EUROPA UNIVERSALIS III Muscowy/Russia FAQ by Sephiroth Katana (http://www.rpgclassics.com) INTRODUCTION ============ Each nation in EU3 offers a unique gameplay experience, due to their huge differences in starting potential. If you want a relatively easy time, play as Castille or France; if you want a near-impossible challenge, try The Knights or Ryukyu. If you want a reasonably challenging, yet rewarding experience, you could try starting as Muscowy in 1399. The early game is problematic and offers quite a few obstacles, and even the mid- to late-game still requires you to stay on your toes, but if you succeed, you can forge a mighty empire to rival any other nation. Interestingly, playing as Muscowy can show you the logic of real-world history -- you will experience first-hand exactly why the Russian princes fought each other rather than their common enemy, and you'll be forced to amass huge armies and conquer land just to stave off your hungry neighbours. It is a fascinating experience that often requires serious thinking, but is still quite doable even for relatively new players. As of this writing, not many EU3 resources are available on GameFAQs. If you have other questions, the Paradox forums and wiki boast a vibrant community. They have a special style of FAQ-writing, which is meant to be more open-ended than the typical walkthrough. I do not promise to follow this style; this FAQ describes what worked for me in several Muscowy playthroughs and gives some specific advice. It is meant to be a walkthrough of a particular campaign, not a tutorial on game mechanics. I will point out mechanics that are particularly important, but you should probably already be familiar with such concepts as "sliders," "infamy," and "inflation," which are common to all nations. If you are just starting the game, try to play through as Castille to get used to all these things. OUTLINE ======= Preliminary Remarks General Strategy 1. Sliders 2. National Ideas 3. Decisions 4. Advisors 5. Province Improvements 6. Economy 7. Government Type The Grand Campaign, 1399-1821 1. Surviving the early game (1399-1450) 2. The early mid-game: Muscowy vs. the Horde (1450-1525) 3. The late mid-game: colonization, expansion, and warfare (1525-1600) 4. The late game: basking in glory (1600-1821) 5. Other Russian states (Note: The date ranges are rough guidelines only.) PRELIMINARY REMARKS =================== As Muscowy, you start out in a pretty bad position. You have a small handful of land-locked provinces, wedged in between several hostile nations. Your three small neighbours, the fellow Russian principalities of Tver, Ryazan, and Yaroslavl, are inoffensive and can even be friendly, but unfortunately, you are going to have to conquer them to get much-needed resources to deal with your other neighbours. To your north is Novgorod, which starts out with more land and money, and wants to conquer you as much as you want to conquer it. To your west is Poland/Lithuania, which can put up a nasty fight even in the late game. To your south and east is the immense Golden Horde, which controls half of the Eurasian continent in 1399, and is incapable of any diplomatic relations (seriously, this is part of the game mechanics) other than conquest and extorting tribute. To make things worse, you have a number of additional weaknesses: 1. You start out with the Oriental technology tree. Your military units will quickly be outmatched by Western European countries, and you are forced to wait 15% longer than those countries to research the same upgrades. Your provinces start with no improvements other than basic forts, and you are initially unable to build such improvements (you need to first research some upgrades). Just to compare, Castille starts out with a free University, an advanced building that gives you free technology investments. As Muscowy, you will probably need to wait at least 150 years before you can build one. 2. You start out so far away from the ocean that you will most likely never have the chance to explore the New World. If you conquer Novgorod quickly, you might get a shot at playing Peter the Great, but chances are that Britain, Portugal, Spain, or Sweden will beat you to the colonies. 3. Did I mention the Golden Horde? Because it is absolutely terrifying. It will take almost a hundred in-game years before you can put up a fight, and you will have no choice but to pay them tribute during this entire time. This will slow down your development considerably, as it is quite difficult to build up your economy when you have to pay this extra liability every month. There are, however, some pros to balance the cons: 1. You start out with a reasonably large military and a modest cash reserve. Hey, you have to be thankful for what you can get. This allows you to at least stand up to your immediate neighbours and pay off the Horde for a little while. 2. You may never reach the New World, but you might not need to. If you survive the early game, you can actually dismantle the Horde piece by piece and expand onto their land. The northeast of Asia is no man's land, and if you manage to get that far, you can quickly colonize it. Many of these areas are rich in fur and iron, which are quite valuable. In addition, staying on land just means that you don't need to worry about spending money on a navy. Let all those fools putter about in their little ships -- the more money they waste on them, the easier it will be to smash their armies! 3. The penalty for being in the Oriental tech group actually doesn't kick in immediately. You start with Druzhina Cavalry, which will stay competitive against European cavalry for a good century. You can also switch to the Western tech group using the game's Westernization mechanics. This is difficult, but doable. 4. Although the Horde is terrifying, they use the Steppe Horde form of govern- ment, which is just about the worst government in the entire game. Specifically, every time their ruler dies, they go into a succession crisis in which most of their lands can be overrun by rebels. While this is going on, they can actually fracture into multiple smaller hordes, each of which will be much easier for Muscowy to handle. Thus, if you can survive long enough to Westernize and expand into the Horde's lands, you can then quickly build an enormous empire. It is quite gratifying to be able to mobilize 150,000 troops in the span of a month late in the game. Hopefully, this FAQ can help you get there. One final note: I developed these strategies while playing the full version of the game with all four expansions (through Divine Wind). In my opinion, this is the way the game should be played; it took them a long time to really iron out the mechanics. And, it should go without saying, but this FAQ would be most useful to readers who are not EU3 masters. I'm sure someone somewhere was able to Westernize within the first 20 years and conquer the world in the first 100, but this FAQ is for normal players and their typical EU3 experience. GENERAL STRATEGY ================ This section describes long-term strategic choices that you can make throughout the game, such as your slider moves and national ideas. I describe the choices that will specifically benefit Muscowy in my opinion. 1. Sliders Don't neglect your sliders; they exert a subtle yet deep influence on how your game plays out. You'll need to adjust them every chance you get in order to Westernize quickly. Below, I describe the relative importance of each slider and give advice on how to set it. a. Centralization vs. Decentralization Most of the sliders offer you a choice, with both sides having advantages and disadvantages. Not this one: there is absolutely no benefit to Decentralization. It may go against your political beliefs, but unfortunately this is how the medieval world works according to EU3. Maximum Centralization is always preferable. Unfortunately, Muscowy starts out with high Decentralization. Moving to Centralization should be your first priority, especially since you'll need it to Westernize. b. Aristocracy vs. Plutocracy This one depends on your play style. Full Aristocracy gives you a better land army and more diplomats; full Plutocracy gives you more merchants, spies, and trade efficiency. If you are planning to do a lot of trading, Plutocracy may be helpful. But, since Muscowy is a land-based power, my personal suggestion would be to favour Aristocracy. It is not hugely important, though, and I usually just follow whichever direction the random events suggest. Your regular slider moves would probably be better used for the other sliders. c. Serfdom vs. Free Subjects You start out with full Serfdom, which is actually not too bad. It makes it more difficult to research technology, something that Muscowy already has a problem with, but it also gives you cheaper military units and makes it easier to increase your Stability. Free Subjects basically does the opposite of all these things: it makes technology cheaper, but increases the cost of your military. I prefer to have this somewhere in the middle, but I don't make it a priority. If you have full Serfdom, you will experience fairly frequent random events allowing you to move toward Free Subjects without sacrificing a slider move. d. Innovative vs. Narrowminded This is an interesting one. You start out Narrowminded, and you must move toward Innovation in order to Westernize. Having successfully done that, however, you will actually benefit more from moving back to Narrowminded, as this will reduce the cost of Stability and give you more missionaries, which can be difficult to get otherwise. As Muscowy, you might have to do a lot of converting on Horde lands, so missionaries can be extremely useful. This slider also affects the Papal Influence of Catholic countries, but Muscowy is Orthodox, so this won't make any difference. e. Mercantilism vs. Free Trade Another interesting one. As you may expect, Free Trade favours your merchants and your ability to compete in foreign centers of trade. Mercantilism improves your performance in centers of trade that you control, but Muscowy starts out with zero. Mercantilism also gives you extra spies, which is reasonably useful. I suggest just making a one-time decision whether or not you are going to incorporate trade into your play style. I usually decide not to do this, since it is not that helpful in the crucial early game. This allows me to just focus on Mercantilism and have one less slider to worry about. You will occasionally get random events allowing you to move toward Free Trade. f. Offensive vs. Defensive Pretty self-explanatory. Offensive gives a bonus to your attacking units and their morale, whereas Defensive improves the quality of your forts. I personally prefer to have this exactly in the middle, but either extreme has its pluses. g. Land vs. Naval Again, self-explanatory: Land benefits your armies, and Naval benefits your navies. In my opinion, Muscowy benefits the most from an all-Land play style, so you can go all Land and have one less thing to think about. Perhaps the one drawback is that Land penalizes the cost of colonists, which can be important (though not hugely so) when you are conquering Horde lands. h. Quality vs. Quantity Both have benefits. Quality improves your battle performance, but increases the cost of your army and reduces your manpower, which means that you will have to wait longer to replenish your armies. Quantity does the opposite of that, giving you more and cheaper units that don't perform as well. You start out with high Quantity, which is actually OK for the early game. As you improve your economy, you might consider moving toward Quality. To summarize, your priorities in the early game are to move toward Innovative and Centralization, with Land being a useful third option. After Westernizing, you can actually move back toward Narrowminded. 2. National Ideas These are various bonuses that you can adopt as your Government Technology improves. You can switch between them (i.e. abandon one idea and replace it by another one), but this penalizes you, so it is better to choose things that can benefit you throughout the entire game. Below, I list a few of the most useful ideas for Muscowy, in the order in which I recommend getting them. Since I think that Muscowy is most successful as a land power, I do not recommend any of the naval ideas (many of the land ideas, on the other hand, are essential). a. Military Drill There are a couple of good choices for a first idea, but this one can really help you stay competitive in the early game. It gives a permanent boost to your land armies' morale, which means that they will hold their ground and fight longer. Thus, even if you are outnumbered, it is more likely that the enemy will run out of morale before you, and you will win the battle even if you have taken more casualties. Once this happens, you can chase after the retreating enemy before they have a chance to recover their morale. If they don't have enough to last the first few days of battle, they will just surrender and their entire army will be removed from play. This can really help you stand up to the Golden Horde, whose warriors are powerful, but undisciplined. b. National Conscripts Absolutely fantastic. This idea increases your manpower reserves by 50%, which is particularly useful in the early game when you may have to fight multiple wars in a row with no time to recuperate from your losses. Until you can get a fairly large number of new provinces, manpower will be a crucial factor in all of your military engagements. It would be a good choice for your first idea, except that you need to spend some time to build up your Land Technology first. c. Grand Army Another great idea that permanently increases your land supply limit by 33%, meaning that you can make substantially more military units. The benefits really start to kick in during the mid-game, when your country becomes large enough that you need multiple armies to protect all of your borders. In the early game, you might not have enough money to use up the available supply, although it can be quite useful if you do. d. Church Attendance Duty Reduces the cost of Stability by 33%. This is not that useful late in the game, when you can restore Stability in a single month, but it can be extremely useful when you are Westernizing and trying to recover your Stability. Also, this idea unlocks the Gilded Iconography cultural decision, which is also very useful. e. Colonial Ventures You will surely choose this idea at some point -- it can be very helpful in the mid- to late-game when you are trying to expand to the Pacific Ocean. But, in fact, you can get value out of this idea even earlier, since there are so many horde lands close to Muscowy. The more colonists you have, the more quickly you can seize all of this land. The bonus from the idea is very noticeable; most likely, it will double the rate at which you get colonists. f. National Bank Automatically gives you a permanent yearly inflation reduction of 0.1%. I even used to choose this as my first or second idea, but if you're good at managing your economy, you may not need this for a while, even while you're paying money to the Horde. Still, this is really the only way to reduce your inflation in the early game. You can also hire Masters of the Mint, but they need to be at least level 4 in order to be useful. If your advisor is level 1, he will only give a 0.02% inflation reduction, which is worthless. This idea is like having a level 5 master, permanently, without using up an advisor slot. g. Bill of Rights Not essential, but can give you an easier time by reducing the frequency with which those stupid rebels appear. Once you have created your vast empire, this can really cut down on the aggravation factor. This is also very useful if you happen to inherit a large country with provinces spread out over the world. h. Smithian Economics Oh yeah, baby. This will boost your production efficiency by 20%, which will send your economy into overdrive once you have conquered those iron-producing provinces. In the late game, this is a great idea, and you can only get it in the late game, since you need Production Technology 30 before you can adopt it. That's basically the only reason why it's not higher on this list. i. Esprit de Corps Increases your armies' damage potential by 25%, which is great. The only problem is that you need Land Technology 53 to adopt it, and by then the game will be nearly over anyhow. 3. Decisions During your game, you have the chance to execute a number of "Decisions," which can be "National," "Cultural," or "Religious." In all of these cases, a decision is a one-time event that provides various effects (positive or negative) until the end of the game. Below, I describe the most important decisions for Muscowy. a. Institute Liberum Veto You may need this in the very early game if you get attacked by a superior army. The decision will give you 15,000 troops for free, but it will open the door to some serious rebellions and penalties later on. Worst of all, it will give you +1 to Decentralization, while all of your early-game efforts should be directed toward moving in the opposite direction. Basically, try to avoid this decision. But, if you're up against the wall, it will most likely save you. In the first 10-20 in-game years, 15,000 troops is usually enough to turn a war around. b. Make St. Petersburg the capital If you own the Neva province and have formed Russia, your capital moves to St. Petersburg and you gain +3 Stability. Wait until just after you've Westernized: it will reduce Stability by 5, but this decision will give you +3 back. c. Go east into Siberia! This decision is unlocked once you reach western Siberia. For a negligible cost, you will get a Conquistador unit, allowing you to uncover unexplored land. If you don't get the Quest For The New World national idea (and I suggest that you don't), this will be your only Conquistador for the entire game. Thus, you should definitely execute this decision and then make the most of your explorer before he dies. d. Gilded Iconography Unlocked once you adopt the Church Attendance Duty idea. This cultural decision requires a large one-time payment, but after that, you'll get an annual bonus to your cultural tradition, every year until the end of the game. This is great, since it frees up all of those magistrates that you use for tapestries, national epics, and paintings. The earlier you can implement this decision, the more valuable it will be. e. Formalize Scales, Weights and Measures This decision becomes available at your capital after you have reached Govern- ment Tech 10. You also need to put your national focus near your capital. The decision will use up five magistrates, but will provide permanent bonuses to tax, revolt risk, and production efficiency. f. Pass Militia Act If you ever get a ruler with a Military skill of 7, make him a general and pass this act for +1 to Centralization. Obviously this is only beneficial if you haven't Westernized yet -- it will just help you get there faster. g. Pass Recruiting Act Pass this act while you're at war for +1 to Innovative, one of the requirements for Westernization. h. Implement the Gold Standard Unlocked once you get Government Tech 30 and have a high-level Master of Mint. It permanently decreases inflation by 0.04/year, which should be a no-brainer. i. Establish Russian Patriarchate You can do this after you've formed Russia, if the Ottomans have taken over Constantinople. Your maximum war exhaustion is reduced. j. Act of Uniformity If you can get Government Tech 15 before you get Church Attendance Duty, you can implement this for more and cheaper missionaries. Definitely helpful, since religious conversion is very useful for stability. k. Pass Suffragan Bishop Act Reduces Stability cost, but also reduces taxes. Probably worth it on the whole. You really don't want to spend your money stabilizing instead of researching technology. Plus, most of your income will come from production rather than taxes, anyway. l. Pass Anti-Piracy Act This improves your Infamy reduction rate, but slightly penalizes the maximum Infamy allowed. Probably worth it -- you'll be doing some conquering, so it's good to burn off the Infamy faster. 4. Advisors Advisors can be very helpful for achieving your goals. The best advisors to choose vary depending on which stage your game is in. In the early game, you get the most value out of advisors who give bonuses to your technology investments. This is particularly important since Muscowy's research is penalized until you Westernize. Also, at this early stage, your economy is so poor that even a level 1-2 advisor can significantly improve your research speed, at a fairly low cost. Thus, you will be looking for the following: - Artist (Stability investment bonus; you start with a decent one) - Army Reformer (Land investment bonus) - Natural Scientist (Production investment bonus) - Statesman (Government investment bonus) Since I recommend staying away from trade and naval combat as Muscowy, I suggest focusing on the above and ignoring Treasurers and Naval Reformers. Keeping an Artist on hand will be useful for a very long time, since you can expect frequent stability drops from random events. Westernizing also carries a huge stability penalty. Aside from these guys, a Master of the Mint (inflation reduction) can be a life- saver in the early game. If you ever let your inflation go above zero, this and the National Bank idea will be your only means of reducing it. However, the advisor really needs to be level 4 or higher to be useful, since any inflation reduction below 0.08% per year is far too slow to help you. Make sure to keep up your Cultural Tradition. In the mid-game, these advisors will still be useful, but you can also get more value out of specialists like the following: - Banker (reduces interest on loans; try not to borrow money though) - Fortification Expert (improved fort defense) - Grand Captain (improved morale for land armies) - Theologian (improved conversion chance for missionaries) - Spymaster (improved chances of spy success; situationally useful) In the late game, you can rely on more subtle economic and diplomatic advisors: - Alderman (improved production efficiency; hire once you have iron production) - Diplomat (yearly Infamy reduction; quite helpful in between wars) - Grand Marshal (yearly Legitimacy bonus; situationally helpful) - Philosopher (yearly Prestige bonus; quite helpful in between wars) I rarely use the other advisors, as I feel that the bonuses they offer are either too small or not very relevant to Muscowy's situation. 5. Province Improvements You have to think hard about which province improvements to build. Not only is your money limited, but the buildings have all kinds of secondary effects aside from the ones shown on the selection screen. If you want to benefit from your buildings as quickly as possible, the production buildings (Constable, Workshop, etc.) increase your tax base and production efficiency. The bonuses stack: a Constable gives you a 25% tax bonus, and a Workshop gives +1 to tax, so with the Constable you'll actually get +1.25. However, you get the most far-reaching effects from manpower buildings (Armory and so on). Obviously they will improve your manpower, which is helpful in the early game when you have to fight numerous wars with limited resources. The Conscription Center, if you get that far, gives a huge bonus to manpower and even increases your supply limit (which stacks with the Grand Army idea), allowing you to train even more units. But, in the long term, the manpower buildings also improve your ability to make money from commodity production. In the late game, production will account for a larger proportion of your income than taxes. You can click on a province to see which commodity is produced there. Your main goods as Russia will be grain, wool, fur, copper, and iron. The money that you get from producing these goods, however, depends on their market price, which is determined using a fairly complicated mechanism. Essentially the game keeps track of "supply" and "demand" for each good. Your income goes up when demand goes up and supply goes down. As I understand it, you can influence the supply of a good by building certain things in provinces where that good is made. You can influence the demand for a good by building certain things anywhere. As it turns out, the manpower buildings boost demand for grain, copper, and iron, three of your most common resources. The metals are especially valuable, since you can also build Weapons Manufactories in provinces that produce iron and copper for additional production bonuses. Moreover, the cost of each manu- factory is tied to your manpower, so building lots of Conscription Centers will actually allow you to build even more manufactories. This will supercharge your economy once you colonize the far east, where copper and iron appear quite often. I typically make 20-30 Weapons Manufactories in the course of a single game. In light of this, it would seem that manpower buildings are actually the most useful. The production buildings do help out in provinces with high tax rates, such as your capital or cities with trade centers. Furthermore, Workshops do improve the demand for fur, which is another very common Russian resource. If you are able to grab any provinces that make exotic goods, such as chinaware, tea, or spices, Constables and Treasuries will also increase the demand for these goods. However, you are unlikely to get more than a handful of these provinces in a typical game. The government buildings (Church and so on) are a bit less important in my view. Churches are helpful early on, and Courthouses can be useful in those high-risk provinces with a different culture and religion from the state-adopted ones. The Town Hall, if you get that far, gives a tax bonus, and the Cathedral, if you get even farther, gives nice bonuses to all your missionaries. These last two buildings also improve the demand for exotic goods, but this is unlikely to play a big role in your game. Overall, I do not prioritize these buildings as highly as the others. The trade buildings are helpful for provinces that have trade centers. If you get up to Post Offices, they increase your global trade efficiency, which will improve the performance of all your trade centers. I generally feel that Muscowy gets relatively little value out of these. Among the naval buildings, a Dock will give you a production bonus, if you happen to have an iron-producing province on the Pacific coast. Among the unique buildings, pretty much all are useful, possibly except for the Admiralty. If you do build one, try to do it in a province that produces Naval Supplies, as this will greatly increase demand. Among the manufactories, the Weapons Manufactory should be your top priority, since you'll be making the most money from copper and iron production. The Textile Manufactory can help in a province that produces wool, but you'll probably get more value out of the weapons. The University and Fine Arts Academy are reasonable options for places that don't make any of these products, but the Weapons Manufactory should really be the top priority. 6. Economy One of the hints on the game's loading screen says, "Did you know inflation is bad?" This is the best advice a new player can possibly receive. Do not drive your inflation up. It can take 30-50 years to bring it back down, which is devastating in the early game. Any inflation is too much. To avoid inflation, never use your monthly income on anything other than tech research. This means that you will lose money during the year; hopefully your annual income on January 1st will give you enough to last until December 31st. Don't spend all of your starting money, as you might need it to last through the first few years. Likewise, do not borrow money. Not only will you have to pay monthly interest, thus slashing your income even more, but you will have to repay the principal after five years. Of course, occasionally you will face desperate times. The only occasion when you should ever consider borrowing money is right before starting a war with the Golden Horde. This will let you hire a general (they don't come cheap in the early game), train some extra troops, and maintain those troops during the war if they go over your supply limit. Once you finally commit to a war with the Horde, the idea is that you will save money from not paying tribute, and that you will seize new land that will generate new income. Within five years, you should have enough money to pay back the loan. If not, you'll likely just lose the game anyway. There is no other time during the game when you should ever consider borrowing money. Similarly, you may occasionally mint money, thus driving up inflation. You should never do this before you have the National Bank idea. Once you adopt that idea, you will have a permanent 0.1% annual inflation reduction. If you then hire a decent Master of the Mint and improve your Centralization, you can get this up to about 0.2%. Even with this, it will take five years to reduce one single percentage point of inflation, so be very careful. Really the only time you should ever consider minting money is if it is close to the end of the year and you are about to receive your annual income. Minting for 1-2 months will not hurt you too badly, and you can reduce the inflation over the next 10-12 months while surviving on your annual income. Lastly, it is worth pointing out a few additional obscure ways to improve the supply or demand for your top products: Grain: Station at least one regiment in the province to set the supply equal to zero. (Remember, you want less supply and more demand.) The supply is also reduced if you lean toward Free Subjects or Free Trade. Having +3 stability will also give a small bonus to demand. Wool: Supply is improved (lowered) if you lean toward Aristocracy. Fur: If your sliders show high Quality, the demand for fur will increase. However, it will plummet while you are at war. Salt: Demand is improved if you lean toward Free Subjects. Copper: Supply is improved if you lean toward Free Subjects. Also, if your army contains at least one artillery regiment anywhere on the map, demand for copper will improve. Demand also goes up significantly when you are at war. Iron: Having a large army and leaning toward Land will improve demand. It will also go up significantly when you are at war. 7. Government Type Muscowy starts as a Despotic Monarchy, which is actually pretty good early on. Most notably, you get a big boost to your Infamy limit, so you can misbehave a lot more, which can be helpful early on when you need to fight a large number of opponents and build up your income and land base quickly. But this government won't give you a lot of magistrates, so you'll need to switch out as soon as you can. The best plan is probably to create an Empire as soon as you control thirty provinces. You won't have the Infamy limit bonus, but your land armies will get a bonus to morale, and you'll at least get more magistrates. Better yet, an Empire is able to use the Holy War Casus Belli against any "infidel" country up to the year 1650. Remember, Muscowy is Orthodox Christian, so you cannot use this CB against Catholics or Protestants, but you can use it against anyone else. If you do, your Infamy cost is reduced by 75% for any province that you steal from your opponent, which allows you to devour conquered nations very quickly. This isn't quite as game-breaking as it may seem: early on, most infidels that you will be facing are hordes, and horde provinces can only be seized through colonization, which cannot benefit from the Holy War mechanic. But, if you are able to break through the hordes to Persia or the Ottoman Empire, this is how you can destroy them. If you are able to win a single war, you can easily grab 10-12 provinces at a time, utterly decimating your opponent. If you want to play an expansionist game, this CB is for you, but make sure that you get your conquering done before 1650 -- there is no way to use Holy War after this time. After Empire, you can choose between two paths. The first path is to switch to an Administrative Monarchy, which suits a more peaceful, economy-oriented approach. You will get a lot more magistrates, plus a bonus to your production efficiency, which will help out your economy quite a lot once you start con- quering lands where copper and iron are produced. From there, you can move to a Constitutional Monarchy, which removes the production bonus, but gives even more magistrates. The other path is to stay as an Empire until you can switch to an Absolute Monarchy. This means that you'll have to live with fewer magistrates for some time, but once you make the switch, you get even more magistrates than the Administrative Monarchy, plus a bonus to your armies' discipline. You will also get the Imperialism Casus Belli against pretty much everyone, allowing you to declare war with impunity. You can then upgrade to an Enlightened Despotism, which gives you an Infamy reduction bonus. It is possible to abandon one path for the other (e.g. form an Administrative Monarchy and switch to Absolute Monarchy), but this will carry very heavy stability penalties. It is better to just pick one path and stick with it. Both have advantages: the Administrative Monarchy will let you improve your infra- structure sooner, while the Absolute Monarchy is better for a more aggressive and expansionist play style. THE GRAND CAMPAIGN, 1399-1821 ============================= 1. Surviving the early game (1399-1450) Biggest threat: Novgorod All right, then! You've started the Grand Campaign, and you're looking at your six starting provinces on the map. Before you even unpause, there are already quite a few things for you to do. First, the Horde starts out at war with you. You have no hope of defeating them with your starting army. My best advice is to immediately offer them tribute (click on any Horde province, choose "Sue for Peace" and go from there). The exact amount of tribute they demand depends on your economy, so it's better to pay it now rather than later. If you offer tribute on day one, they will typically ask for 0.9 ducats per month. This is actually horrible, but you have no choice. At least you start with 77 ducats in your treasury! Second, you get a slider move. Although your first priority should be to move toward Centralization as quickly as possible, this is a bit dangerous in 1399. This move will either spark a revolt on your territory or decrease your Stability, both of which are perilous in the early game. Since you need to Westernize as soon as possible, the best option is probably to defer the move by a couple of years, until you can train a few more regiments and reliably defeat a rebellion. Third, you need to set your research priorities. Initially, put all of your monthly income into Stability, as you need to get it to +3 in order to really do anything in this game. After that, it's a bit more open. Take a look to see which advisors are available (this is all before you unpause). You start with a decent Artist advisor, whom you should keep for the time being, and if you see a good advisor in one of the main research areas (say, Land Technology), you may wish to hire him before someone else does. Fourth, use your remaining diplomats to arrange some royal marriages and/or alliances. The Teutonic Order is usually willing to ally with you on day one. You start with reasonably good relations with most European countries (this will soon change), so use this time to build up your diplomacy. I usually try for a royal marriage with France, who is sufficiently far away from you to not be a threat, but is sufficiently powerful to be useful. Other good choices are Castille, Portugal, or Hungary. In the beginning, you do not own any trade centers, and the only one you can access is Novgorod. Needless to say, they are not too keen on helping you make money. If the starting advisor pool has a reasonably high-level Trader, you can hire him and give it a shot; otherwise, your merchants will probably fail to place, wasting your money. My preference is to just give up on trading as Muscowy, which allows me to focus on Mercantilism and ignore Trade Technology in favour of other, more useful areas. Finally, you will be assigned a mission before unpausing. Nine times out of ten, you'll be asked to conquer one of your small neighbours. If you complete the mission, you will get a bonus in the form of "cores" on the conquered lands. A core on a province means that it is considered part of your heartland, and you always have an excuse to go to war with any country that holds one of your cores. This is actually very important -- core provinces produce 10 times more income than non-cores, and have much lower revolt risk. It is very important to follow these missions, since otherwise you'll need to hold on to a province for 50 years in a row before it becomes a core. The best scenario is when your first mission is to conquer Yaroslavl, then Tver, then Ryazan, and finally Novgorod. Yaroslavl is usually completely help- less at the beginning. If your first mission to annex them, you can declare war before unpausing and send your starting army directly from Moskva to Yaroslavl. Usually Novgorod will not bother to defend them, and you can get a new territory in your first year. If you don't get the mission to annex them, chances are that Tver or Novgorod itself will. The next weakest opponent is Tver. You can also take them down with your star- ting army, and Novgorod is unlikely to defend them. However, Ryazan will always ally with Novgorod. Even if you declare war on them in your first turn, most likely Novgorod will jump in shortly afterward. Hopefully they stay out, or you at least get a chance to conquer Tver and Yaroslavl first. The mission does not let you annex Tver immediately, but you can vassalize them and annex them diplomatically ten years later. If you do end up in a war with both Ryazan and Novgorod, you have a one-time panic button: it's called Liberum Veto. You will get the option to institute it once you start losing the war. If you take this option, you will instantly receive an army of 15,000 troops for free, which should be enough to crush the enemy when combined with your starting army. However, this should be a last resort, since it will increase your Decentralization, the exact opposite of your most important objective in the first 100 years. It will also set you up for some pretty bad rebellions later on. When you do fight Novgorod, make sure to make your starting king into a general. He has decent military skill, so this will greatly improve your chances. Before launching into war with them, try to recruit a few new regiments and send them out in groups of 2-3 thousand men to siege Novgorod's provinces while your main army engages their main army. You want to run up your war score as quickly as you can. If Ryazan is the alliance leader, let Novgorod siege you and try to occupy Ryazan first. If you annex them, it will automatically end the war with Novgorod and give you 10 years to recover. You should not launch your main conquest of Novgorod until you get the mission to "Subjugate" them. Completing this mission will force them to become your vassals, instead of annexing them. However, this particular mission greatly reduces the conditions for victory. Novgorod is so huge that vassalizing them typically costs over 100% war score, which is impossible to get even if you win a total victory. However, the Subjugation mission will cut this cost in half and give you cores on their territory. You need a core on Novgorod in order to form Russia, so this is your best bet unless you want to wait 50 years. In between wars with Novgorod, you can consider fighting Poland/Lithuania. They start out very powerful, but their union is doomed to dissolve sooner or later, and they start with a big rebellion close to your border. In fact, the rebels are guaranteed to spill onto your territory, and you may not be able to defeat them with your starting army. A safe option would be to let them occupy Vyazma and move on, letting you step back in and retake the province. You can fight your neighbours in the meantime. In fact, Lithuania might actually be an easier target than the Russians in the early game. You have to be a bit careful about it, though. Don't declare war, but rather wait for the rebels to overrun the provinces at your border. Quite often, they will declare independence and form new principalities such as Polotsk or Smolensk. At that point, you can attack them (hopefully you get a random excuse like Border Friction) before they have a chance to build up an army. You can get quite a few important provinces in this way, like Bryansk and Smolensk. In terms of potential allies, I find that the best choices are countries that are nearby, but do not share a border with you. The other Russians will be glad to ally with you, but since you want to conquer them, there isn't much of a point. The Horde (and all nomad tribes in EU3) is unable to form alliances with anyone -- they recognize "only gold or steel" as the game puts it. Poland and Lithuania are way too close for comfort. However, the Teutonic Order is a decent choice (contrary to historical fact), since they regularly fight Novgorod and may help you in a war against your neighbours. Hungary is also a reasonable pick; they might not come to your aid, but at least they will act as a deterrent against potential attackers. You can form Royal Marriages with other Orthodox countries like Serbia or Georgia. I also like to develop good relations with really distant countries, like Portugal -- again, they won't help you fight, but people will think twice about picking on you with them on your side. So, in the first decade or so, you should aim to conquer Yaroslavl, Tver, and Ryazan, then wait, either until rebels break away from Lithuania, or until Novgorod is busy fighting the Teutonic Order. Only attack Novgorod once you get the Subjugation mission. Don't take too long -- the Casus Belli you get from this mission will expire a few months after you get it. After your Stability reaches +3, you can invest all your money into a single area of your choice. Any one of your three main focus areas will provide a major benefit: - Government: get a national idea and build Churches (reduce Stability cost) - Production: build Constables (boost tax income) - Land: build Armories (boost manpower) I suggest Government, since this will let you get the Military Drill idea, which will greatly help your armies to hold their own in battle. After that, switch to researching Land. Wars in the early game will leave you under-manned, which means no way to defend if the Horde suddenly decides to break their truce with you. You can double your manpower by choosing National Conscripts as your national idea, but Military Drill will give you more staying power. You can consider yourself to be out of the early game once you've conquered Yaroslavl, Tver, and Ryazan, hopefully grabbed some land from Novgorod or Lithuania, and started to build some Armories. But there is one last mission that you can get early on, and it's called "Conquer Finland." This will probably only happen after you have vassalized Novgorod, and you may even need to diplomatically annex them first. Conquering Finland usually means that you have to declare war on Sweden, a tough Western power. This is difficult, but if you're going to try it, the best time is now. Sweden has better infantry than you, but your Druzhina Cavalry actually beats their knights for now. If you are able to send two cavalry-heavy armies into Sweden and wipe out the first army they send, you can siege and occupy the provinces bordering former Novgorod territory. The main reason to do this is that you instantly get cores on _any_ Finnish provinces that you are able to annex. This is a huge windfall, and can really ramp up your early-game economy. If you go for this mission, you will benefit more by annexing more provinces, so grab as many as possible. It doesn't matter if your Infamy goes up, since your government (Despotic Monarchy) lets you avoid some of the severe penalties you would usually get for driving up your Infamy. If you followed the missions, you should now have free cores on quite a lot of land. Your economy will be in much better shape, and you will be ready to take on the Golden Horde. If you didn't get the cores, you might need to wait. Non-cored provinces are more likely to rebel, have higher stability costs, and produce much less income. 2. The early mid-game: Muscowy vs. the Horde (1450-1525) Biggest threat: Golden Horde By now, you've got to be chafing at having to pay that tribute every month. You need that money to build province improvements! You can't build them if your annual income is eaten up by your monthly expenses, but you can't increase your income until you build more Constables! Unfortunately, the Horde is an enemy unlike any you've faced up to now. You could take on Novgorod with two big armies, but the Horde will just keep coming forever. You will face multiple armies with 12-14K troops, and their Steppe Cavalry is actually pretty good in the early game, certainly a match for your forces. And you cannot even call your allies into battle against nomadic tribes, so your buddies in the Teutonic Order are not going to help you. You can't raise war taxes either (as the game says, "to the Horde, all taxes are war taxes"). Sometimes the Horde will break their truce with you even if you haven't done anything. All you can do in this situation is die (or reset the game). However, if they are OK with your tribute, you can be smart about when to attack. There are two factors to consider: a. The Horde has the single worst form of government in the game. Every time their ruler dies, they enter a succession crisis in which large stretches of land are seized by rebels. If you're lucky, the rebels can actually splinter off into other, smaller hordes, like Crimea. This is not always good, since the new hordes will come after you for tribute just as much as the old horde did, but at least you might be able to fight them one at a time. They might even fight each other even while they're fighting you. b. The Horde also attacks other countries, not just you. They like to harass Poland/Lithuania, which is another reason why this country won't cause you a lot of grief in the early game. Their success at this can be quite random. I have seen them conquer their way into Poland and even parts of Austria, but this usually doesn't last, and the other Europeans retake the land as soon as the next succession crisis starts. Other times, Poland will push back pretty hard, and can actually conquer large pieces of the Horde if you're not careful (you want that land for yourself). The Horde can even attack the Ottoman Empire, which means that their armies will be tied up far away from your border. When you attack, you need to bring your A-game. Get at least two of the most powerful armies you can, headed by generals (your king can be a general, as long as he's not too skillful -- if he has 6 or more Administration, you need him for Westernizing). Also make sure to have a cash reserve of 50-100 ducats, as you will need this in order to seize Horde lands. If you don't have the income, bite the bullet and take out a loan. If you succeed, you can use the spoils of war to repay the debt, and if you fail, you'll be dead. Sounds like a clear choice to me. Now it's time to attack. You want to target wealthy provinces with a lot of economic potential, so that the Horde will be greatly weakened at the end of the war. A good target is Kazan, directly east of your starting province of Nizhny Novgorod. If the enemy armies are centered around there, then hit their southern regions, like Saratow or Tambow. If you're starting the war, you have no choice but to take a stability hit. It's so unfair, since they're extorting you, but you have no choice. Sometimes you can get a mission to conquer one of their provinces, which gives you an excuse. Either way, once you've made the decision to attack, send your armies to two different provinces (hopefully adjacent ones, so they can reinforce each other) and hope that you can take control of them before the really huge Horde armies show up. You can use your spies to Bribe Defenders and speed the process along; usually Horde provinces can be bribed fairly cheaply (like 10-20 ducats) and bribery has a high success rate (75-90%). Once you've taken control of some territory, pick the province that looks like the most valuable and send colonists to it. The complete version of EU3 has a unique mechanic for fighting nomads: instead of annexing their territory through diplomacy, you can only do this by sending colonists to individual provinces. Colonists are not cheap -- each one costs about 20-30 ducats at this stage of the game. Usually a successful colonist will create a settlement of 100 people, but if you're colonizing a Horde territory, this amount is doubled, the success rate is increased, and the time needed for the colonist to arrive is reduced. All told, you will need to wait about 30 in-game days to add 200 people to your settlement. Once the settlement is created, it will grow automatically every month by a small amount, even if you don't send new colonists. Usually you add about five
people per month, but with Horde lands, it's more like 15-20. And the punchline is that, once your settlement grows to 1000 people, the province defects to your complete control without any need for negotiation. So you can permanently remove territory from their grasp without even ending the war. Of course, five colonists are very costly, so I usually send about 2-3 to a province and let the natural growth fill in the rest. You can also get free colonists in the following way. Once you have successfully occupied a few Horde provinces, go to your missions window and cancel whatever is currently there. Hopefully it's something useless like "Naval race against Sweden." You'll take a small prestige loss when you cancel it, but there is a good chance that the next mission will be to colonize one of the occupied territories. Do this and you'll get two free colonists for the next province at no extra cost, which makes the process go much faster. Hopefully you can survive long enough for the colonists to do their work, and get more than one province in this way. Do not end the war until the provinces have defected, or the Horde will just kill all of your colonists, wiping out your work. When it looks like you might start losing the war, try to sue for peace. You will probably not be able to force the Horde to pay tribute, as much as you might like, but you may be able to get them to accept defeat. You may even offer to admit your own defeat, and they might accept without forcing you to pay tribute. Either way, they'll be back in five years, but you will have some time to recover without having to pay tribute. You will stop paying tribute as soon as the war starts, which is one plus at least. If you were able to acquire a few provinces, they'll usually be agreeable. This is basically the blueprint for dismantling the Horde piece by piece, and it is probably the single most satisfying thing you can do in EU3. Go to war, colonize a few provinces, make them admit defeat, wait five years, repeat the process. The more times you do this, the easier it will get. Their most valuable provinces are Kazan, Perm (which has iron), Samara (which has gold), Sarai, and Astrakhan (which has a trade center). Once you've grabbed at least 2-3 of these, you will quickly find that their war machine isn't quite what it used to be. Then they're doomed, and will probably splinter into Crimea, Nogai, Kazan, Sibir, Oirat, Qasim, Qara Koyunlu, and other mini-hordes, each of which can be dealt with in the exact same way. Use the free colonist missions to make things go faster. In fact, you can exploit the Horde mechanics to steal provinces from Poland, Lithuania, or the Ottomans without ever having to fight them. Just wait until the Horde grabs their land, then step in and colonize it. The other country will still have a Casus Belli on you, but they probably won't use it immediately. In between wars with the Horde, look for other targets close by. For example, when the Poland/Lithuania union goes sour, it is possible for new countries like Polotsk to break away from their erstwhile masters. Something to watch out for is that the conquered Horde lands are going to have a different culture (Tartar) and religion (Sunni) from your own. This generally increases the risk of revolt in these provinces, and you really don't want to have to hunt down large rebel forces in between major wars. There are a couple of ways to deal with this. If you have made progress toward Innovative, you generally become more tolerant (there are some national ideas that help with this as well) and the risk of rebellion is reduced somewhat. Your other option is to pursue a policy of total assimilation. You can't do much to change the culture in a province; that happens by itself given enough time. However, you can convert them to Orthodoxy by sending missionaries. Each missionary requires a one-time investment of about 30 ducats, and then has a small chance every year of converting the province. Don't let the province fall back into enemy hands, or the missionary will be killed and you will have to invest in another one. In the long term, using missionaries will make your lands much more stable, but in the short term, the missionary will actually slightly increase the revolt risk. The best way is to proceed cautiously and only have a couple missionaries working at a time (probably this will be all you can afford anyway) in the most high-value provinces (like Kazan or Perm). Hiring a Theologian can be quite helpful for increasing your conversion chances. Overall, the only real threat in this stage comes from the Golden Horde. Europe is still comfortably far away, and their wars don't really affect you yet. Just make the Horde your main priority, and look for other opportunities as they come up. 3. The late mid-game: colonization, expansion, and warfare (1525-1600) Biggest threat: Sweden, Ottomans, Prussia The final stage in this mid-game is to transition from Muscowy to Russia and Westernize. If you conquered your neighbours in the order given to you by the missions, you can fulfill the requirements for forming Russia very early, since you'll automatically cores on the territory you need. The last component is either Bryansk or Smolensk -- either take them from Lithuania or wait until they break off on their own, then annex them. The best time to form Russia is right when you've started to defeat the Horde. You'll automatically get cores on a huge number of provinces, many of which are under Horde control. However, if you've just broken the Horde, this simply means that your newly acquired territories will be running at full economic capacity as soon as you get them. It will also reduce the revolt risk in these territories. When you do form Russia, you automatically move two steps toward Centralization, which is also very helpful for Westernizing. You can consider the mid-game finished once Westernization is complete. Hopefully you have diligently used every slider move up to this point to improve your Centralization, as well as move toward Innovative. I find that random events boosting your Innovative score happen more frequently, so I suggest prioritizing Centralization in your moves. To Westernize, you also need a king with an Administrative score of 6 or higher, so keep an eye on your king and heir to make sure you don't miss the time. Fight the nomads while you wait for a better king! Once you click the button for the Westernize event, you will need to go easy on the wars for a while. First, you will take a huge Stability penalty of -5, which is horrible. Fortunately, if you own the Neva province, you can immediately move your capital there to create St. Petersburg, which gives you +3 back. This is important, since Westernizing will increase your Stability cost significantly. Now, you will enter a period of transition that will end once you complete the Military Modernization event. To do this, you need a ruler with at least 7 Administrative, so if you Westernized with a 6 score, you need to wait, possibly a long time. Hopefully your heir has a 7. You need even more Centralization, and you can make the necessary slider moves while you're waiting. You actually do not need Innovative any more, so feel free to move back toward Narrowminded after your Centralization is good. The last requirement for Military Modernization is that you are not under the effects of the modifier called "Resisting Western Influences." This is harder to do than it sounds. After you Westernize, but before you modernize the military, you will regularly get very bad random events, in which your peasants revolt, your aristocrats assassinate your advisors, or other awful things happen. You have the option to avoid these negative events by Resisting Western Influences for ten consecutive years. You can't complete Military Modernization until this ten-year period expires. Actually, this isn't too bad, since you will probably have to wait a while anyway, either to get a new ruler, or to make the needed slider moves. Just accept the modifier in the meantime, and complete the final event as soon as the modifier expires. Once you finish Military Modernization, you will move to the Western European tech group, remove the Oriental research penalty, and never have to deal with Resisting Western Influences again. You can go and immediately switch to Western infantry, but you may wish to keep your Eastern cavalry for a while longer -- the Western group will not begin to outperform it until Latin Knights. Now, the world is yours! At this point, your former enemies will be gone (like the Russian rivals) or incapacitated (like the Horde). Your strategy for expansion should consist of the following two components, which you have to accomplish simultaneously: a. Start pushing east of Perm toward Siberia. Initially, you'll be mopping up the remnants of the Golden Horde, as well as Kazakh and Sibir. They're exactly like the Golden Horde, but weaker. But eventually, you'll see your first uninhabited provinces, usually Berezov and Obdorsk in the far north. You can send a colonist to these lands to begin a settlement -- this time, you'll only get 100 settlers per colonist and a growth of about 5 new settlers per month, and you'll have to pay a monthly maintenance cost. Once you get 1000 settlers, though, the colony will turn into a full-fledged province that is automatically set to your culture and religion. At this point, you should execute the decision called "Go east into Siberia!" This will give you one free Conquistador (explorer unit), and if you don't get the Quest For The New World idea, he'll be the only one you get in the whole game. Make use of him. Put him in charge of a small army and send it east until it finds the Pacific coast and explores all of the uninhabited coastal territory. Now continue expanding into these lands as your old colonies develop. You should probably have 2-3 new colonies growing at any given time. Many of these new lands are rich in fur and iron; the latter in particular is vital to your economy. If you focus your tech research on Land, you can build your first Weapons Manufactory in an iron- or copper-producing province. If you've kept up with construction of manpower buildings, this should cost 600-700 ducats. As you move east, you will run into still more nomads, like Chagatai and Oirat Horde. You can conquer them, but if you leave a strip of uninhabited land between them and your colonies as a buffer zone, they'll never attack you. You may wish to expand peacefully first and then go back and conquer the hordes. If you take too long, though, someone else might beat you to it. But there's more to be done than just peaceful expansion... b. ...and that's called the Holy War Casus Belli. By now, you should have switched government to an Empire. This will tide you over nicely until you can switch to Absolute Monarchy, but it also gives you the Holy War Casus Belli, which can be used on any non-Christian, non-horde country. This is a tremendously overpowered CB, allowing you to capture twice as many enemy provinces at only 25% the Infamy cost. The problem is that all of your non-Christian enemies thus far have been hordes, and you can't use the benefits of Holy War on hordes since the only way to conquer them is to colonize their land. Once you clear out the hordes, the first organized non-Christian states you'll run into will probably be the Ottoman Empire and Persia. Both are very strong, and usually ally with each other. The Ottomans in particular have high manpower and Military Drill, so you won't have a big advantage. It's not impossible to win, though. First, it sometimes happens that the Timurid hordes make a lot of headway against the Ottomans, which weakens the latter considerably. You can colonize the Timurids first, and then finish off the Ottomans. Some of the provinces around the southern shore of the Caspian Sea produce Spices, a valuable commodity which should work wonders for your income. The Anatolian peninsula has plenty of iron and other goods. If you're going to attack the Ottomans, make sure you max out your supply limit with troops and mass them along the border (the Caucasus, and possibly the Moldavia/Romania region on the northwest shore of the Black Sea, if the Ottomans have expanded up to there). Make sure that each army has a general and 20-30 thousand troops. You want to keep your armies close together so they can reinforce each other if need be, and you need to outnumber the enemy in every battle that you fight. If you win, you can easily seize 10 or more provinces at a time. Expanding eastward will put you in a much better position to deal with the West. Around this time, the Teutons will form Prussia around your borders, and Sweden may also be looking to carve off a piece in the north. If you took Finland earlier, this won't be as big a deal, but you need to make sure that you are always increasing your manpower and maxing out your supply limit. The Europeans take this into consideration when deciding whether to attack you. You need to Westernize as quickly as possible to maintain parity with their armies. If you do get attacked (e.g. by Sweden), you need several large armies with 25K troops and enough generals to go around. I usually put about 60% infantry and 40% cavalry in each army, which gives you a bonus for mixed composition. Artillery is not that useful in my opinion, as it is more important to defeat the enemy armies than to win sieges quickly. After a rather bloody fight in the beginning, you can set up a few sieges on their border provinces and use your armies to hunt down reinforcements before they are able to gather together. Other Europeans are usually not that dangerous. Often, Prussia will call you into battle against random German duchies. You can just accept the call to arms to preserve your alliance, and then do nothing. The enemy will offer ridiculous peace terms for a while, but just keep ignoring them until they suggest a White Peace. You should avoid wars with Austria and France if you can, but otherwise you are unlikely to be in any real danger. Sometimes, Europeans will establish isolated holdings in places that you might want to control. For instance, the Crimean peninsula often ends up being taken by an Italian state like Venice or Genoa. If you don't want to start a war with them, one option is to fund patriots in these remote places, which have a chance of taking them over and forming a new horde or minor principality, both of which are far easier to deal with. Overall, your main task in this part is to successfully Westernize and expand. 4. The late game: basking in glory (1600-1821) Biggest threat: Austria You could probably just safely do nothing for the remaining 200 years, but where is the fun in that when you can keep expanding? For the most part, you can keep doing what you did before -- finish colonizing all the uninhabited land in Siberia until you reach the Pacific, mop up the hordes, and exploit Holy War to the fullest. For example, if you break into Persia, you can then keep going into India and acquire valuable cotton- and spice-producing provinces. Alternately, if you manage to reach China, Holy War will let you make significant inroads into their land (you'll have to cut through Manchu and Mongol Khanate on their northern border, though). Remember, Holy War expires in 1650, so make it count. In terms of technology, I strongly recommend going Narrowminded at this point, and maybe even investing in the Divine Supremacy idea to get more missionaries. All these new territories are home to many different religions, and converting them will make your country much more stable. It is also very important to always maintain military production (which means keep building those manpower buildings and Weapons Manufactories). If you don't have enough large armies on your borders, all of your neighbours (particularly the Western Europeans) will see this as a sign of weakness and attack, sometimes all at the same time. Just make sure that your supply limits are maxed out. You can have smaller armies in the east (perhaps 4-5 20K armies on the Chinese border), but for the west, you really need numerous massive (30-40K) armies right next to your potential opponents. The most dangerous late-game opponent is usually Austria. They're often the Holy Roman Emperor, and will call every other German country into battle against you. You will probably have to fight one major European war where you will have to break them. Repeat the strategy that you used on the Ottomans, just with larger armies. If you kept up the manpower buildings and Weapons Manufactories, your income should be skyrocketing, allowing you to keep up with Austria in Land and Government technology. Focus on Land and you may even break ahead of them, giving you an advantage. (One important note -- if you conquer any province that belongs to the Holy Roman Empire, remember to go to that province and select the "Leave Holy Roman Empire" decision! Otherwise, the Emperor can demand the province from you, and you suffer various penalties if you refuse.) Once you switch to an Absolute Monarchy, you can use the Imperialism Casus Belli, which is not as good as Holy War, but still cuts the infamy cost of new acquisitions in half. With this in hand, you can advance westward into Europe. It is quite doable to expand into Poland and Hungary, and possibly cut a piece out of Bohemia. You probably won't be able to annex much Austrian heartland, but you can beat them and force them to convert to Orthodoxy, which will lead to some interesting changes in the Holy Roman Empire. You can also force them to roll back Imperial reforms, which is very important if it looks like they are able to pass many of them. I have seen Austria restore the HRE in one game -- that's probably an unbeatable opponent, even with your resources. I don't recommend bothering with any overseas colonies. However, you may inherit some through a Royal Marriage. Honestly, this is more of a nuisance than anything else, since then you'll have to run around the globe putting down revolts for 50 years while you wait for the provinces to core. If you want to expand, I suggest sticking to continuous land borders. 5. Other Russian states Of course, you can play as any of the other Russian states as well. Just choose Tver, Ryazan, Yaroslavl, or Novgorod at the starting screen. All of them face the same issues that Muscowy does in the early game, except things are more difficult, since they have less land and fewer troops, and they also have to deal with Muscowy. Novgorod has the easiest time, and probably can be a bit easier than Muscowy, since they start with a trade center and are farther away from the Golden Horde. Tver and Ryazan are in a difficult position. Your best bet is to ally with Novgorod to avoid Muscowy. You'll survive, but it won't be clear what to do next. Try to follow the same basic strategy, using Muscowy as a distraction against the Horde, or grabbing splinter lands from Lithuania if there are any. Yaroslavl is in a nearly unwinnable situation, since their only starting province just does not give them enough to muster up an army. Try to ally with anyone who will listen, to give Muscowy a deterrent. I don't have much advice beyond that -- there's a reason why Muscowy formed Russia in real life, and not the other guys. Once you survive the early game, the rest plays out much like Muscowy's game. Any of the Russian principalities can form the Russian nation, and you can then Westernize and continue on as normal, except that it will probably happen much later than for Muscowy. THE END ======= Europa Universalis III is a copyright of Paradox Interactive, 2007-2011. This FAQ is a copyright of Sephiroth Katana, 2013.