
So there.

I kind of figured, but our merchants would still offer, for the disturbing factor. We don't have any high quality slaves currently available for sale, but we are capable of shipping in bulk, Y'know, for future reference.Simon_Jester wrote:[snip slavery]
Here in Aztlan, we draw the distinction between gods and demons by the fact that demons can possibly be summoned and controlled, and the gods cannot. The rest is folklore and practical details. Also, just for the record, the stars are the 4000 hostile brothers of Huitzilopactli, on our end, who he must repeatedly kill to save the world, so not exactly rosy on the non-secular side over here, either.Simon_Jester wrote:The idea of a financial deal with the Aztecs is... hm. Interesting.The official stance of the Ohioan church is that you're devil-worshippers just as much as the Detroiters are, correction, more so than the Detroiters are; there are such a wide variety of devils out there. It's why we made chocolate illegal. It is far too yummy to be a normal food, so it is obviously a demonic trick!
The faithful who worship Yacatecuhtli are, by their nature, very familiar with shady and/or proxy forms of commerce. Just sayin'.I like the idea of having some of the annuities be purchased by the Aztecs, now I just need to work out how to make it work and what to do with it.
Yeah, I've been planning to make the hat rivalry a thing ever since you started talking about it and I learned that there were Nottomans.On a side note, hats definitely exert subtle influence on Ohioan decision-making. Ohioan hats are, in all their baroque glory, superior to almost any others, and Aztecs may be among the few peoples capable of giving them hat envy.
Simon_Jester wrote:Well, once again you have all this stuff about 'durability' and 'mass' and 'speed' and I honestly don't understand what it's all supposed to be for.
You can get my take on the point values of light fighting ships by looking at my entry in the Order of Battle thread, which doesn't have a complete army order of battle but does list all my ships, though not the precise locations where they all operate.
The lightest vessels which can realistically be described as a "warship" would include things like an oar-powered riverboat with a dozen or so rowers, a swivel gun, and a squad of marines. I place that at 25 points, plus or minus a few. Galleys armed with small numbers of cannon would tend upwards into the high double digits.
A ship-rigged sloop of war with 12-20 guns of medium caliber would be, I estimate, typically around 200 points. A heavy frigate with about twice the guns, a thicker hull, and probably some heavier artillery might push up to 500-600, and ships of the line could easily be worth 1000 points or so. This has the advantage that a nation with 300000 points could roughly reproduce the historical Royal Navy of the late age of sail... but only at the cost of much of their points, as Britain invested most of their points into the RN in real life.
I enjoyed that. A ptsd whirling dervish with such casual command of the elements he cooks his tea on it. An empire fractured by civil war each generation and with institutions that weather each storm. Glorious builders, technological and magical leaders hamstrung by their own fratricidal royal family.Esquire wrote:Guess who's got two thumbs and a story post up? This guy!
Light on plot developments, but I'm just trying to introduce my nation and one of the prime characters. Let me know what you all think!
You are most definitely our peers in hattitude, oh brethren of the lower Ohio!Esquire wrote:I see your silly hats, and raise you the following magnificent headgear:
So there.
No. Regrets.Eternal_Freedom wrote:Orion renews and reaffirms it's condemnation of such decadence. Such a waste of material! And the problems of raising doorways and ceilings to avoid having to remove such headgear...tsk.
Just wonder, Ohio, how much has your nation spent on fancy hats for it's rulers in the last centuries? Enough for a frigate? Two? Such illogical waste!
Correction: Diamonds are the fortified towns or bastions, hollow squares are large towns/small cities.Imperial528 wrote: ...I've gotten more stuff filled in on my map here: http://i.imgur.com/wJyOz8n.png...
...For a key, solid squares are mundane cities, empty squares are fortified towns or military bastions, and circles are mage cities....
...Huh? I'm a bit confused by this text. Ah, wait, I see... the aforementioned conflict.Imperial528 wrote:Worcester is a small city on the shores of Erie, and the jewel of Worcestershire. For the continued well being of any travelers or tourists that find themselves in either Worcester or its shire, do not bring this connection to light.
I'd refrain from referencing explicit cultural names so closely inspired by real life. Make up your own, since if there are Normans it begs the question of "where are Normans from?" in a way that there being... Greenbearers or whatever... doesn't.For the past fifty years, Worcester has been simmering on the embers of a cold war that so wishes to be a civil war. There has always been animosity between the entrepreneurial nobles of the city and the land owners of the countryside, the peasantry often treated as pawns in their squabbles. For over a century, there was little more than economic rivalry and smatterings of racial tensions between the primarily Norman city and the mostly Anglish country. Major conflict usually withered and died in the face of more pressing matters, such as fending off the influence of the Anglo Crown or aiding their southern neighbors in wars against the nearby Germanic empire.
So they're already a member state of your confederacy? Is that correct?Worcester's joining with the Adirondack Commonwealth some hundred and fifty years ago prevented such outlets of aggression, leading to rising tensions. Yet hope arose from the marriage of Duke Alberic III of House Granville with Lady Eleanor Baxter, a union of political aim, meant to produce an Anglo-Norman bloodline to smooth over both the racial and economic differences between the city and the shire.
Question: where are these guys, exactly?The City of Worcester, without any clear heir, appointed Lord Guilbert Dorsey as Interim Governor. As Governor, Lord Dorsey's rule has been harsh, perhaps cruel at times, but has kept order. The now elderly Governor has begun to hear the call of the reaper, and with no clear heir from the Alberic's line, nor the political unity to declare a new ruler, it is likely that his death will shatter the weakened government, potentially leaving Worcester in a state of civil war.
Feel free to have them interact with me if you'd like. The Sylix would probably have an interesting if yet undecided reaction to having the undead so close to their borders.madd0ct0r wrote:Jub - after I wrap up the battle with EF I might start fleshing out some rival magocracy kingdoms in the borderlands if that's ok? Quite small individually, probably each centered around a tower or keep.
Your comparisons sounds about right to me. One thing that has occurred to me is that my Navy is pretty light on ships of the line, since when I wrote my OOB I didn't think there were any other major maritime powers for battleships to fight, hence the 70 frigates and 100 sloops but only 12 battleships.Raw Shark wrote:Y'know, it took me this long to think to myself, "Wait, if we never got pillaged by Spain, we still have all that 'gold' stuff that the whiteys love so much laying around everywhere, too." [facepalm]
So yeah, much more efficient shipments of hard currency than I was picturing are possible if a financial deal is reached with the Aztecs.
On the subject of my navy, I'm picturing my ships being worth about the same as the Orion Empire's, in a different but equal sort of way. We're both hella fast, and our other advantages mostly cancel each other out, IMHO: They almost always have us outgunned, we can almost always pick our battles; we can almost never dislodge them from a specific position, and they can almost never get the drop on us or pin us down, without an overwhelming commitment of force in either case; they're magically reinforced against being intimidated by our death metal schtick, we're too terrified of the higher powers and desensitized by constant exposure to grisly carnage to be intimidated by their huge guns; they have telepathic comms, we have swarms of fangy goat-bats trained to go for the youngest, skinniest victims first, etc. However, despite individual ship values, I'm spread all over the place with Pacific*, Caribbean, and east Atlantic fleets defending my interests, so I'd be severely on my back foot if he came directly for my east coast, or especially the Azores, with everything he's got. Sound about right?
* Despite the current lack of major PC threats from the West Coast, we keep numerous frigates and even a few ships of the line over there, because of shark men, piracy, and this little kaiju problem a couple decades ago that's had us kind of jumpy ever since.