
Thoughts on bringing the Trebuchet to AOM? Long range siege
My favourite part from AOE2 was the long range trebuchet which would force turtle players to leave their walls to fight harassment?
Would it fit the Greek pantheons or make a new Roman sub God? As a balance walls could have an upgrade at mythic to be double as resistant.
Also for other Gods like aztecs that use more traps, you could give them ‘mud’ or ‘ice’ for Norse as a SLOW ground effect which could be a type of ‘wall’ that took 5seconds to walk through and was cheaper than walls
There seems to be a possibility of Roman Gods as an expansion. Would be awesome to see Hercules verse Medusa as a campaign as well which was massive for mythology
The Major Roman Gods
Jupiter: King of the gods and ruler of the sky; equivalent to the Greek Zeus. He is the supreme protector of the state.
Juno: Queen of the gods, goddess of marriage and childbirth, and sister-wife to Jupiter.
Mars: God of war and agriculture. Considered the mythical father of Rome's founders, Romulus and Remus, he was highly revered.
Venus: Goddess of love, beauty, and fertility. She is the mythological ancestor of the Roman people through her son Aeneas.
Neptune: God of the sea, water, and horses.
Minerva: Goddess of wisdom, justice, and strategic warfare.
Apollo: God of the sun, music, archery, prophecy, and medicine.
Diana: Goddess of the hunt, wild animals, and the moon.
Vulcan: God of fire, volcanoes, and the forge.
Mercury: Messenger god, patron of commerce, travelers, and thieves.
Ceres: Goddess of agriculture and the harvest.
Vesta: Goddess of the hearth, home, and family, tended by Rome's Vestal Virgins. 
British Museum
+5
Other Essential Deities
Pluto: God of the underworld and the dead.
Janus: The unique, two-faced god of beginnings, transitions, and doorways.
Saturn: An ancient god of time, wealth, and agriculture. He ruled during the mythical "Golden Age" and was celebrated during the festival of Saturnalia.
Bacchus: God of wine, agriculture, and fertility (the Roman version of the Greek Dionysus