Dominions 3: The Awakening/Nations/Ermor, Broken Empire

History
The "new order" has proven to be substantially more dangerous than believed, and not just for the enemies of the Empire. The dead walk the earth, while the living struggle to avoid joining them. The Thaumaturgs and priests of the empire have some ability to control the dead, but the situation has become even more unstable with the rebellion of peripheral elements of the empire, such as the new nation of Pythium.

The nation still has legions, but now they are composed of an unholy mix of the living and the dead, and the chaos is not helpful.

Pretenders
The following pretender god chassis are available for Broken Empire:

Commanders
All Ermorian priests have the ability to reanimate dead as per the spell, but with no cost in death gems. This means that given enough time, a group of Ermorian commanders can raise an army with no cost in gold, resources or gems. The type of undead that can be raised depends on the priest level of the commander:
 * Level 1 -- Ghouls
 * Level 2 -- Soulless
 * Level 3 -- Longdeads
 * Level 4 -- Longdead Horsemen
 * Level 5 -- ???

Ghouls and soulless require fresh bodies to reanimate. Longdeads will be reanimated at a constant rate regardless of available corpses.

The Ermorian Scout and Assassin are the same as their generic counterparts.

The Centurion and the Legatus Legionis are fairly typical Middle Era non-magic leaders, though the Legatus does come with the "standard" ability with an excellent radius.

The Ermorian Cultist is equivalent to the standard 50-gold independent priest, but they are cheaper and a better undead leadership. All in all, a good buy.

The Thaumaturg, at 1S1D2H for 130 gold is not a bad deal, given their flexibility. They are capable of reanimating soulless and ghouls, which means that they must have a supply of fresh corpses; they cannot sit in a fortress and "bootstrap" an undead horde. They are poor researchers, but they are sacred, so the upkeep on a stable of Thaumaturg researchers will not break the bank.

The Censor is an Ermorian commander that has the ability to command fairly large amounts of both living and undead troops (40/80/0). They are not undead themselves however. They come with a patrol bonus and are capital-only.

The Grand Thaumaturg is an excellent buy at 340 gold. They are 2S3D3H1? (100 AWSD 10 AWAD), which gives you some wonderful magic options and eventual access to the ocean. Buying a Grand Thaumaturg on turn one and making him your prophet on turn two gives you access to a continuous source of undead horsemen (six per turn for free!) that will greatly assist your early expansion. They are capital-only.

A priest level of three makes a group of Grand Thaumaturgs very flexible: they can stay at home and summon up replaceable armies of longdeads, or lead your undead legions (casting Divine Blessing or Protection of the Sepulchre). Grand Thaumaturgs start in old age, but because of their levels in Death they are less likely to accumulate afflictions.

Units
Broken Empire Ermor comes with a large number of troop choices, but most are characterized by three things:
 * No missile weapons to speak of
 * Excellent defense
 * High resource cost

The only ranged choice (other than javelins) available to Broken Empire is a standard Slinger. Dirt cheap (7/2), bad stats, bad gear, unremarkable precision (10).

The rank-and-file Ermor troops cost a great deal in terms of resource. Even the lowly Velite costs 10 resources, while most hover around 20 and the elite are 29 or 31. These resource costs pay for some decent gear, including a tower shield for everyone and some very nice defense skills. All this makes the living component of the Broken Empire armies tough to take down. They largely ignore missile fire, and even heavy cavalry charges take a while to chew through a shield wall of Principes. Their attack skills are nothing special however, and this means that the enemy troops tend to run up against an Ermor line... and sit there. Ideally, the undead then lap around the sides and start to chew through the enemy's flanks.

Amusingly, the elite Broken Empire troops (the Tritarius and the Praetorian Guard) start out at 55 year of age, which puts them in their dotage. The Tritarius may be worth buying if you need to take out some independent provinces with knights, because they are effectively armed with pikes.

Ermor has access to the Retarius and the Gladiator units, which are low-resource troop choices, but which only fight for a single battle before disbanding. This appears at first to be a poor use of your gold, but given the high resource costs of other Ermorian units they are a viable choice for rounding out your armies in a hurry if another player is attacking. Their stats are decent and their morale is excellent.

Broken Empire has two sacred troop types, the Shadow Vestal and the Lictor. Both are capital-only.

Shadow Vestals are undead, ethereal and stealthy in addition to being sacred. They have low protection but excellent defense in addition to being ethereal. Their cheap resource cost (20/3) makes them attractive, especially with a bless strategy.

Lictors are not undead and can thus be commanded by someone who is not a priest or mage. They are heavily armored and have the high gold and resource cost you would expect from such gear (80/24). Their defense skill is terrible compared to other Ermorian (living) units, but their attack skill is comparatively high. They have a patrol bonus.

Note that since the Shadow Vestals are undead, while the Lictors are living, they must be blessed with two different spells -- the Unholy Blessing will not work on the Lictors, and Holy (normal) Blessing will not affect the Shadow Vestals.

Starting Sites

 * Temple of the Dead -- Capital-only recruitment and 4 Death gems per turn
 * Temple of the Spheres -- Capital-only recruitment and 1 Astral gem per turn

Unique Spells
Middle Era Ermor gets no unique spells, though they are presented with a number of unique Holy spells that are automatically available without research. Among these are specialized versions of Charm, Haste, Resist Magic, and Curse... all available in some form to Ermor without allocating a single mage to research.


 * Unholy Command
 * Unholy Protection
 * Unholy Blessing
 * Unholy Power
 * Anathema
 * Apostasy
 * Protection of the Sepulcher
 * Power of the Sepulcher

Mortius the Scythe Wielder
Mortius appears to be an odd duck of a hero. He is almost identical to any other Grand Thaumaturg, except that his defense and morale are slightly worse and better, respectively. A slightly better leadership (25/120/20) does not seem to make him anything special.

However, he does carry the Infernal Scythe, a magical weapon that will banish anyone wounded with it to the "Inferno". This could make him an interesting super-combatant killer... if he had a decent attack skill, which he does not.

Zirru the Grand Thaumaturg
Although Zirru starts off at a very ripe old age (160+), this is not particularly ancient for a Sauromancer when old age starts at 150. That and his high level in death magic make it unlikely that he will accumulate afflictions due to old age.

Zirru comes with 2S4D, which makes him an excellent candidate for upping your death magic in the unlikely event that your pretender does not comes with a high level in death.

Strategies
Some selected snippets from a thread on the Shrapnel Boards:


 * Any commander, even independent ones, with atleast one level of Holy can reanimate undeads. So take advtantage of this and recruit lots of priests outside your capitol to make expendable chaff troops.


 * Your best low level thugs would be Banes, Conjuration lvl 3. A good chasis with enough MR to resist banish from low level priests. A lucky pendant (5 astral gems) and whatever 10+ damage weapon you can afford will make a good thug against anything that doesn't have trample. Doom Glaive being a favourite of mine. This works until lvl 7+ summons shows up on the scene anyway.


 * Conjuration lvl 2 also gives you Dark knowledge which should help in improving your death gem income.


 * Enchantment lvl 1 will give your mages the ability to spam undead on the battlefield. lvl 4 gives you Behemoths.


 * A well known battlefield tactic for Ermor and Pythium is to make a large block of Principes and place an astral mage or two in the middle. Then cast the Alteration 3 spell Body Etheral. This gives you etheral troops with armor and good stats! Give the principes the order to Fire closest, they will throw their javelins at their closest target and then engage.


 * You need to make a deciscion what your Middle/Late game is going to be though. Either you invest in astral magic with Thaumaturgy at lvl 5+ for Soulslay and Enslave mind spells. Or you try to get Conjuration lvl 9 and bring out some Tartarians. There are some nice Death evocation spells, but I have yet to train evocation beyond lvl 3 with ermor until turn 60+, thinking that Conjuration or Enchantment is more important for them.


 * Death and Astral spells are your strenghts. Etheral principes with some decked out banes as a vanguard, a horde of low undead chaff to wear the enemy down and all of them backed up by 3-4 unholy priests is a pretty standard Ermor tactic.


 * Your "artillery" will be lacking until quite well into the game. But cheap commanders with decent preciscion score can be decked with scepters of command (F2, construction lvl 4) for some decent long range firepower. You will need either your pretender of an indy mage to make these though.


 * You can use the Black Servants from Conjuration 1 for some early game action if you can get them some armor
 * They are ethereal, and that helps a lot. You'll probably won't have enough gems or mages to make armor, but e.g. Earth would be wonderful. As with most undead, they have Encumberance 0, and thus won't suffer from heavy armors' fatique.
 * You really need to put an anti magic amulet on them; otherwise even independents will banish them pretty darn quick
 * A Black servant with a Doom glaive, Fire plate, anti magic amulet makes a good thug; thats quite a bit of gem investment in one lvl 1 summon though


 * Death Magic has a good number of spells for stealth raiding squads. I use them mainly to pick on provinces with temples in them where you only have to deal with PD. A Spectre commander with Shades, Shade Beasts, Dispossed Spirits, and Ghosts are all available at D3 and Conj 6. They're all stealthy and ethereal and Chill 3 I believe, and Spectre's are pretty good mages.


 * Astral magic can be used to increase the holy power of high priests during combat, giving them access to higher undead-enhancing priest spells.


 * Develop combined arms tactics with a mix of different types of undead and living troops.


 * You can also use Antimagic, the Astral 3 spell to further protect your undead units


 * Nether Darts, Nether Darts, Nether Darts. Evocation 7 makes those Thaumaturges a main ingredient of your army. Protect them at all costs - meat/undead shield, troops on guard-order. Add a Spell Focus and an Eye of Aiming (if enough Air gems) and watch them roll. Oh, and those Darts are armor negating and cause feeblemindness so even SCs need to think twice before taking on your armies. Victims get a resistance roll, but high precision causes more darts to land so..