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Two types of mobilization:
National Mobilization is when a nation mobilizes in an area where the language and/or culture is predominantly the same as the mother country. The types of armies mobilized will be the same as the mother country. For example, if Britain mobilizes in Australia, the mobilized armies are going to use British units (in Napoleon or Empire Total War).
Upkeeps, Costs, and Consequences:
After one week of mobilization, they have the option of demobilizing or converting the mobilized armies into standing regular armies.
If a nation decides to keep the mobilize armies and convert them into regular, standing armies, then the mobilization upkeep does not apply to the mobilized armies and the regular army upkeep will be applied. It costs no money to convert mobilized armies into standard armies.
If a nation refuses to do both and it is during peacetime, then the upkeep will exponentially rise. This chart explains below:
1 week = 1,000
2 weeks = 16,000
3 weeks = 36,000
4 weeks = 64,000
5 weeks = 100,000
6 weeks = 144,000
7 weeks = 196,000
8 weeks = 256,000
9 weeks = 324,000
10 weeks = 400,000
***The exponential upkeep is formed from this function f(x) = square root(x).
Other rules:
A type of mobilization may only occur once, whether it is national or colonial mobilization. A nation cannot mobilize for the second time unless the mobilized troops are demobilized or converted into regular, standing armies. If the mobilized armies are destroyed in a land battle, then they have to wait for one week before they can mobilize again. If the mobilized armies are lost during a naval battle, a nation can mobilize again instantly.