[X] Plan Celeritas et Clementia

Considering how a good portion of our troops are injured, Pompolussa included, I think we should take time to at least make sure that some of them are taken care of. It's worth it in my opinion to show that we care for them.
 
The are several things that are currently making me not vote for Plan CeC are leaving our injured without guards and breaking up a cohort in order to reassign the men which seems like the kind of thing that could cause confusion. If we just detached the second cohort and had them take all of the injured to join Rufus while we marched straight towards Sertorius that would seem simpler. Similarly I doubt that the tribal elders will care if we enslave our prisoners of war, that was simply the done thing at the time not just for the Romans but for everyone going back to before the greeks.
 
Hm. Did Roman cohorts usually switch around injured soldiers?
No they did consolidate when enough people got killed but moving around people like that will just confuse everyone. Especially the pay master since traditionally veterans cohorts got more pay. I mean it should hopefully not effect too much but it will still cause som administrative issues.
 
[X] Plan Moving Forward
-[X] Turn and march immediately for Nola, in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
-[X] Sell them into slavery, both increasing your own personal coffers and gaining more money for the legion.
 
It seems that a clear majority want to head south as quickly as possible and my plan, spending too much time on trying to pacify this region, doesn't provide that. That said, I still think that we should keep up with our 'Samnite friendly'-routine in this vote, if only to not risk the great successes we achieved with the Pentri so far.
I would be 100% with you, if this was a military vote. But this isn't. We just spend a bunch of turns wooing the Pentri over to the side of Rome. 'Plan Moving Forward' kinda ignores all that, by enslaving a bunch of farmers and just leaving Bovanium to itself, without even stopping there. Simplicity might sometimes be for the best, but our diplomatic relations need to be cultivated and should not be completely ignored.
I think your mistake lies in thinking that this isn't a military vote when every single vote while we're on campaign is a military vote. Even when we spent time wooing the Pentri nobility, we did so in order to strengthen our military position by weakening the support for Gemino.

Now, in regards to us being inconsiderate of our diplomatic relations, I'm going to have to disagree. That we're willing to be just to the Samnites who submit to our rule doesn't mean that we have to pardon a bunch of rebels that were more than aware of what they got themselves into when they signed up with Gemino, a sworn and repeated enemy of Rome. Selling them into slavery might not be mercy but it certainly isn't cruelty either, at least not for the times. It's not going to damage our relations with the remaining Samnites but pardoning won't be popular with the legionaires, particularly the cohorts that suffered severe losses in order to defeat them. Selling them into slavery is a just and proportionate punishment for their crime of rebellion.

I'll also note that calling the rebels that we've just sacrificed 300 good Romans to defeat "farmers" is a gross mischaracterization of the situation. We're not selling farmers to slavery, we're selling defeated rebels. We're not abandoning Bovianum either, we just spent months pacifying the area in order to secure it so we could link up with Sertorius again. That was pretty much the whole point.

[X] Plan Moving Forward
 
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You just don't really want people who previously rebelled and have some level of expertise in the subject go back home and rebel again. I doubt they'll see our munificence forever, because not every Roman is us and they're going to be predisposed not to like us anyways. Gemino doesn't surrender to us because he likes us, he dies saying he wished we were a Samnite. But that's different from actually liking us, and I doubt those that actively took up arms to heavily against Rome will act that way.

They'll also poison the well of our efforts because by letting them go back home we will allow them to spread anti-Roman feeling among their friends and countrymen. If there was any great love for them among the Pentri elders, sure, but I don't see concrete evidence this will hurt our position among the Pentri that much.
 
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I think your mistake lies in thinking that this isn't a military vote when every single vote while we're on campaign is a military vote. Even when we spent time wooing the Pentri nobility, we did so in order to strengthen our military position by weakening the support for Gemino.
Just because we're willing to be just to the Samnites that submit to our rule doesn't mean that we have to pardon a bunch of rebels that were more than aware of what they got themselves into when they signed up with Gemino, a sworn and repeated enemy of Rome. Selling them into slavery might not be mercy but it certainly isn't cruelty either, at least not for the times. It's not going to damage our relations with the remaining Samnites but pardoning won't be popular with the legionaires, particularly the cohorts that suffered severe losses in order to defeat them.

I'll also note that calling the rebels that we've just sacrificed 300 good Romans to defeat "farmers" is a gross mischaracterization of the situation. We're not selling farmers to slavery, we're selling defeated rebels. We're not abandoning Bovianum either, we just spent months pacifying the area in order to secure it so we could link up with Sertorius again. That was pretty much the whole point.

[X] Plan Moving Forward
What I meant with a 'military vote' is when we choose how to engage an enemy, a better term might be 'combat vote'. For example last turn when we had to choose how to finish the rebels in this region. In such votes I'm most of the times opposed to write-ins, because I feel the QM will have thought his options (and their accompanying battle roll modifiers) through.
This is a diplomacy vote, there are no rolls or modifiers here. Only narrative and how fast we can get down to Nola. In both cases CnC, with its write-ins, is superior to MF in my opinion.

Most of his surviving force, and especially most of those whom surrendered or who we managed to capture, will have been those 500+ peasants recently levied from the western towns. I have repeatedly stated in this thread, that those people only joined him because we abandoned them.
 
What I meant with a 'military vote' is when we choose how to engage an enemy, a better term might be 'combat vote'. For example last turn when we had to choose how to finish the rebels in this region. In such votes I'm most of the times opposed to write-ins, because I feel the QM will have thought his options (and their accompanying battle roll modifiers) through.
This is a diplomacy vote, there are no rolls or modifiers here. Only narrative and how fast we can get down to Nola. In both cases CnC, with its write-ins, is superior to MF in my opinion.
I'm not really seeing why write-ins are supposedly superior to the standard options nor why you believe there'll be no rolls or modifiers. There's been several diplomatic options that required rolls and where we did get modifiers based on our preparations and choices. I'm not really seeing how what you're calling narrative is different from the rest of the quest. Was the battle this update not a part of the narrative?
Most of his surviving force, and especially most of those whom surrendered or who we managed to capture, will have been those 500+ peasants recently levied from the western towns. I have repeatedly stated in this thread, that those people only joined him because we abandoned them.
I don't think we've any idea what the composition of the surrendered troops is nor why the recent recruits joined him. We also don't know what kind of training they've gotten since joining, whether they've been radicalized while under the command of an implacable enemy of Rome or if they came to hate Rome enough simply by our 'neglect'. There are simply too many unknowns to risk it, not to mention the fact that our reputation with the legion might very well suffer as a result of such lenience towards people that've killed their brothers in arms. I know I'd be fairly miffed if people who'd killed my friends just got to walk away with a little cut in their ear.
 
I personally don't get the vibe that taking the vanilla options presented to us means tunneling to the exclusion of all else. As an example, trying to make speed to Nola doesn't mean we're force-marching our wounded or giving the middle finger to all the Samnites as we drive by. Atellus will still keep his eyes up as he moves with his forces through the area, and he's established a certain reputation and pattern of behavior that we should expect to persist, at least in the short-term.

I also freely admit I have some personal misgivings, as I alluded to in an earlier post, against micro-management. I think of our role as questers as guiding the general story, not its minute details which often happen adhoc, due to rolls, or what-have-you.
 
[X] Plan Moving Forward
We really shouldn't overcomplicate things and reshuffle the cohorts around.
Adhoc vote count started by Imperator on Apr 9, 2018 at 3:06 PM, finished with 52 posts and 32 votes.

  • [X] Plan Moving Forward
    -[X] Turn and march immediately for Nola, in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    -[X] Sell them into slavery, both increasing your own personal coffers and gaining more money for the legion.
    [X] Plan Celeritas et Clementia
    -[X] Reassign able-bodied men from the Second Cohort to fill out the other cohorts' ranks. Transfer walking wounded who cannot keep pace or fight effectively to the Second, in like number.
    -[X] Send Pompolussa, what remains of the Second Cohort, Himatus and his men back to Bovianum along with all the wounded, to ensure the supply train stays secured. Task them with keeping an ear out for Tercerian in case he tries to attack Bovianum or attempts to aid the rebels in Nola by attacking your cohorts from the rear.
    -[X] Inform the captured rebels that they will be forgiven for following Gemino and allowed to return to their homes, on two conditions. Any who do not swear to these two conditions have refused Rome's clemency, and will be sold into slavery.
    --[X] Firstly, the captives will receive a scarring notch on their right earlobe. If any man so marked ever abuses Rome's clemency by standing in her way again, that man will be crucified.
    --[X] Secondly, the captives must convey a message to their home villages: Bovianum bent the knee to Rome. On that day, Bovianum chose to meet Rome's open hand. Gemino, in his arrogance, persecuted Bovianum. On that day, Gemino chose to face Rome's sword hand. The sword has fallen. Gemino is dead. Soon, the legion will return. All villages that bend the knee to Rome will not be harmed, as Bovianum was not harmed. All those thieves and bandits who have persecuted those villages will be destroyed by the sword of Rome, as I have destroyed Gemino. Wherever those who persecute the villages may be, and however strong they may appear, they will be destroyed. Remember, and beware!
    -[X] With the rest of the cohorts (excepting the rump of the Second), slightly filled out by troops drawn from the Second, march immediately to Nola in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    [X] Plan Hearts, Minds & the Legion's purse
    -[x] Send Mercator and the 7th cohort immediately back to Nola, he is to inform Sertorius of your success, thank him for the assistance provided and inform him that you plan to follow soon.
    -[x] Send Pompolussa's 2nd and the 6th cohort, together with all the wounded, ahead to Bovianum to better tend to the injured, and ensure that the supply lines stay secured until you return from the western towns.
    -[x] Take the 3rd & 9th cohorts as well as the Gallic auxiliaries to pacify the western towns that supported Gemino, and ensure that the entire region is solidly under Roman control.
    -[x] March the captives back to the western towns, there you offer their families a chance to ransom them at affordable rates. This offer only extends to those you determine to having recently been levied from the western towns. The rest are to be sold as slaves.

Adhoc vote count started by Imperator on Apr 9, 2018 at 3:18 PM, finished with 53 posts and 32 votes.

  • [X] Plan Moving Forward
    -[X] Turn and march immediately for Nola, in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    -[X] Sell them into slavery, both increasing your own personal coffers and gaining more money for the legion.
    [X] Plan Celeritas et Clementia
    -[X] Reassign able-bodied men from the Second Cohort to fill out the other cohorts' ranks. Transfer walking wounded who cannot keep pace or fight effectively to the Second, in like number.
    -[X] Send Pompolussa, what remains of the Second Cohort, Himatus and his men back to Bovianum along with all the wounded, to ensure the supply train stays secured. Task them with keeping an ear out for Tercerian in case he tries to attack Bovianum or attempts to aid the rebels in Nola by attacking your cohorts from the rear.
    -[X] Inform the captured rebels that they will be forgiven for following Gemino and allowed to return to their homes, on two conditions. Any who do not swear to these two conditions have refused Rome's clemency, and will be sold into slavery.
    --[X] Firstly, the captives will receive a scarring notch on their right earlobe. If any man so marked ever abuses Rome's clemency by standing in her way again, that man will be crucified.
    --[X] Secondly, the captives must convey a message to their home villages: Bovianum bent the knee to Rome. On that day, Bovianum chose to meet Rome's open hand. Gemino, in his arrogance, persecuted Bovianum. On that day, Gemino chose to face Rome's sword hand. The sword has fallen. Gemino is dead. Soon, the legion will return. All villages that bend the knee to Rome will not be harmed, as Bovianum was not harmed. All those thieves and bandits who have persecuted those villages will be destroyed by the sword of Rome, as I have destroyed Gemino. Wherever those who persecute the villages may be, and however strong they may appear, they will be destroyed. Remember, and beware!
    -[X] With the rest of the cohorts (excepting the rump of the Second), slightly filled out by troops drawn from the Second, march immediately to Nola in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    [X] Plan Hearts, Minds & the Legion's purse
    -[x] Send Mercator and the 7th cohort immediately back to Nola, he is to inform Sertorius of your success, thank him for the assistance provided and inform him that you plan to follow soon.
    -[x] Send Pompolussa's 2nd and the 6th cohort, together with all the wounded, ahead to Bovianum to better tend to the injured, and ensure that the supply lines stay secured until you return from the western towns.
    -[x] Take the 3rd & 9th cohorts as well as the Gallic auxiliaries to pacify the western towns that supported Gemino, and ensure that the entire region is solidly under Roman control.
    -[x] March the captives back to the western towns, there you offer their families a chance to ransom them at affordable rates. This offer only extends to those you determine to having recently been levied from the western towns. The rest are to be sold as slaves.

Adhoc vote count started by Imperator on Apr 13, 2018 at 2:49 AM, finished with 152 posts and 65 votes.
 
I'm not really seeing why write-ins are supposedly superior to the standard options nor why you believe there'll be no rolls or modifiers. There's been several diplomatic options that required rolls and where we did get modifiers based on our preparations and choices. I'm not really seeing how what you're calling narrative is different from the rest of the quest. Was the battle this update not a part of the narrative?
There are some votes that are purely narrative. For example, I can't see a roll determine the outcome of picking the 'Slavery'-option in the [Prisoners]-vote.
I don't think we've any idea what the composition of the surrendered troops is nor why the recent recruits joined him. We also don't know what kind of training they've gotten since joining, whether they've been radicalized while under the command of an implacable enemy of Rome or if they came to hate Rome enough simply by our 'neglect'. There are simply too many unknowns to risk it, not to mention the fact that our reputation with the legion might very well suffer as a result of such lenience towards people that've killed their brothers in arms. I know I'd be fairly miffed if people who'd killed my friends just got to walk away with a little cut in their ear.
In my experience those most radicalized are also those most likely to lie dead in the field and those of Geminios veterans who fled were probably skilled enough to escaped us on their Home Turf.
I'll admit though that I might be biased by my intention to shore up support in the western towns. These towns are in my opinion essential (or at least a big aid ) to keeping Bovanium save from Tercerian.
 
I personally don't get the vibe that taking the vanilla options presented to us means tunneling to the exclusion of all else. As an example, trying to make speed to Nola doesn't mean we're force-marching our wounded or giving the middle finger to all the Samnites as we drive by. Atellus will still keep his eyes up as he moves with his forces through the area, and he's established a certain reputation and pattern of behavior that we should expect to persist, at least in the short-term.

I also freely admit I have some personal misgivings, as I alluded to in an earlier post, against micro-management. I think of our role as questers as guiding the general story, not its minute details which often happen adhoc, due to rolls, or what-have-you.

That all may be true, however the options as presented do give specific emphasis on what each of the choices intend.

While I doubt we will not tend to our wounded with any of the options presented, compared to some of the other options, returning to Bovianum is the one option that specifically emphasizes treating our wounded, such as Pompolussa who was noted to have been heavily wounded in the fighting. Considering the medicine and resources of the time I would think that every advantage and resource given could mean the difference between life and death for some of our men. Compared to out in the field, away from our direct supply lines, I believe Bovianum would be much better provisioned to helping save some of our troops.

I do not disagree with everyone who is voting against micromanagement, rather my disagreement is with the option in the vote to head straight towards Nola when right now I believe that our orders as given are relaxed enough that we can afford to stop by Bovianum to allow some of our men to receive better treatment as an extension of Sertorius asking for us to finish our business.
 
Inserted tally
Adhoc vote count started by Crazy7s1 on Apr 9, 2018 at 4:00 PM, finished with 60 posts and 36 votes.

  • [X] Plan Moving Forward
    -[X] Turn and march immediately for Nola, in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    -[X] Sell them into slavery, both increasing your own personal coffers and gaining more money for the legion.
    [X] Plan Celeritas et Clementia
    -[X] Reassign able-bodied men from the Second Cohort to fill out the other cohorts' ranks. Transfer walking wounded who cannot keep pace or fight effectively to the Second, in like number.
    -[X] Send Pompolussa, what remains of the Second Cohort, Himatus and his men back to Bovianum along with all the wounded, to ensure the supply train stays secured. Task them with keeping an ear out for Tercerian in case he tries to attack Bovianum or attempts to aid the rebels in Nola by attacking your cohorts from the rear.
    -[X] Inform the captured rebels that they will be forgiven for following Gemino and allowed to return to their homes, on two conditions. Any who do not swear to these two conditions have refused Rome's clemency, and will be sold into slavery.
    --[X] Firstly, the captives will receive a scarring notch on their right earlobe. If any man so marked ever abuses Rome's clemency by standing in her way again, that man will be crucified.
    --[X] Secondly, the captives must convey a message to their home villages: Bovianum bent the knee to Rome. On that day, Bovianum chose to meet Rome's open hand. Gemino, in his arrogance, persecuted Bovianum. On that day, Gemino chose to face Rome's sword hand. The sword has fallen. Gemino is dead. Soon, the legion will return. All villages that bend the knee to Rome will not be harmed, as Bovianum was not harmed. All those thieves and bandits who have persecuted those villages will be destroyed by the sword of Rome, as I have destroyed Gemino. Wherever those who persecute the villages may be, and however strong they may appear, they will be destroyed. Remember, and beware!
    -[X] With the rest of the cohorts (excepting the rump of the Second), slightly filled out by troops drawn from the Second, march immediately to Nola in order to reinforce Sertorius and the Hirpini in the siege.
    [X] Plan Hearts, Minds & the Legion's purse
    -[x] Send Mercator and the 7th cohort immediately back to Nola, he is to inform Sertorius of your success, thank him for the assistance provided and inform him that you plan to follow soon.
    -[x] Send Pompolussa's 2nd and the 6th cohort, together with all the wounded, ahead to Bovianum to better tend to the injured, and ensure that the supply lines stay secured until you return from the western towns.
    -[x] Take the 3rd & 9th cohorts as well as the Gallic auxiliaries to pacify the western towns that supported Gemino, and ensure that the entire region is solidly under Roman control.
    -[x] March the captives back to the western towns, there you offer their families a chance to ransom them at affordable rates. This offer only extends to those you determine to having recently been levied from the western towns. The rest are to be sold as slaves.
 
[X] Plan Celeritas et Clementia

I'd rather the whole army makes a stop at Bovianum so that we can treat our wounded and maybe reprovision and take a short rest, but that will likely not happen.
 
One thing I dislike is that most officers especially Lieutenants fresh from wherever they come from ,try to make plans for specific things and instead just complicate everything else. These is a trained military. They know what they are doing just give simple orders and get it over with.
Eh, this boils down to simple orders, but they're orders that HAVE to be given by the commander, because the decisions involved simply cannot be made by company-grade officers and Quintus Atellus is (in effect) the only field-grade officer present.

The actual orders reduce to something like:

"Fill out the other cohorts' casualties with able-bodied men from the Second, transfer the walking wounded to the Second. At daybreak, the Second marches back to Bovianum with the wounded. The rest of us are marching for Nola in the morning. Oh, and Tullus, I'll be coming over to where your boys are guarding the prisoners, I have a little speech to make to them, then we'll be notching their ears and sending them home with a message."


Now, the first two sentences, your plan drops- but I'm not sure that makes it a better plan. It means that we're taking everyone, including the wounded, with us to Nola. That's going to slow us down quite a bit, I would think.

And the last two sentences are reduced to "Oh, and Tullus, get ready to hand over the prisoners; we'll be selling them off to the slavers at the first opportunity." But again, this doesn't really make the plan more complicated than "get ready to notch their ears and let them go after I give them a message to take home to their villages."

My plan simple takes a bit more time to make sure the western towns are pacified.
NOTE: I am aware that you switched plan votes later, after this post I am now replying to. Nevertheless... I owe you replies. You made some good points.

And in all fairness, you're right, it totally does. Anyone who considers pacifying the western towns by marching through them at this time to be a higher priority than "get to Nola about some days earlier" should totally vote for your plan.

Me, I consider speed to be a higher priority than thoroughness, thus my incentive to choose, well, celeritas.

This is false, we only send the 6th and 2nd ahead to Bovanium until we return from the western towns. Depending on the status of our injured when we get there Plan Hearts, Minds, & the Legion's Purse might actually take more troops to Nola than yours.
Uhhhhh...

Complication. Some of our wounded will almost certainly take more than a few days to recover to the point of being fit to march, let alone fit to fight. In Bovianum, or rather the camp near Bovianum, we're going to have to leave behind some kind of 'field hospital' to tend to those of our men who were seriously injured but likely to fully recover given proper medical care- say, because they have a broken leg somehow.

Also to take care of those who will live, but who cannot fight for themselves, such as amputees. We can't get a guy who's just had his arm cut off all the way back to Rome in a timely fashion without risking him being bushwhacked, or without allocating several able-bodied men to guard him at a time when those men are desperately needed fighting the Samnites.

And this field hospital will almost certainly have to be in Bovianum (or rather, the nearby camp), and will have to be guarded by a sufficient force of legionnaires that bandits operating in platoon strength can't casually wipe the place out. Which means leaving at least a couple of centuries worth of men.

At which point we need something like my plan to shrink the Second Cohort down to a rump organization while transferring in walking wounded to fill out the ranks with people who won't be very helpful in the fighting at Nola.

Edit: To expand on this, Plan Hearts, Minds, & the Legion's Purse first sends
  • the 7th directly south
  • the 2nd, 6th and all the wounded ahead to Bovanium
  • the 3rd, 9th and the gauls to the western towns (between the site of the battle and Bovanium)
With the exception of the 7th these then regroup at Bovanium to start the march south.
Yeah, see, I figured you were expecting someone to guard the wounded, probably the Sixth and Second Cohorts or what's left of them.
 
...Would MORE people be voting for my plan if it just said "Let the captives go, and march to Nola," while leaving no provision for guarding the wounded?

I'm beginning to think they would, and I'm not sure I understand that. The bulk of the 'micromanagement' in Celeritas et Clementia comes from wanting to leave a guard force in Bovianum to tend the wounded, while also getting as many soldiers as possible to Nola despite that constraint.

If we don't do that, either we're bringing the wounded with us and slowing ourselves down, or we're leaving the wounded unguarded. I can't decide which is worse.

No they did consolidate when enough people got killed but moving around people like that will just confuse everyone. Especially the pay master since traditionally veterans cohorts got more pay. I mean it should hopefully not effect too much but it will still cause som administrative issues.
I'm not at all sure that EITHER the Second OR the other cohorts we'd be transferring the men to would qualify for veterans' bonuses; the Second was at best "semi-green" when we marched to Bovianum, and I suspect that no cohort's pay has been upgraded since that time.

The only thing that might cause problems would be transferring men into the Seventh if they're a 'veteran' cohort, and in that case, well, we just gave some of the men from the Second a raise! They're not likely to whine about it, I'd hope.

The are several things that are currently making me not vote for Plan CeC are leaving our injured without guards...
Uh, Celeritas et Clementia does, in fact, leave our injured WITH guards. Namely, the remaining able-bodied men of the Second Cohort. While they took a pasting in the battle, they cannot possibly be so short of men that they won't have any left after being drawn on for replacements.

and breaking up a cohort in order to reassign the men which seems like the kind of thing that could cause confusion. If we just detached the second cohort and had them take all of the injured to join Rufus while we marched straight towards Sertorius that would seem simpler.
So, just to be clear, you'd rather we left a larger number of able-bodied men behind in Bovianum, instead of drawing on the Second to fill out the ranks of the others?

First cohort would let such a small sum slide - they've sacked a town already. These guys haven't had any loot under our command yet. Even if it's only enough to buy a drink or two they'll feel it if we turn it down.
Hell, if that's the issue, we could make up that kind of relatively small change ourselves, out of pocket. It's worth it to dissolve "Enemy of the Samnites;" that trait is nothing but trouble for us in the long run.

Think about it. Even if it were working out to our advantage in this campaign, which on the whole it isn't, we've got fifty or sixty years of active political life to think about, and it looks like a lot of the Samnites will be Roman citizens for much of that time. They will be participating in Roman politics. How do you feel about the prospect of us having a -1 malus to our attempts to persuade Samnites to do things for the rest of our lives? I for one do not like that idea.

The main reason I disagree with Celeritas is that I think swapping people between cohorts might damage morale.
I mean, you're not wrong, but we've got a battle to fight in the near future. Having 200 more able-bodied men in the cohorts we have, even temporarily, is going to help considerably.

We could always rotate people back later when the wounded have recovered and things go back to normal.

I concur with you, though more in the sense that trying to micromanage with very precise and detailed orders doesn't quite feel right to me.
The thing is, we HAVE wounded. We can't just ignore them and assume it's all going to work out somehow. That's not 'avoid micromanagement,' that's 'absentee boss.'

Most of the 'micromanagement' of soldiers in Celeritas et Clementia comes from the fact that, well, we have wounded who can't march and won't be able to fight at Nola, and we need to guard them in a secure location. At the same time, we want to maximize the force we take to Nola; I begrudge every able-bodied man we leave behind, and every gap in the ranks of the cohorts we take with us.

The plan for the captives basically reduces to "well, we don't have time to imprison them or ransom them or anything, so let's do something simple, quick and dirty to make sure that the local villages at least KNOW we're planning to come back and squash Tercerian, and also make sure that the villagers know damn well that if they oppose us again they will NOT be let off with a slap on the wrist.

it takes a paragraph or so to explain, admittedly, but is that so bad?

Atellus's main duty (in my opinion) is deciding the broad stroke of policy: kill the captives, grant mercy, make joining Sertorius his priority, protect the towns, etc. It's not that managing the little things isn't part of his job description or important, but trying to include every little contingency right now seems cumbersome. They will figure out the best way to implement the objective.
I'm not sure something as specific as "notch the captives' ears" or "transfer men between cohorts" wouldn't just get lost in the shuffle. If I weren't worried about that, I wouldn't have gone for the write-in.

Changing my vote. Let's get this over with.
How, exactly, is it more "over with" to pick "Going Forward" over "Celeritas et Clementia?"

I mean, it's not like letting the prisoners go is slower than selling them into slavery. The only clear difference is that Celeritas et Clementia shuffles men between cohorts to maximize our strength at Nola (which I'm willing to give up given how many people seem to be aginst it), and that it specifically designates a certain body of men (probably a few hundred) to guard the wounded in Bovianum, rather than trying to get the wounded to Nola or leaving them unguarded in Bovianum.

And trying to take the wounded with us to Nola would probably kill some of the worst cases, impaire recovery in others, and slow down our march considerably.

Whereas leaving the wounded unguarded in Bovianum would expose them to a great deal of risk from any small bandit groups still operational, or just plain from Samnites not liking them very much.
 
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