(remember you can earn medals on defense too Once the wall is up we will completely ignore it and we just let the enemy smash on it and give us some medals too. On the secondary objective we will setup an iron wall of armored cars dividing Europe into East and west. This conquest is done in such a way as to NEVER win, the goal is to get a good game save that we will use over and over.We want to setup this save with primary objective EAST with all 3 of our general surrounding 2 towns,and killing and farming respawn but never conquer the towns. Here is a good way to get faster medals and at the same time rank (give experience) to your generals, this is all done in conquest mode but it really is for the campaigns which are much harder. I believe it should be possible to obtain a situation with 6 or even 7 ennemies, but 5 are good enough. The situation I've been able to create within 30 minutes involved 3 ennemies just around, and another 2, 2 hexes away. Then from there, you can join any of your general to that troup and repeatedly kill all the ennemies (those surrounding your general plus those where he'll move to). Another few ennemies migh be 2 hexes away. Create a guard general (double troup) and try to position where he'll be surrounded by a few ennemy troups. Don't use any of your "home generals" at this stage. You also need to leave your ennemies "almost dead" (a few save/reload may be useful. You'll need to have many ennemies and a lot of troups as well. I used the Battle of Leipzig (the excellent French generals available helps to create the right conditions), but a lot of other scenarios may be good as well. The general idea is to have a guard cavalry troup surrounded by almost dead ennemies, and to repeatedly kill them all by reloading. I've designed a way to go for a fast metal grinding, but mostly to improve my generals, including new princess. However, in World War II, Australia became the site of Axis naval activity and air raids.Today I will show you how to fast improve your generals in European War 4: Napoleon. Prior to 1940, Australia saw only sporadic conflict as the frontier wars entered its final stages. Other parts of Afro-Eurasia, as well as the Americas, saw a wide variety of conventional wars, civil wars, ethnic or political conflicts, revolutions, and small rebellions. Likewise, Southeast Asia saw a large variety of native rebellions against the American, European and Japanese colonial empires, while also seeing the intercolonial Pacific War. the Italo-Turkish War, as well as intercolonial invasions of German, Italian and Vichy French possessions in the World Wars). In Africa, conflicts of this era were mostly fought between European colonial forces on one side and native kingdoms and insurgents on the other, though there are exceptions (e.g. īesides the aforementioned world wars, a number of smaller conflicts also took place. Depending on the source consulted, conflict deaths reached an all-time peak in either 1941 or 1942 at 2.96–7.71 million, during the height of the latter conflict. This period saw the outbreak of World War I (1914–1918) and World War II (1939–1945), which are among the deadliest conflicts in human history. This is a list of wars that began between 19. Graph of global conflict deaths from 1900 to 1944 from various sources.
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