EMPIRE II - THE ART OF WAR

Welcome to the demo version of Empire II, The Art of War.  This is a playable
demo which shows most of the features of the commercial game.  The game itself
may be purchased at your local software store or direct from New World
Computing at P.O. Box 4302, Hollywood, CA 90078.

Installation:

Empire II, The Art of War requires an IBM 386 or greater, some hard drive
space, 4MB of RAM, SVGA, CD ROM Drive and a mouse.

Insert the CD into your computer.  Type the letter of the drive and a colon
(i.e. D: or E:) and press ENTER.  You then need to enter the Empire II
directly by typing 'cd empire2' and ENTER.

Type 'install' and press ENTER one more time.  This will lead you to the
installation program which will lead you through installing the demo on your
hard drive.

About the Demo:

The demo of Empire II, The Art of War is designed to show you most of the
features of the commercial game including allowing the play of an actual
scenario.  Many of the features such as saving files, modem and network play,
and play of other scenarios not included have been disabled.

The scenario included with the demo is The Battle of Agincourt.  Below is a
brief description of both the battle and the scenario.

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Agincourt, 25 October 1415

Background:

During the 100 Years War, the English developed a tactic of chevauch�e, the
sending of forces through French territory  to inflict damage, win plunder and
undermine the French King�s authority.  In 1415, a generation after the last
major conflict between England and France, a young King Henry V organized
another chevauch�e into France.  On 13 August, Henry�s forces landed near
Harfleur France and surrounded the city.  What should have been a simple
conquest turned into a drawn out siege costing Henry both time and many men
(mainly to disease).  Finally the city was take on September 23.

On October 8, Henry took off with 6000 men, what was left of his already
decimated army, from Harfleur with the intent of marching to his base at
Calais.  A French army of 25,000 under the constable Charles d�Albret began
pursuit, finally placing itself in Henry�s way at the village of Agincourt.

The Battle:

The battlefield was a narrow set of muddy fields bounded by forest.  To which
Henry set up a strong position protected by English longbow men, possibly the
most powerful combat force man for man in Europe.  The French, being forced
into the narrow front, were forced to deploy into three sequential lines.
Henry moved his men into longbow range of the French, set up defenses of
stakes and started firing.

The French cavalry plodded forward under the deadly fire.  They reached
Henry�s front lines only to be repulsed when Henry�s archers exchanged bows
for axes and swords.  Again and again they struck against Henry�s lines to be
repulsed once more.  Finally, the French could not take the carnage anymore,
and retreated in disarray.

Aftermath:

The French suffered 7,000 casualties, including d�Albret.  English losses were
about 1600.  Henry then proceeded to Calais.  Encouraged by his victory, Henry
returned to France two years later to conquer much of Normandy.

Scenario Notes:

The stakes used by the English archers proved to be quite effective against
the French cavalry.  As such, the English longbow men are given the
entrenchment capability.