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Cities seem to bring in the most, yes? True, but wait a second and consider who owns your cities? Not you, but your vassals, and vassals don't always pay their taxes. Take a look at your holdings, and the income from each. This means forfeiting an early military advantage, but for the purposes of this guide, I'm assuming there's nothing immediately within reach that you must seize. When you start the game, hold off building those military structures or their upgrades for the moment. Kings who wants an army and money to pay for it know that the money comes first.
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So, you know why it is important to have money. A rich king can assassinate his foes and placate vassals where a poor king cannot. Get a powerful economy working early in your demesne and more expensive economic structures become available for purchase without a prohibitive wait.īeyond that, you need money for other purposes. You will also be able to afford stronger holdings, and more holdings, making you more resilient on the defence as well.įinally, as in real life, those who have money have more opportunities to make more. If you have a small but advanced realm, and you are fighting someone who is spread across a vast distance, you will be able to raise and concentrate armies quicker.
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Having a strong economy means that you can be fielding vast and varied armies, supported by mercenaries if necessary, that will be capable of taking on the forces of much larger nations and winning through concentration of might. You can have all the technological advancement and vast expanses of land you want, but it's worth exactly nothing if you can't develop it beyond its basic structures. As such, if you are facing an opponent of near equal strength, you will lose.īeyond that, money is also what allows you to recognise your military potential. If you cannot pay your soldiers, they will, aside from any other penalties, not be as effective in combat, as their morale will be lower. If military might is the power tool with which you carve out your kingdom, then money is the fuel with which that tool is driven.
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