, and perhaps that's why I didn't know this one had updated yet.

This was an unexpected war, but good that your style is fluid enough to react and you certainly benefited.

The Spanish have weakened England for you and even if they have formed Great Britain, are they strong enough to repel you? I suppose we will see. Thanks for the new chapter.
 
  • 1
Reactions:
Just caught up. Very well written and explained. I feel like I could actually play the game following your guide here.
 
  • 2Like
  • 1Love
  • 1
Reactions:
RIP Richard, hopefully Jean VII lives up to his father's example.
Hopefully. It's often difficult to live up to great fathers with large personalities.
Interesting.

Not to overlook the other choices, such that King's Court of the Guns, Drums & Steel of eu4 in one of the previous chapters, but this one suits the story told in the short excerpt fine, or rather, can finally hear the world of the authaar through the words of the tale as they flow. Kudos.
Glad to have you popping in, @filcat!

You may have noticed I've used Kingdom: Two Crowns a lot in this AAR when picking a soundtrack. I think it just suits the style I'm going for rather well. It also doesn't hurt that these songs make up a large part of my music playlist.
Good result against Portugal! Sorry it delayed your plan of conquest.
The delay did cost us the chance to prevent GB from forming, but it's not a huge deal. The win against Portugal was still nice. Those gold mines are going to help a lot.
Curious what your thought is on the Spanish war. Are you happy Spain weakened the English colonial empire, or would you rather have had that colonial empire to conquer and/or gain warscore against Great Britain in your upcoming war?
I'd rather conquer it myself of course. But since Spain is still our ally and a needed security against France, letting them take land off England/GB is helpful, for now. It hasn't happened yet (and maybe it won't be necessary), but we might need to betray Spain at some point if they take land that we really care about.
one of the things I like most about this AAR is the cold calculated optimized moves
Thanks!

We may be heartless, but the game has thrown enough curveballs our way that I've had to focus up.

I'm sure lots of us have had that moment: You've played a game or a match or a map so many times to do with your eyes closed, but then the game gives you something new, so you have to renew your focus.
I still cannot believe natural enemies of Ottomans and Russia teamed up
Me neither. Russia and the Ottomans almost always come to blows over Crimea (as is historical). Here, that just didn't happen. My first Russia game, back when I was still new to the game, ended due to Turkish interference.
He will be remembered well, he prepared Brittany well for the revenge we'll take against England and France
That sweet revenge will soon come against England. It's just a shame Richard didn't live to see it.
will they rue the day they meddled or this war type only allows land exchange in the colonies in question?
We can take any land we want, but taking the Portuguese mainland might upset Spain. I really didn't want to risk it, not with our conquest of England so near.
Big catch up to do! But have managed it over the last few days in some patches of downtime :)
Glad you've been enjoying it and are caught up! :)
Haha, I can almost imagine him looking at the camera knowingly in one of those spoof movies :D
Leslie Nielson would make a great Jean VII. :D
Devils, Antichrists and Swine! The uppance will come.
It will indeed. We just need cold, calculating patience. A Breton never forgets!
Ouch, that smarts - but more of an irritation than an injury.
If this had happened when we were getting all those revolts earlier, I would've been very salty.
Wow, that’s a rapid rise.
I like it: no small thinking in this campaign.;)
One of the things I hope to show with this AAR is how fast a player-nation can grow. We've even suffered some key losses, yet are already at the top spot GP-wise. Economically and militarily we're still far off but catching up fast.
I live there! Be nice to us.
We'll be as nice as the game allows hopefully. I can't guarantee what our Australia CN will do.

I think I can rename their provinces still. Have a suggestion for your place-of-residence?
… Jean looks very effective on the stats. Especially on the military side - very useful.
His stats aren't bad at all! I half expected the game to roll all zeroes.
Someone wrote the forum was glitchy this week, and perhaps that's why I didn't know this one had updated yet.
Yeah that glitch was weird. Glad it got resolved so quickly.

Thanks for your comments!
This was an unexpected war, but good that your style is fluid enough to react and you certainly benefited.
We certainly did benefit. And now that we have experience fighting Portugal alone, and have learned that it is surprisingly easy to occupy their mainland, we'll be back.
The Spanish have weakened England for you and even if they have formed Great Britain, are they strong enough to repel you? I suppose we will see. Thanks for the new chapter.
We will indeed see. GB might be slightly stronger than England, I think. But not by a lot. We have the advantage of making the first move, a preemptive strike.
Just caught up. Very well written and explained. I feel like I could actually play the game following your guide here.
Welcome! Glad you're enjoying.

If you ever do try EU4, I'd love to hear how it goes.
 
  • 4Like
Reactions:
CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT: The Prelude to War (August 1618-June 1627)
CHAPTER FORTY-EIGHT: The Prelude to War
|-|
(August 1618-June 1627)

At the start of this session, we receive some unfortunate news. Great Britain is supporting the independence of d’Elbene.
Picture1.jpg

Not only are we not receiving any tariffs from them anymore, but at any moment d’Elbene could decide to roll the dice and risk rebellion. We do at least keep the merchant from their 10+ provinces.
Picture2.jpg

(The vassal integration privilege we've granted to the Nobility affects our CNs, even though they can never be integrated).

We can end GB’s support of our subject either through defeating d’Elbene whenever they risk independence, or through declaring a war against GB (since d’Elbene will then be at war with GB, cancelling the treaty).

Luckily, we were planning on attacking GB anyway, so no real harm done. This was just a bit unexpected.

With the loss of tariffs, our gross income is still a respectable 115.37, and we have 50% control in our home node of the North Sea.

Picture3.jpg

I help boost this further by merging 22 of our transports with our European trade fleet. Remember that our flagship gives extra Trade Power per ship grouped with it. Trade goes from 52.68 to 57.43 after the change.

Here’s a nice graph of our income over the last 26 years. I’ve never been quite sure how to read the Y-axis. I guess we could think of it like GDP? Neither am I sure what the dip at 1595 represents. The last 5 or so years have seen an impressive jump from ~1,000 to 1,440 gold.


Picture4.jpg

In the time-honored tradition of empires, that extra money goes straight to the military. 4 regiments are built to bolster our Asian army (1/1/2 composition).

I temporarily unlink our transports for a quick trip across the Atlantic to pick up our North American army, which is still sitting in Borado from the Portugal war. What few trade ships we have in Asia are sent to the North Sea to join our flagship.

Henrika is now strong enough that it declares against Lakota. Like the Creek and all other natives before them, the war leads to annexation.

The latest Franco-Austrian war concludes with, guess what, a French victory. Austria loses some land to their rival.

The Pope, likewise, cedes more stuff to Savoy. Their defense against Venice is still ongoing, but I don’t have high hopes for our former ally.

Picture5.jpg

We’ve completed our colonies in Woolna and Samar. More of Australia is on the cards. Now we claim Kaurna, a Trade Center, and Malgana. The British have also arrived and established their own CN.
Picture6.jpg

Those extra provinces give Terre Australe the 10+ for a merchant. We send him to Congo which transfers to Ivory Coast.

In the meantime, Pangasinan is integrated. Their capital, which is a Trade Center, is TCd and a Marketplace is built there.

A look at the distribution of our forces:

3 stacks (60,000 worth) are in Ireland and 18k, recently reinforced with those newly built units from earlier, are in Tidore. 1k and 7 ships were gained from Pangasinan’s annexation which will soon be merged with our army and navy in Asia. We have a navy in Europe (67 ships, 22/23/0/22 composition) and 27 ships in Asia (a mix of some galleys and more transports, includes the 7 from Pangasinan, 4 of which are light ships).

We’re ready to attack Ternate and “protect” them from the encroaching Spanish and British. Ternate is allied to Luwu.

Picture7.jpg

Conflict continues in Europe. Not even 2 years from the end of the last war (they haven’t even finished coring Breisgau), France attacks Liege, dragging the HREmperor in again.

The Pope, having resisted bravely this whole time, is forced to cede 3 provinces to Venice and 1 to Provence.

Picture8.jpg

On schedule, the next techs are picked up. We get another Idea Group from admin, more naval morale and an upgraded galley from diplo, and an increase in CW, plus new cavalry and cannons from mil.

I already switched our points focus to admin some time ago (giving us an extra +2 in that category monthly at the expense of -1 for the others) because I’ve already decided our next Idea Group.

We want to build Ireland, and all our empire, up as much as we can. Infrastructure is a great pick for this. Already we have enough points to unlock the first slot.

Picture9.jpg

Back at the beginning of this update, when looking at d’Elbene’s Liberty Desire, you may have noticed that d’Elbene gets an extra +25% LD from being a Self-Governing Colony. Seeing as how we don’t need d’Elbene to fill in their region anymore, and we’re having trouble keeping them loyal, I change them to a Crown Colony. This costs 1,000 ducats.

Immediately this has a pronounced effect on our force limit. The different colony types provide different bonuses to land and naval forcelimit, as well as other things. Already d’Elbene is giving us an extra 17.40 unit cap.

Picture10.jpg

They’re still disloyal for now, but only because of GB’s support. Should d’Elbene lose that support, they’ll be happy as a clam.

Fittingly, Jean VII is now a Martial Educator. Military men are needed in these dark times.

Picture11.jpg

2 years after its declaration, France annexes Liege and gives a few Austrian provinces to its ally Bregenz. Another blow to Germany.

Austria is also at war with the Ottomans again. They eventually cede a bunch of land, including Vienna, to the Turks.

Picture12.jpg

We annex Ternate and gain reparations and money from Luwu. Afterwards we vassalize Madyas.

More forcelimit is gained after constructing a TCI in Kongolese Coast. The Officers’ Mess is one of the special, region-based ones that can only be built once per trade region.

Our colonizing of the Philippines continues. Bikol is done, next is Tagloc.

Picture13.jpg

(Caraga is colonized soon after. See, a few paragraphs below).

Our spies tell us that GB has plans to attack one of the natives in Australia. Perhaps this will distract them. Perhaps this will provide an opening.
Picture14.jpg

I order Terre Australe to go ahead with a 1v1 against British Australia to see what might happen. I also subsidize them 12 ducats a year for the next while.

On the Isle of Mann, the increasing hostility between Brittany and GB leads to a new marshal settlement being founded. 7 more heavies are ordered to match and surpass our foe.

Picture15.jpg

(This event only fires once per-game per-country. I'm glad we got it somewhere close to our heartland and not a random colony).

We get -10% construction cost from Infrastructure’s second slot. And we get 5% Admin Efficiency from the latest Age Ability.

Seeing as how Mann, and the culture of the province, Highlander, has become such a large part of Brittany, I accept them as equals. I accept Moluccan as an equal culture as well, because the provinces are rich, and I plan to build them up further.

Picture16.jpg

(Accepting a culture removes the penalties).

Kaurna is done. We move our colonist to Caraga next to Tagloc in the Philippines.

Terre Australe wins their 1v1. They take much from the British CN.

Our colony at Malgana is also done. I decide, both to help Nevez Breizh and to block off d’Elbene, to colonize Pepikokia.

Picture17.jpg

Spain attacks GB again. We make sure that the toggle to join offensive wars is still left unchecked. We want to declare our own war, not help Spain.

I take a deep breath, check the ledger again. The sides:

  • GB: 127k troops, 149 ships, 53k manpower
  • Spain: 194k, 85, 80k
  • Brittany: 121k, 105, 124k
We have double the British infantry, 20k less cavalry, and half their artillery.

We are equal on heavy ships and transports. The British have more lights. We have more galleys.

The British have ~90 more income. But if we occupy their homeland, that should change.

Picture18.jpg

It’s all about to change.

Our European fleet, merged together with the best admiral we’ve got, sits off the coast of Scotland, waiting. 6 British heavies are in the province, completely unaware of what is about to happen.

Picture19.jpg

June 23rd, 1627.

The conquest of Sutherland.

The outbreak of war.



The newly formed British Royal Navy had been born out of the traditions of its predecessor, the English “Navy Royal.” Most of the Scottish vessels were either sunk during England’s conquest or defected later into Breton hands. A growing hostility and naval arms race between the Bretons based in Ireland and the English—now British—was inevitable.

On the one hand this uniform transfer of power—from an entirely English navy into an entirely British one—contributed to British prestige and power. English ships were sailed by English crews and commanded by English officers, bringing all the experience, doctrine, and tradition gained during their wars with France and Spain.

But on the other, this left British sea forces badly overstretched, especially as they now had to police Scottish waters wholly with their own vessels. This lack of ships—warships especially—persisted, even as their shipwrights continued to match the recent spike in Breton naval production. Indeed, at the outbreak of the First Breton-British War the number of heavy warships was even for both main combatants—a nasty shock for the larger British power.

And they were about to receive another.

The Bretons, as the aggressors, could pick the time and place to strike a first, fatal, blow. Such an important task King Jean trusted to the up-and-coming, young, skilled Corentin de Goulaine. Goulaine, not even a year into his captaincy, was a true representation of the Breton attitudes at that time, attitudes coming mostly from the policies of Jean’s father, Richard. Goulaine held ambition, raw talent, and youthful energy beyond measure. His efforts ensured the Breton navy would dominate the seas of Northern Europe for the next five years, until the famed Battle of Skagerrak.


***Excerpt from: “The First Breton-British War, Chapter Two” by Erwan Bergot***

. . .

It was unseasonably foggy that June. And so superstitious sailors grumbled. The officers and admirals kept calm, carried on. Still, one might drift too close to Scottish shores and Breton rocks. An early grave was no one’s wont.

Piracy was common. Breton, Gael, Scots, Manx—even Spanish now with the war on. Of course, those governments denied it. But all knew, pirates or no, the shallow seas of the North Channel were no one’s friend.

North of the Outer Hebrides, Caesar took the lead. Captain Newport could barely see through his spyglass that Newcastle—normally direct to port—was also lagging far astern. Hoping to tighten the formation, Newport gave orders and a flurry of signal flags were raised and lowered. Sending a messenger boat in these conditions would’ve been fruitless. The mist thickened considerably again, leaving each ship an island. It was unclear whether Newcastle had received the order.

Elsewhere in the flotilla were Melville, Zealous, Dunbar, and Alexandria. Neither of the vessels had been seen since the dawn, except a brief appearance of Melville. Supposed to be straight astern, the ship had been surprisingly close as the fog—persistent for days—briefly thinned. Minutes later it had backed off, leaving Caesar and her crew alone again.

The fleet was arranged in two rows of three, a total of six. Somewhere off to starboard traditionally was Alexandria, with Dunbar behind. Caesar and Melville kept each other company in the center column. And portside was Newcastle and Zealous. But with such dreary grey fog, who knew where anyone was?

Newport’s heart gave shudder of dread when he heard the thunderous cannon fire.


***Taken from “Christopher Newport’s Last Battle” by Harvey Elliott***

. . .

(NARRATOR, measured, triumphant):

Goulaine had gotten exceptionally lucky.

The British warships Alexandria and Dunbar had drifted far too close to the Hebrides, seeing both run aground to become captured prizes. Both ships would later serve with distinction in the Breton fleet during the Danish War.

That just left the four—badly isolated—Newcastle, Zealous, Caesar, and Melville.

The Breton European fleet—docked and waiting in the Scottish Hebrides under Goulaine’s command—set sail as soon as scouts reported the wrecks of Alexandria and Dunbar. Goulaine immediately smelled larger fish.

Melville, alone at their end of the formation, was the first to be sunk. Caesar followed suit a few minutes later as Captain Newport blundered through the Scottish fog, unlike anything he had dealt with in the Caribbean.

Zealous and Newcastle were headless, hopeless, and mercilessly outgunned.

Goulaine’s much larger fleet—consisting of eighty vessels—surrounded and peppered the British boats. Instead of surrender, the British fought on. Their ships sunk—British crewmen were left to flounder in the open ocean—succumbing to the elements.

Back home, Goulaine was celebrated as a hero and portrayed his actions as a noble defense of Breton territorial waters. The House of Tudor was outraged at such brazen conduct. No Breton apology—by King Jean, the Breton government, or (now admiral) Goulaine—was supplied.

So began the war.


***From the History Channel’s multi-part, six-hour documentary special: “War in the Isles: The Breton Conquest.” This special was noted for its use at the time of CGI-simulated battles and the unprecedented violence of its reenactments.***

Picture20.jpg
 
Last edited:
  • 8Like
Reactions:
Well that's the Anglo-Portuguese alliance broken. (iirc alliances between AIs automatically break if they don't join each others war)
 
  • 1Like
  • 1
Reactions:
As the man says... it's clobberin' time.
 
  • 2Haha
  • 1
Reactions:
June 23rd, 1627.

The conquest of Sutherland.

The outbreak of war.
“This is it folks - over the top!”

PS: this quote is from a song by The Angels, a great Australian rock band from the 1970-80s. The song is called ‘Take a Long Line’ and the lyrics are quite applicable! :D For those who can be bothered listening, listen carefully right at the beginning.

 
Last edited:
  • 1Like
  • 1
Reactions:
Loved the naval narrative and history snatches.

Very much looking forward to your conduct of the war.

Rensslaer
 
  • 2
  • 1Love
Reactions:
2 years after its declaration, France annexes Liege and gives a few Austrian provinces to its ally Bregenz. Another blow to Germany.

Austria is also at war with the Ottomans again. They eventually cede a bunch of land, including Vienna, to the Turks.
gotta eat gb quick so you catch up with france before they blob worse without the threat of austria

Terre Australe wins their 1v1. They take much from the British CN.
great to just unleash a homie on theirs without making your hands dirty

The conquest of Sutherland.
is there a specific optimized reason to use this specific wargoal? I still don't really get how we optimize wargoals.

So began the war.
yes!
 
  • 2Like
Reactions:
Thanks for the latest chapter.

I will echo the sentiments of @Rensslaer and note the history book style of this chapter was a nice change of pace.

***From the History Channel’s multi-part, six-hour documentary special: “War in the Isles: The Breton Conquest.” This special was noted for its use at the time of CGI-simulated battles and the unprecedented violence of its reenactments.***
Well, there's an idea. Can't AI create these videos for us? (Wish they could. Likely we are close.)
 
  • 1Like
  • 1Love
Reactions:
Finally caught up after my long break! That last chapter was lovely, especially the build up of the narrative over the last few chapters.

I missed so many thing starting from the loss of Brittany but bingeing the chapters was great and seeing everything culminate in this salvo. :chefskiss:
 
  • 2Love
Reactions:
Well that's the Anglo-Portuguese alliance broken. (iirc alliances between AIs automatically break if they don't join each others war)
Yes, declining does break alliances. So Portugal and England are, for now, separated. Though of course they can always really later and will have extra reasons to do so given Brittany is a common enemy of them both.
As the man says... it's clobberin' time.
You'll see just how much clobbering is done soon. Coming right after this feedback.
It's bloody awful for poor Brits. How could this happen :(...
Awful for them, but good for us!

England had quite a late conquest of Scotland, and didn't get the extra income/manpower from Ireland. They've also been weakened due to the constant wars with Spain. Enlgand/GB, much like real life, needs the Isles completely in its sphere and out of enemy hands to succeed.
“This is it folks - over the top!”

PS: this quote is from a song by The Angels, a great Australian rock band from the 1970-80s. The song is called ‘Take a Long Line’ and the lyrics are quite applicable! :D For those who can be bothered listening, listen carefully right at the beginning.
Over the top, across the strait!

Thanks for the song recommendation.
Loved the naval narrative and history snatches.

Very much looking forward to your conduct of the war.
Thanks for the latest chapter.

I will echo the sentiments of @Rensslaer and note the history book style of this chapter was a nice change of pace.
Finally caught up after my long break! That last chapter was lovely, especially the build up of the narrative over the last few chapters.
I'm glad you've all enjoyed the narrative bits as much as the regular gameplay!

I thought we needed something beyond the normal narrative scenes for the previous chapter, hence the more Historybook style. They give some nice context I feel. Plus, I didn't think I'd be able to accurately describe a naval battle, so giving just the prelude (cleverly hidden beneath fog) and the aftermath helped with that.
gotta eat gb quick so you catch up with france before they blob worse without the threat of austria
Indeed. And Austria continues to diminish as we'll see this coming update.
great to just unleash a homie on theirs without making your hands dirty
It sometimes backfires of course if the overlord decides to intervene, as we saw with Portugal previously. In this case, I think GB was too distracted by their war with Spain to notice. Or they might've been blocked from doing so since they weren't at peace. I don't remember if peace is a requirement for intervention, but it feels like it would be.
is there a specific optimized reason to use this specific wargoal? I still don't really get how we optimize wargoals.
This question has reminded me we haven't talked much about wargoals or claims yet. I've added a section to the beginning of the next update for this. Hopefully it answers your questions.
Well, there's an idea. Can't AI create these videos for us? (Wish they could. Likely we are close.)
That would be interesting, though it would probably face just as much if not more controversy than AI art already has. And creating a still-image (which AI often has trouble with) is easier than a whole video with lots of moving parts. I'm sure things are moving in that direction, it's only natural, but how long would it take to work out all the kinks is another question.
I missed so many thing starting from the loss of Brittany but bingeing the chapters was great and seeing everything culminate in this salvo. :chefskiss:
Glad you've enjoyed an "AAR and chill" session. :)

The beginning and end of the British war is coming right now!
 
  • 3Like
  • 1
Reactions:
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE: More About Claims, Wargoals, GB Defeated! (June 1627-December 1629)
CHAPTER FORTY-NINE: More About Claims, Wargoals, GB Defeated!
|-|
(June 1627-December 1629)

Before we get to the meat of this chapter, I want to talk a bit about the wargoal we used to declare on England and wargoals in general. This is prompted by @diskoerekto's comment last week.

Why did we choose conquest as our CB against Great Britain when we have reconquest available? And why did we pick Sutherland as our wargoal/occupation target?


Picture1.jpg

Depending on the wargoal you use, provinces may or may not cost diplo points to demand. This is what the game calls Unjustified Demands.

By using conquest as our CB, all provinces we have claims on, not just Sutherland, don’t suffer that extra diplo point cost.

The same principle would be true if we were using reconquest instead. If that were the case, all cores would cost no diplo to demand.

But vassals and subjects also factor in here, since they are their own nations with their own diplomats, Spy Networks, and claims/cores.

As Scotland’s overlord, we benefit from their claims if those provinces actually go to Scotland in the peacedeal. We can’t use Scotland’s claim on Sutherland and take it for ourselves, for example. That would still count as “unjustified.” But if Scotland takes it, then it is “justified.”

We also don’t have that many claims on GB itself. As you can see from the declaration of war screen, we only claim 6 provinces (Carmarthen, Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Hampshire, and Somerset). However, Scotland has many more claims than us.

By using Scotland’s claim, we get no Unjustified Demands for claimed provinces we take and claimed provinces Scotland takes. Whereas if we just used our own claims, only we would benefit.

Here’s a weird quirk though: If we had a third subject and were using their claims, then we would benefit, and they would benefit, but Scotland would not benefit. Scotland’s claims would be “unjustified.” Whoever’s claim you use as the primary matters.

The reconquest CB oddly doesn’t work like this. Anyone who has a core receives the benefits of no Unjustified Demands. Us, our vassals, even uninvolved third parties.

And I’ll remind everyone of Chapter 42: claimed provinces cost less to core and whichever province you choose as a wargoal is cheaper to demand.

Basically, I’m wanting to minimize the excess diplo I spend taking land and the excess admin I use coring it. Since Scotland has the most claims, we will receive the most benefit.

Sutherland is an easy province to occupy and is the highest dev province Scotland has claimed.

Anyway, to war!

It is time for Brittany to claim her destiny.

We start the war off with 2 opening moves. The first was the naval battle at the end of the last part. For the second move, we move a pre-built 1k into British South Africa.


Picture2.jpg

The Alexandria is split off from our European fleet to repair. Goulaine’s fleet moves into the Irish Sea, sinking another 2 British heavies and 6 lights. Then he docks in Cork (the shipyard we’ve built there increases ship repair speed). We’ve secured the naval advantage, now we must keep it.


Picture3.jpg

(Captured Dunbar is seaworthy enough to help out right away. Alexandria has to repair).

The speed of Goulaine’s fleet, thanks to his trait buffing it, lets us respond to any threats and get back in port for the monthly repair-tick with the British none the wiser. Another 3 heavies and 2 lights are sunk.

While this is going on, we grab the next slot in Infrastructure, giving decreased Expand Infrastructure cost (Chapter 40).


Picture4.jpg

While effective, the downside to keeping our fleet together and ready for battle is that our lights aren’t contributing to our trade income. Our income has dropped by about 20 ducats, giving us a deficit. At least d’Elbene is providing tariffs again, since without British support, they’ve become loyal.


Picture5.jpg
Picture6.jpg

(A neat trick: if we kept our trade fleet in port, told it to collect trade, and turned on the toggle for staying in port during war, it would still provide trade income. Anytime our fleet was in port repairing I could've done this. But the deficit wasn't major enough for that level of micro).

After a few months of seeing how the British would react and seeing whether I could bait any of their armies into a hopeless crossing of Ulster or the Hebrides using the blockade trick, we cross ourselves.


Picture7.jpg

We do end up catching an army of around 12k in the Inner Hebrides, so the blockade trick worked in that case. Elsewhere, our navy has split up for blockades and the siege of the fort in Dumfries goes well.


Picture8.jpg

After only 63 days Dumfries falls. That British 16k you see is destroyed soon after. The fort in Dumfries blocks their retreat south.

Our attention is briefly drawn to Europe as Austria loses a large chunk to Bohemia and is also losing to OPM Donauworth and their allies.


Picture9.jpg

Northumbria falls after 112 days and Inverness after 185. We have enough cannons for a full bonus when sieging, a large Spy Network in Britain to decrease the time it takes between ticks, and enough mil power to preemptively force wall breaches (Chapter 36).


Picture10.jpg

Here, for example, is our siege of London. It’s not quite as fast as the others because London has some bonuses to its Defensiveness, but is still pretty good.


Picture11.jpg

Over a year in, Scotland, and north and central England have fallen. We also now have all of South Africa. And I’ve built a 1k in Taiwan to occupy the British outpost there. We’ve also sent a colonist to the other Taiwanese province, Middag, because Tagloc is almost complete.


Picture12.jpg

Jean VII has a great mind for military matters. The game says he’s personally trained many of our newest officers. Quite an accomplishment! We get a half-cost mil advisor as a result.

We also now have an heir. Of course we named him Francois. He was sired during the previous chapter as we prepared for war. Stats-wise Francois is not the best. But he’s an amazing diplomat.


Picture13.jpg
Picture14.jpg

After 139 days Coventry is ours! We fight a bloody battle in Shrewsbury, but win. Later in Cornwall, we win again against the same force.


Picture15.jpg
Picture16.jpg

London falls the week afterwards, unfortunately I didn’t get a screenshot of the number of days it took. We entered the province in either October or November 1628, and the fort fell April 8th of 1629. Around 160 days.

The last of the British forces on the island are destroyed at Devon. And we sink many enemy lights as they retreat from the now unfriendly port of London. A month later at St. George’s Channel, 1 heavy is sunk and 1 is captured.


Picture17.jpg

Goulaine has had quite the successful war. Brittany has wholly dominated the conflict, losing only 3 transports. And soon will come the peace.

Now we’re just waiting for the last fort in Wales (Montgomery) to fall. Goulaine amuses himself in the meantime hunting down isolated enemy fleets. Another 3 heavies and 21 lights are sent to the Locker.


Picture18.jpg

Another brief look at Europe as that plays out. Poland has just lost a province to Magdeburg after an exhausting war against them, Calenberg, and Venice. The Ottomans jump at the chance for an easy war a few months later.


Picture19.jpg

Montgomery falls after 259 days. Another 3 lights are forced out of Welsh ports and sunk.

Peace comes that December, just in time for Christmas! All in all, the war lasted 2 years and less than 6 months.


Picture20.jpg

We lost barely anything navally, though our subjects weren’t so lucky. And in terms of casualties our CNs and vassals were hit hard, especially Terre Australe. But none of that matters because we won.


Picture21.jpg

What did we take?

All of South Africa. The Cape is TCd for a new merchant (transfers to Ivory Coast from Cape of Good Hope).

Scotland gets larger, including the forts at Inverness and Dumfries.

A province in Wales (Carmarthen) to release them as a vassal.

The British outpost in Taiwan. Our colonist hasn’t arrived in Middag yet, but the whole island is now ours.

632.90 ducats of which we get 622.11.


Picture22.jpg
Picture23.jpg

(The TC region for the Cape of Good Hope only has one Trade Center, the Cape itself, so it's really easy to get a merchant here).

Here’s a look at the largest navies in the world after that. We’re in second place in terms of heavies, even with France. GB has lost 40 or so naval forcelimit and almost half their heavies.


Picture24.jpg

Even if they manage to rebuild their fleet, it will take a ton of cash that they might have trouble generating. The same goes for their destroyed armies. And we’ve caused Devastation in their home provinces, further hurting their income.

A very good war, I’d say.
 
  • 6Like
  • 1Love
Reactions: