Strategy-style games are not my strength. I’ve no APM, I can’t tell you the difference
between micro and macro, I’ve never beaten a human opponent, heck, I even get
stomped by the computer in Starcraft 1.
But, for some reason, I’ve been getting into them lately. Civ, XCOM, Tropico, Rome, and Age of Empires II HD.
Last night, I played AoE with my friend Emery. The two of us teamed up against four AI
opponents on a random map. We set the
difficulty a level higher than I play, which is to say from Standard to Moderate. Emery has played a
lot of AoE and is very good at the game, more than tripling my score the last
two times we played, so I entered the game with confidence.
My starting point as Korea
was at the 9 o’clock position, with Emery as China at the 11 o’clock.
“Haha, good allies!” He told me.
I started with a few peasants, a town center, and a scout
who I immediately sent south to explore the surrounding area. The ground was covered in snow, with a small
gold vein to the east and a forest southeast and northeast.
A few of my villagers built a lumber camp and began to
gather wood. Another built a mill near
wild berry bushes. Food gathering,
underway, I began to build houses to support my soon-to-be growing population. Before long, farms were being built and
maintained, gold mined, trees felled, and additional buildings constructed.
Usually, on the default difficulty, I can wait until the
second age to build a barracks and train up some militiamen. I knew that this time I would be facing a
more formidable group of opponents, so I created my barracks early and trained
about four militia men. I stationed them
on the southern pass of my borders, where any assaulting force would be
funneled by the trees. The eastern pass
was bounded, so I thought, by ice and water, so I left that undefended.
It was a good thing that I had some fighters early, because
I found out that the Teutons were neighboring me. Warmongering bastard that he was, he sent
early skirmishers at me. They bypassed
my outpost and entered by lands by the east, traversing the ice river. They caused some havoc with my civilians
before I was able to eliminate the threat.
After this, I began to build a wall. I wasn't able to completely wall off the
border before a force of Teutons and Mongols slipped through and began to
harass and attack my supply lines.
Frantically, I trained up as many soldiers as I could to slay them. My stalwart defenders were able to drive off
the aggressors.
Then, the attacks ramped up.
I was soon in a constant battle against an overwhelming tide of martial
aggression. As I tried desperately to
finish the wall, Mongols and Teutons constantly streamed through, slaughtering
my workers and clashing with my meager military. Soon, the border became a charnel house,
where workers feared to be sent, and where the soldiers fought without quarter
in a brutal melee for survival. For they
knew that should the border fall, the Mongol and Teuton hordes would butcher every
living thing in their homeland. And so
they fought, grim-faced and hard.
For decades, the unfinished wall only slowed down the
attackers. Armies clashed, swords met,
and blood soaked the ground. Then,
finally the battering rams and catapults rolled in. Morale faltered, and I pulled back. I ordered my workers to begin building guard
towers with interlocking fields of fire to push back the first wave of
assault.
Before long, the wall crumbled and the bloodthirsty hordes
streamed in like a river. The guard
towers held true as long as they could, but it only stemmed the tide. The enemy poured into my farms and homes,
killing as they pleased.
My people mounted a final desperate push, soldiers and
civilians alike and were at great cost able to repel the invaders. Battle-weary, and knowing that the enemy
would return, I ordered the civilians to flee north to China. My broken, tiny army would remain to hold the
city. Knowing their deaths would be
unsung, the brave fighters bid farewell to their comrades.
The remaining civilians made their way north, pledging to
remember the sacrifice.
The decades that followed were years of savage guerrilla
warfare. The Teutons and Mongols tried
to ransack and pillage my town center, and my bleak-faced cavalry repeatedly
smashed them. Time and again, the horde
would attack, and my defenders would crash into their flanks and rear, wreak
havoc, and fall back.
Each friendly death was a heart-wrenching tragedy. Each enemy death was an uncelebrated act of
vengeance.
Finally, after years of losses, only a few men
remained. A final, massive invasion army
marched in from the south. Knowing this
was their last moment, they rode forth to meet the enemy, woefully outnumbered. They roared their challenge and charged.
As they neared their end, a glint of gold appeared on the
horizon. A thousand thundering hooves
shook the earth. A multitude of voices
screamed their battle-cry.
China
had come.
The tide turned.
Victory was won that day.
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