Birth of the Republic 509-264 BC
By Roberto A. Ullfig
Covering the period from the expulsion of the last Roman king,
Tarquinius Superbus, and the establishment of the Republic to
the 1st Punic War.
Note: These rules are written with a 6-player game in mind. Rules for
fewer
players are given towards the end.
Overview
Two new periods (each with a new deck) are played before the Early
Republic
period. The game begins with the Latin period and deck (15 cards)
followed
by the Italian period and deck (16 cards) before finally entering the
Early
Republic from the original game. The 1st Punic War is not necessarily
the
first war in the Early Republic as it is shuffled into that deck. On
average
6 new turns are inserted before the Early Republic begins. Several
rules
are inactive at the start and only come into being as play proceeds.
Latin Period 509-390 BC
Setup
Rome begins with 30t and 2 Legions; 1 Active War, and 1
Leader begin in play:
1st Latin War 499-493
Active War
2/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D3/S18; 10t Spoils
Victory allows Tax Farmers 1 & 2 to be played.
Strength x 2: 2 related Wars
|
Tarquinius Superbus ?-495
Leader
+1 to 1st Latin War; D7/S14
Eliminated when 1st Latin War is defeated
Pontifex Maximus cannot be
elected until this Leader is discarded.
|
Annual Revenue
Annual Revenue at start is 30t. (-10t on turn 1 due to active
War). The State should therefore have a total of 46 talents after
collecting annual revenue and paying maintenance for 2 legions on
turn 1.
The State's Annual Revenue is increased by victory over
certain wars as noted on the war card's description and listed
here:
Veientine War : +10t
2nd Latin War : +10t
1st Samnite War : +10t
2nd Samnite War : +20t
3rd Samnite War : +20t
Defeat of all five of these wars would therefore make the
annual revenue equal to 100t, as in the normal game.
Legion Pool
Rome begins with 2 active legions and 5 legions in the Pool
so it can only muster a maximum of 7 legions at the start. Rome
cannot build any fleets until the Early Republic at which time it
can build as many fleets as it can build legions.
The State's Legion Pool is increased by victory over
certain wars as noted on the war card's description and listed
here:
Veientine War : +3 legions
2nd Latin War : +3 legions
1st Samnite War : +2 legions
2nd Samnite War : +5 legions
3rd Samnite War : +5 legions
Defeat of all five of these wars would therefore make the
Legion Pool equal to 25, as in the normal game.
Note that only the Pool is increased in size - the legions
must still be paid for in order to be used.
HRAO
There is no Consul at the start. The HRAO is determined via
normal rules using the senator with highest influence (oratory in
case of ties).
Senators
1. Shuffle senators #1 through #18 and deal 3 to each player.
2. Senators #19 and #20 are shuffled into the Early Republic Deck.
3. Reletter Statesman #18A (Flamininus) to #18B.
Brutus
The player who receives #10 Junius is given this Statesman
which he MUST play during Initial Intrigue:
#10A L. Junius Brutus ?-509
Statesman
Mil 4, Ora 3, Loy 9, Inf 7, Pop 1
Voids 1st Latin War D/S.
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
Red Cards
Take 12 Cards from the Early Republic:
Blackmail
Seduction
Harbor Fees
Mining
Tax Farmers 1-6 (not playable at start)
2 Tribunes
plus 6 NEW Red Cards:
#5A Appius Claudius 340-273
Statesman
Mil 1, Ora 5, Loy 9, Inf 5
+1 to Population Rolls.
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
#8A M. Furius Camillus 445-365
Statesman
Mil 5, Ora 3, Loy 8, Inf 5
Voids Veientine War D/S.
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
#18A L. Quinctius Cincinnatus
?-435
Statesman
Mil 5, Ora 2, Loy 9, Inf 1
Voids Aequian and Volscian War D/S.
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
#xA Military Leader
Statesman
Can be assigned to any senator currently without a Statesman;
gives that senator +2 Military rating (Maximum of 5).
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
Marriage
Intrigue
Player can make one Unopposed Persuasion Attempt against
any senator in the Forum during his initiative. This counts as
the faction's persuasion attempt. Discard after use.
|
Shuffle all 18 cards; deal 2 Red cards to each player, the
remaining 6 are shuffled into the Latin Deck.
Latin Deck (15 Cards; 9 Black, 6 Red)
Volscian War ca. 494-455
Active War
2/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D6/S15; 5t Spoils
Victory allows Tax Farmers 3 and 4 to be played.
|
Aequian War ca. 494-455
Active War
2/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D6/S15; 5t Spoils
Victory allows Tax Farmers 5 and 6 to be played.
|
Veientine War 483-396
Active War
4/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D9/S12
Victory increases Annual State Revenue by 10 talents
and adds 3 legions to Pool
|
Coriolanus 5th Century BC
Leader
+2 to Volscian War; D3/S16
Eliminated when Volscian War is defeated
|
Sack of Rome 390
Event
Rome is sacked! Unrest is increased by 3, and 3 Mortality chits
are drawn which can effect any senator in play; however, senators
whose chits are drawn are considered captured and are only killed if
not ransomed before the next Forum phase. Also, the State must
immediately pay 30t. Discard at start of next Forum Phase. |
Plebian Secession 494
Event
Treat just like a Drought Event.
Discard at start of next Forum Phase.
|
Plebian Secession 449
Event
Treat just like a Drought Event.
Discard at start of next Forum Phase.
|
Agrarian Unrest 485
Event
Treat just like a Drought Event. During the upcoming Senate
Phase the Presiding Magistrate MUST propose a Type I Land Bill
immediately after the Prosecutions phase. This proposal cannot
be vetoed. Whatever the result of the vote, Land Bills can now
be proposed normally. Discard at start of next Forum Phase. |
The Twelve Tables 450
Event
All senators who have an office (except for the Pontifex
Maximus) immediately lose their office along with 1 influence.
Instead of electing 2 Consuls this turn, elect 3 Consular
Tribunes (see Special Rules for Consular Tribunes). All
senators are eligible to become CT except for the Pontifex
Maximus. Censors are elected beginning next turn. Add
one to this turn's Population Phase roll. Discard at start
of next Forum Phase. Note that the HRAO will probably change
because of this event; use normal rules to determine HRAO. |
plus 6 Red Cards (see above)
Italian Period 390-264 BC
Statesman
Sort out the 5 Early Republic statesman. Shuffle 3 of these
statesman into the Italian Deck; the remaining 2 statesman are
shuffled into the Early Republic Deck. IMPORTANT: These
statesman
cannot be played unless there are currently less than 6 cards remaining
in the Italian Deck..
Italian Deck (16 Cards; 7 Black, 9 Red)
2nd Latin War 340-338
Active War
4/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D4/S18
Victory increases Annual State Revenue by 10 talents
and adds 3 legions to Pool.
Strength x 2: 2 related Wars |
1st Samnite War 343-341
Active War
2/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D3/S18
Victory increases Annual State Revenue by 10 talents
and adds 2 legions to Pool.
Strength x 2: 2 related Wars; Strength x 3: 3 related Wars |
2nd Samnite War 327-304
Inactive War
5/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D10/S17
Inactive until attacked or matched
Victory increases Annual State Revenue by 20 talents
and adds 5 legions to Pool.
Strength x 2: 2 related Wars; Strength x 3: 3 related Wars |
3rd Samnite War 298-290
Active War
8/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D5/S17
Victory increases Annual State Revenue by 20 talents
and adds 5 legions to Pool.
Strength x 2: 2 related Wars; Strength x 3: 3 related Wars |
Pyrrhic War 280-272
Active War
7/0; -10 per Turn if Active; D7/S16; 10t Spoils; [Attacks: Sicily]
Strength of War is reduced by 4 after a combat result other
than a Victory or Defeat. Discard with no Spoils at start of
Forum phase if strength (not including Leader) is less than 1. |
Pyrrhus 3rd Century BC
Leader
+3 Pyrrhic War; D9/S15
Eliminated when Pyrrhic War is defeated or discarded.
|
Plebian Revolt 287
Event
Treat as Severe Drought (+2 Unrest each Population Phase) until
discarded by a successful vote in the Senate. This vote cannot be
vetoed by the Pontifex Maximus. If this Event is discarded, the
Presiding Magistrate loses 2 influence but gains 2 popularity, also
Tribunes now become playable.
|
Appian Way 312-308
Intrigue
Playable during the Senate Phase after Censor Election by a
faction that controls the Censor. Censor gains 2 Popularity
and Unrest is lowered by 2. The State must immediately pay
10t from the Treasury. Cannot be played if there is less
than 10t in the Treasury. Discard after use. |
Scandal
Intrigue
Playable during a player's Initiative, in lieu of a
Persuasion Attempt, against any senator in Rome.
Target senator loses DR Popularity. Player must have
a senator in Rome when this card is played.
Discard after use. |
plus:
3 Tribune (from Early Republic)
1 Influence Peddling (from Early Republic)
3 Early-Republic Statesman (see above)
Special Rules Overview
0. Initial Intrigue Phase
1. Tax Farmer concessions cannot
be played at the start of the game. They become playable as certain
wars are defeated.
2. The player that is dealt #10 Junius receives the Brutus Statesman
card (#10A) which he must play.
I. Mortality Phase
No changes.
II. Revenue Phase
1. State Annual Revenue changes (see above).
2. Note that Land Bill costs are the same as in the Early Republic.
III. Forum Phase
1. Random Events Table (Latin and Italian Period)
| Roll |
Event |
| 3 |
Mob Violence |
| 4 |
Natural Disaster (-25t) |
| 5 |
Drought |
| 6 |
Evil Omens (-10t) |
| 7 |
Epidemic |
| 8 |
Refuge |
| 9 |
Ally Deserts |
| 10 |
Evil Omens (-10t) |
| 11 |
Ally Deserts |
| 12 |
Manpower Shortage |
| 13 |
Allied Enthusiasm (+25t) |
| 14 |
Enemy Ally Deserts |
| 15 |
Allied Enthusiasm (+25t) |
| 16 |
Enemy Ally Deserts |
| 17 |
Enemy Leader Dies |
| 18 |
Another New Alliance |
2. Evil Omens, Natural Disaster, and Allied
Enthusiasm
monetary effects are halved during the Pre-Early Republic Period. The
Pontifex Maximus' fine from Evil Omens is only 5t (this, if he
can't pay the 10t for the Omens).
3. New Alliance events are treated as
Another New Alliance for all wars from the Pre-Early
Republic Period (i.e. War is discarded with all spoils). Clarification:
This
can be applied during any period. For example, a New Alliance
rolled
during the Early Republic can be treated as Another New Alliance
when
applied to a Pre-Early Republic War.
4. Note that a Period is immediately entered when a card from that deck
is drawn. For example, all rule changes pertaining to the Early
Republic take effect the turn that a card is drawn from the Early
Republic deck.
IV. Population Phase
No changes.
V. Senate Phase
1. A Censor cannot be elected (nor Prosecutions made) until
the turn after The Twelve Tables event (Latin Deck) is drawn.
Note that prior consul markers are always awarded for office
per normal rules (even before The Twelve Tables event occurs).
2. Land Bills cannot be proposed until after the Agrarian Unrest
event (Latin Deck) is drawn.
3. Tribunes (including a
Statesman's free tribune)
cannot be played until after the Plebian Revolt event (Italian Deck) has been discarded.
3a. If the Plebian Revolt is in play, the Presiding
Magistrate may make a special proposal at any time after the
Prosecutions phase. The proposal is voted on normally. If passed, the
Presiding Magistrate gains 2 Popularity but loses 2 Influence and
the Plebian Revolt event is discarded - this is the only
way that the event may be discarded. After this proposal is
passed Tribunes become playable. This proposal cannot be vetoed by the
Pontifex Maximus.
4. Rome can build a maximum of 7 legions at the start; defeat
of certain wars adds more legions to the Pool. Rome cannot build
fleets until the Early Republic and the maximum number is the
same as for legions.
5. Consular Tribunes (CT):
CTs are elected instead of Consuls on the turn that
The Twelve Tables event is drawn.
A senator elected as CT gains 2 Influence, regardless of the
Period, and a Prior Consul marker. Any and all CT's can be
sent to war. The Presiding Magistrate is the CT with the most
influence (oratory breaks ties). Note that The Senate Phase
ends when the PM leaves Rome. A Dictator appointment requires
all three to agree. A CT cannot be elected Consul next turn;
otherwise, treat a CT just like a Consul.
6. A Pontifex Maximus cannot be
elected until after Tarquinius Superbus is discarded.
7. Influence Gains/Losses are modified using the following table:
| Office |
Latin |
Italian |
Early |
| Pontifex Maximus |
+5 |
+5 |
+5 |
| Dictator |
+3 |
+5 |
+7 |
| Consul |
+3 |
+4 |
+5 |
| Censor |
+3 |
+4 |
+5 |
| Master of Horse |
+1 |
+2 |
+3 |
| Consular Tribune |
+2 |
+2 |
n/a |
| Minor Conviction |
-3* |
-4* |
-5* |
*: applies to Popularity as well.
All other influence/popularity gains/losses remain as in the Early
Republic
VI. Combat Phase
1. Veteran legions are not created until the Early Republic.
2. Legions and Military Rating: remember that Military Rating in excess
of
the number of legions in an army is unused. Example: 2 legions and a
commander with Military Rating of 5 has an army strength of only 4.
VII. Revolution Phase
1. Commanders cannot become Proconsul until the Early
Republic. They always return to Rome with their army during the
Revolution Phase
(even if not victorious) and cannot rebel. The return of the army in
this case
would not negate the prosecution status of the war.
Clarification: If a war would normally be considered
prosecuted, it is still considered prosecuted after the army returns.
2. The Tax Farmer concessions cannot be played until certain
wars are defeated:
Tax Farmer 1 and 2 - 1st Latin War
Tax Farmer 3 and 4 - Volscian War
Tax Farmer 5 and 6 - Aequian War
3. A Latin Period Statesman
is discarded if he is in play at the start of the first Revolution
Phase of
the Early Republic; ALL his possessions EXCEPT for his office are
transferred to the family card. He cannot be prosecuted next turn for
the office and he is eligible for Consul regardless of what office he
had
held. Possessions
refers to all chits, Influence, Popularity, Prior Consul, etc. on the
Senator. A Latin Period Statesman must be discarded if still in a
player's hand at this time. During
the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic, the family card of a just discarded
Latin Period Statesman who was a Victorious Commander or
Proconsul returns to Rome with his army. He cannot rebel.
4. The family card of a Latin Period Statesman is
always placed beneath the statesman if it is ever found to be in the
Curia or
Forum. This is so that the player
can transfer the Statesman's possessions to the family card during the
first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic.
5. Early Republic Statesmen cannot be played unless there are less than
6 cards remaining in the Italian Deck.
VIII. Other
1.The Games, Population, Combat Results, Land Bill, and Popular Appeal
table remain the same as in the Early Republic.
2. Intrigue cards from the Latin, Italian, and Early Republic decks
should not be distinguishable from each other. They should all look the
same and have the same color background.
HRAO Tie Breaker
In addition to rule 9.1 from the rulebook, if there still a tie for
HRAO, i.e.
more than one senator with highest influence and equal oratory, then
the
final tiebreaker is lowest Senator ID number.
D/S Percentages
| War |
%D/S |
Notes |
| Pyrrhic War w/leader |
25.9 |
|
| Veientine War |
23.2 |
Camillus voids D/S |
| 1st Latin War w/leader |
14.8 |
Brutus voids D/S |
| 2nd Samnite War |
13.9 |
|
| Volscian War w/leader |
12.5 |
Cincinnatus voids D/S |
| Pyrrhic War |
9.7 |
|
| Volscian War |
9.2 |
Cincinnatus voids D/S |
| Aequian War |
9.2 |
Cincinnatus voids D/S |
| 3rd Samnite War |
4.2 |
|
| 2nd Latin War |
1.9 |
|
| 1st Samnite War |
1.0 |
|
Manifest
Start
18 Senators (#1-#18) - deal 3 to each player
18 Red Cards - deal 2 to each player
Blackmail
Seduction
Marriage (NEW)
Harbor Fees
Mining
Tax Farmer 1*
Tax Farmer 2*
Tax Farmer 3*
Tax Farmer 4*
Tax Farmer 5*
Tax Farmer 6*
Tribune**
Tribune**
Tribune** (NEW)
Appius Claudius (NEW)
Furius Camillus (NEW)
Quinctius Cincinnatus (NEW)
Military Leader (NEW)
Junius Brutus (NEW) - given to player with #10; must be played at start
1st Latin War (NEW) - starts in Forum
Tarquinius Superbus (NEW) - starts in Forum
30 talents in treasury
2 active Legions
5 Legions in Pool
State Annual Revenue is 30 talents
HRAO will be Brutus (#10A) unless he dies in the Mortality phase.
* - Tax Farmers cannot be played until after certain wars are defeated.
** - Tribunes cannot be played until after the Plebian Revolt
is discarded.
No Censor election until the turn after The Twelve Tables is
drawn.
No Land Bills can be proposed until after Agrarian Unrest is
drawn.
No Proconsuls until the Early Republic.
No Veteran Legions can be created until the Early Republic.
No Fleets can be built until the Early Republic.
Latin Deck (15 cards; 9 Black, 6 Red)
6 Red cards left over from above
Volscian War (NEW)
Aequian War (NEW)
Veientine War (NEW)
Coriolanus (NEW)
Sack of Rome (NEW)
Plebian Secession (NEW) - Drought
Plebian Secession (NEW) - Drought
Agrarian Unrest (NEW)
The Twelve Tables (NEW)
Italian Deck (16 cards; 7 Black, 9 Red)
Influence Peddling
Tribune**
Tribune**
Tribune**
Appian Way (NEW)
Scandal (NEW)
Early Republic Statesman*
Early Republic Statesman*
Early Republic Statesman*
2nd Latin War (NEW)
1st Samnite War (NEW)
2nd Samnite War (NEW)
3rd Samnite War (NEW)
Pyrrhic War (NEW)
Pyrrhus (NEW)
Plebian Revolt (NEW)
* - Early Republic Statesman cannot be played unless there are less
than 6 cards remaining in the Italian Deck..
** - Tribunes cannot be played until after the Plebian Revolt is
discarded.
Early Republic Deck (27 cards; 12 Black, 13 Red, 2 Senators)
8 Wars (including 1st Punic War shuffled into deck)
4 Leaders
2 Senators (#19 and #20)
5 Concessions (2 Grain, Land Commissioner, Armaments, Ship Building)
4 Tribunes
1 Assassin
1 Secret Bodyguard
2 Early Republic Statesman
Discard all Latin Period Statesman during the first Revolution Phase.
Commanders can now become Proconsul.
Veteran Legions can now be created.
Fleets can now be built.
5 Player Game
1. Remove 3 senators (but not #10 Junius) from #1-#18 and place them in
the
Curia. Deal 3 senators to each player.
2. Mining and Harbor Fees begin the game in the Forum. Deal 2 Red cards
to each player.
3. Rome starts with 40t in the treasury instead of 30t.
4 Player Game
1. Remove 2 senators (but not #10 Junius) from #1-#18 and place them in
the
Curia. Deal 4 senators to each player.
2. Deal 3 Red cards to each player.
Military Statesman Void Disasters Optional Rule
When playing with optional rule 12, the Statesman affected are Brutus,
Camillus, and Cincinnatus.
Optional Rules
1. M. Atilius Regulus (Italian Deck)
Shuffle the following Statesman into
the Italian
Deck:
#12A M. Atilius Regulus ?-250
Statesman
Mil 4, Ora 2, Loy 8, Inf 4
Voids 1st Punic War Naval Battle D/S.
|
Rename Family Card #12 Acilius to
Atilius.
2. Spurius Cassius Viscellinus (Latin
Deck)
Add the following Latin Period
Statesman to the initial Red Card
distribution:
#24A Spurius Cassius Viscellinus 5th Century BC
Statesman
Mil 3, Ora 4, Loy 6, Inf 3
May propose 1 Type I Land Bill/Year even before Agrarian Unrest
Discard during the first Revolution Phase of the Early Republic
|
Note: When played, the player gets Senator
card #24 which he
must play
beneath the Statesman.
Senator #24 can never be in the Curia prior to the Middle Republic. If
death sends it there it is instead shuffled into the Middle Republic
Deck.
3. Carthaginian Maritime Alliance
(Italian Deck)
This event can either be a new
card added to the Italian Deck
or it can be activated on a roll of 15 on the Random Events Table
during the Italian Period (taking the place of Allied Enthusiasm).
Carthaginian Maritime Alliance 280
Event
Treat exactly as Rhodian Maritime Alliance except that Rome only
receives 4 fleets. Fleets must be disbanded if a Punic War is active.
|
4. Intrigue Cards Combined Decks
With
such small decks it's easier to determine which red cards are drawn by
which players, especially important when it comes to the very valuable Blackmail and Seduction cards.
Shuffle all 12 non-Concession/Statesman Intrigue cards from the Latin
and Italian decks together. Secretly draw 6 of these cards and use
those to start the game, the other 6 cards are shuffled into the
Italian deck.
5. Extended Deck
Play with the following
additional cards:
Latin Deck
24A Cassius 3 4 6 3
Spolia Opima
Siege of Veii 4/0 D5:S11
Spurius Maelius
Italian Deck
12A Regulus 4 2 8 4
Circus Maximus
Tarquinian War 4/0 D8:S16
Gallic Raids
Modify these cards:
8A Camillus 5 3 8 5
Veientine War 4/0 D9:S12
Replace #12 Acilius with:
12 Atilius 2 2 7 3
When #24A Cassius is played, the player is given Family card #24
Cassius to play underneath. Family card #24 can never enter the Curia
prior to the Middle Republic, instead it's shuffled into the Middle
Republic Deck if playing an Extended game, otherwise it's discarded.
6. Consul for Life (King)
During the Latin and Italian periods the influence requirement for
Consul for Life is reduced from 21 to 16.
7. Miscellaneous Tweaks
a. Statesman #18B Cincinnatus starts with 1 Popularity instead of 0.
b. Statesman #5A Appius adds 2 to Population Rolls instead of 1.
c. Plebian Secession Events have no effect if a Land Bill is passed as
a result of the Agrarian Unrest Event.
Strategy Tips
Latin Period
Wars - There are only four wars including one active at the
start. They should be relatively easy to defeat unless combat
rolls are low or the Statesman that void their D/S numbers aren't
available. However, with only 7 legions at the start their
prosecution could be difficult. It is important to remember that
the military rating of a commander added to the legion strength
cannot exceed it, so with only 2 legions the maximum force you
can get is 4 regardless of the commander's rating. Going after
the Veientine War as early as possible is a good idea because it
adds 3 more legions to the Pool. The biggest decision with
regards to Wars is whether to attack two of them simultaneously
or concentrate on one of them, when there are more than one.
Dictator prerequisites are the same and since none of these wars
can have a strength >= 20, three active wars are required; a
Dictator should be rare.
Funds - This is a major challenge. The Sack of Rome costs the
State 30t, and combined with an Evil Omens or Natural Disaster,
the loss could be 40t or 55t. Since Rome needs to build as many
legions as possible early on, the State needs all the funds it
can muster. Until the Gallic Invasion is drawn, all players
should seriously consider contributing as much as they can. With
only 15 cards in deck there's 1 in 3 chance of the card being
drawn on turn 1. Note that the lucrative concessions don't enter
the game until the Early Republic so money will be severely
strained in the early going.
Unrest - The second major challenge. There are _four_ cards
that increase the unrest. Since players will need to contribute,
there'll be little money left for games and Land Bills can't be
proposed until the Agrarian Unrest card is drawn. The Type I Land
Bill proposal required by that card can be a two-edged sword
since 20t is a a big hit on the Treasury early in the game. A
good source for popularity is fighting wars, but since the Field
Consul goes to war first, it could be difficult to send the Rome
Consul to a war. This is one good reason for attacking two wars
in one turn. Appius and Brutus are of course good canditates for
Rome Consul.
Italian Period
Wars - One more war than the previous deck and two of them
(2nd Samnite War and Pyrrhic War) have considerable D/S
percentages. Making conservative attacks against them could
easily lead to some of these Wars remaining active into the Early
Republic, a situation which might not be avoidable anyway.
Funds - The Treasury situation improves as long as the Wars
are defeated.
Unrest - Not as big of a problem as the previous deck since
there is only one card that increases the unrest and Appian Way
is a cheap way to lower the unrest. As long as the Plebian Revolt
is dealt with, the Unrest will not be a problem unless it was
already high entering this period.
Early Republic (as compared to the Early Republic scenario)
The State Treasury will probably be much less at the start of
the Early Republic (less than 100 compared to nearly 200);
however Rome should have a stronger army of Legions though no
Veterans. There is a problem with this situation though and that
is that the 1st Punic requires lots of fleets to attack and the
Senate will not have the money to build many. Note that Rome
won't have any fleets when it enters the Early Republic. If the
1st Punic War is drawn early on, Rome may not be able to attack
it. The only way to possibly prevent this situation is for major
contributions from the factions on the turn the Early Republic
begins.
Since the 1st Punic War is shuffled in the deck, it's now
possible for Hamilcar or Hannibal to die before a Punic War is
drawn, so the war situation is slightly better in a way; however,
since one or more wars from the previous deck could still be in
play this tends to balance the difficulty. Also, since Flamininus
could start with more influence than normal (because of
Cincinnatus), the Macedonian situation is a bit trickier.
Design
The intent of this scenario is to act as a setup for the main
course, The Early Republic. I thought that 6 turns would be
sufficient so 250 years are greatly compressed. Also, the
Senate probably did not function like it does in the normal
game so liberties are taken with history.
There are historical inaccuracies in this scenario since
250 years are compressed into a mere 6 decks. Brutus
is generally accepted as being the first Consul and was
instrumental in the expulsion of the King but he did not
partake in the "1st Latin War" (which was more like a
revolt). That general was A. Postumius Albus who won
the war at Lake Regillus. Likewise, Tarquinius
Superbus probably had nothing to do with this war. I've
just condensed all these events into one. I didn't
add Albus since he has no family card and I
thought Brutus should be in, being the first Consul.
The Twelve Tables were Laws that were written up
over the course of two years by the Decemvirs (10 men).
There were no Consuls during those two years - the
Decemvirs taking their place. It is not clear whether
the intent was for the Decemvirs to be a permanent
institution but a revolt overthrew the second Decemvir.
Consular Tribunes are probably unrelated directly to the
Decemvirs. I'm trying to represent the political chaos
here by using them.
The Latin Period statesman are retired because I didn't
want them to hang around for more than 250 years!
Just discarding them would be no good since then a
player would have little incentive to build them up.
I didn't want the Early Republic swamped with Statesman.
References
Too numerous to mention but most notable are the works of Livy and
"The Beginnings of Rome" by T.J. Cornell.