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4 minutes ago, Lion.Kanzen said:

Puedes diseñar veículos?

Yo creo que se podría, pero tengo algunos proyectos por delante y no creo que sea utilizada por nadie, era una máquina ingeniosa pero fracasó en su cometido (según el artículo). Todavía tengo la fortaleza del vagón xiongnu aquí en la pc. Necesito implementarla.

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1 hour ago, Lopess said:

Yo creo que se podría, pero tengo algunos proyectos por delante y no creo que sea utilizada por nadie, era una máquina ingeniosa pero fracasó en su cometido (según el artículo). Todavía tengo la fortaleza del vagón xiongnu aquí en la pc. Necesito implementarla.

That machine reminds me ...

https://weaponsandwarfare.com/2015/08/27/caesars-naval-campaign-against-the-veneti/

 

Initially, Caesar campaigned by attacking the coastal strongholds of the Veneti one by one, using Roman siegecraft and the almost limitless work ethic of his legionaries to create a situation in which his men could get onto the walls and capture each stronghold. However, as each stronghold threatened to fall to the Romans, the Veneti would bring up their ships and evacuate the population and their possessions, rendering the Romans’ capture of the place pointless. Caesar soon realized that only with his fleet could he make decisive headway, and that he would have to suspend operations until the fleet was ready. The ships the Romans had built were essentially Mediterranean war galleys, the kind of ships they were familiar with. As well adapted as they were to Mediterranean conditions, however, these ships were not well suited to the huge waves and extreme tides of the Atlantic, and were held up for long by the weather. Finally, however, the weather became calm enough to allow them to sail to the south Brittany coast and confront the Veneti. It was an exceptionally ill-matched battle. The ships of the Veneti and their allies, some 220 strong, were of a very different sort from the Roman vessels: high decked, to withstand Atlantic waves, shallow bottomed, so as not to be stranded by low tides, and powered by sails rather than oars, as once again the Atlantic waves are not suited to rowing

The Roman war galleys relied on ramming and boarding tactics, but their rams were ineffective against the strongly built and shallow-bottomed Venetic ships, while those ships’ high decks and manoeuvrability under sail prevented easy boarding. At first the Romans were at a loss to know how to proceed. However, they devised an ingenious device for cutting the rigging of the Gallic vessels: hooks mounted on the end of long poles, which could be used to snag the rigging on Venetic ships.

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For Alexander campaign sciguy42 suggests:

Sogdiana would be awesome, there are a few scenarios where Alexander is fighting them and currently I am just using Persians as a substitute. 

 

The Dahae would be good too, their horsemen rode alongside Alexander, currently I am using the Persian Horse archers to represent them. 

 

Capadocians appear in mission 11, any units unique to them would be great.

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  • 2 weeks later...
12 分钟前,wowgetoffyourcellphone 说:

我敢打赌,他们在头饰下戴着一顶简单的青铜骷髅帽。 没有证据,只是一种预感。

What artwork are these hoods from? Is there an image of a soldier wearing a helmet?

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