In the Crusades campaign, there is an almost constant need for big armies. Sure, there'll be lots of big clashes and fierce engagements, but a lot of the time you'll be killing half-strength armies and skirmishing with oen or two units. You see, in other campaigns, you won't always be fighting massive battles. You'll be fighting massive battles by turn two, and the entire campaign is based around this. Each faction starts with massive armies, right off the get-go. Defend them at all costs and thank your stars for them, 'cause you've got tough fights ahead of you.Īnd now to explain why this campaign is the most intense. These rivers, particularily those around Alexandria and Baghdad, are very useful. This would be a problem, but fortunately (or unfortunately, depending on whether you are the attacker or defender) there are lots of rivers to help defend provinces. There are some mountains and hills near Damascus and Antioch, but for the most part you'll be fighting on plains. The lands down south may be harder, though. The mountain provinces may be hard to take, as enemies can easily use the narrow passes for defense, but once they are take, it is incredibly easy to defend, for obvious reasons. You will have very mountainous terrain in Turkey and Georgia, but as you head south towards Arabia and Egypt, the land becomes completely flat. First off, the campaign map is a mixture of plains and mountains. Out of the four campaigns for Kingdoms, this one has to be the most intense. It is in this exciting scenario that we being the Crusades campaign. The Empire has suffered much in the past two hundred years, but now it resurges and gains strength, ready for whatever fight may come its way. Spectating this struggle is the Byzantine Empire. The Muslims, for their part, are fighting valiantly to drive back the invaders and reclaim the lands they deem to be rightfully theirs. Believing in the righteousness of their cause, they fight bravely against the overwhelming forces arrayed against them by the Muslim leaders of Egypt and the Turks. The Catholic crusaders still hold the Latin kingdoms established at the end of the First Crusade. It is 1174, and the Middle East is the stage for a three-way clash of cultures, religions, and ideas.
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