Reiryc wrote:
If aacw and boa are any indication (and they are), then a grand campaign can be done and be satisfying to a great many players.
That is the point, IMHO, for the whole napoleonic period in general, spanning from 1805 to, say 1815, those games are not a valid reference point.
Both BoA and AACW in all campaigns feature only two pre-defined sides, additional nations coming to one sides aid during the game notwithstanding. There are no changes of alliances mid-game in any of both games, and no minor states to handle, no new states to form, national borders to change or provinces to change hands. There are no periods of peace either...
All that would be necessary for an even remotely realistic feeling grand campaign in a NCP-style game spanning from 1805-15. You need to have a diplomatic system and an AI capable of handling it, changes of alliance for all major nations, an AI that can handle the minor nations, too. Otherwise You will very soon get a very unhistorical game. From 1805 to 1815 every major european nation except Great Britain changed sides at least once, pro and contra France. The current "diplomacy-free" AGE simply cannot simulate that well enough, if at all, at least not without a mass of event-coding more difficult and complex than I care to imagine...
Simply put, the engine in it's current state of development is a wargaming engine, not a strategygaming one, and, as others have already stated, trying to play grand strategy with a wargame is a very difficult and in most cases unsatisfying task at best...
Now, once we got the improved "grand strategy AGE" with VgN, that is whole different matter, then You can count me in to be the first one to Yell for a "NCP Ep. II - Attack of the Grand Campaigns!"
Regards, Henry

Henry D, also known as "Stauffenberg" @ Strategycon Interactive and formerly (un)known as "whatasillyname" @ Paradox Forums
"Rackers, wollt Ihr ewig leben?" (Rascals, Do You want to live forever?) - Frederick the Great, cursing at his fleeing Grenadiers at the battle of Kunersdorf
"Nee, Fritze, aber für fuffzehn Pfennije is' heute jenuch!" (No, Freddy, but for 15p let's call it a day!) - Retort of one passing Grenadier to the above
