I'll have you know it has only been twelve turns that I managed to do that, and keep a sufficient army and leader there. Also, I'm new to R:TW.
Well it's a good game. I've been playing it since around the time it came out. Been a TW fan-girl for a long time and Rome is one of my favorites.
Yeah after all this time, Rome is still my favorite. Everyone seems to be praying for it and it's the only one of their classics that they haven't made a sequel for, so yeah come 2013 or so I might just quit life and only play Rome 2.
Rome was awesome, the diversity of the units was really an advantage when compared to later titles (never played Shogun 2 or Medieval 2, but I did find Empire and Napoleon quite disappointing).
Sweet. I still have to pick that up at some point. The fact that you can actually train more than one unit at a time is great as well. Building armies in Rome was a pain.
Exactly. Wait, wasn't there some place on Sicily where somehow you could recruit them there as well? I remember there being some place you could...I'm probably wrong, though, it's been ages since I've played it.
Oh, I shat a brick after this one, stupid rebels. Only 1 survivor, and he can tell the tale of this battle to all the thousands of his rebel friends! Also, the Brutii lost a city beside Rome to rebels, so I took it over. Come on, Brutii, right beside Rome, really?
Oh yeah, I've done some pretty kick-ass stuff, in a language I barely understand! Lol, aren't you Hispanic? Anyway, the Britannians have launched the most massive assault I've ever seen on R:TW yet on my Northern French cities, here's how it turned out for them. Battle 1: Absolute chaos. Battle 2: How the fuck did they lose this? The biggest win for them is when cavalry snuck into the city to attack archers. Edit: Sorry about the first photo, it overlapped the screenshot I put in the post above.
Nope.... Founded by Corinth, although it was more or less independent for most of it's history. It allied with Sparta during the Peloponnesesian war pretty much because Athens invaded Sicily and Syracuse wanted to retain he independence.