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April 25th, 2010, 09:50 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Durham, NC
Posts: 509
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Thanked 44 Times in 14 Posts
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
I'm on year 10 in my current game (EA T'ien Ch'i). Typically 1000 guys will roll up to my border starving and demoralized, attack 200 at a time for 3 or 4 turns and then sit in their castle until they get reinforced by another army. The only threat is Ermor because they can't starve and they can skellispam from the back so 1000 guys is actually more like 1500 by the end of the fight. I do lose to the big Ermorian armies without mage support, but most nations buckle like a pilgrim's shoe.
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April 25th, 2010, 11:41 PM
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Corporal
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 141
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
Do you have supplies set to 300?
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April 26th, 2010, 12:45 AM
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Corporal
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Posts: 138
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rookierookie
Do you have supplies set to 300?
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Is there a way to bypass the artificial supply multiple limit of 300?
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April 26th, 2010, 05:31 AM
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BANNED USER
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
No, but you could have a map where every province has a supply bonus site, or you could make all commanders give a huge supply bonus, if you want to remove that part of the game entirely.
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April 26th, 2010, 05:38 PM
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Corporal
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Join Date: Jun 2008
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
I've been playing a 300 everything EA game on Faerun map, and not a turn had passed without AI wiping a 125 PD of mine here or there. Everyone from Sauromatia to Atlantis to Arcoscephale to the japanese. Not with particularly large armies even, typically in 500-1000 range, and that's with normal difficulty.
Of course, I played Niefels, and their PD is notoriously sucky, or so I've heard.
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April 26th, 2010, 06:03 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Durham, NC
Posts: 509
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
I do play on 300 supplies, but the really large armies still starve if they province they are sitting in doesn't have enough population. I guess I am an anomaly, or I've just been using nations with powerful PD. The worst things for PD to have is low morale, and/or flyers. So Mictlan, Caelum, the giants, etc. are going to get rolled eventually. But most human nations do fine: T'ien Ch'i, Eriu, Ermor, Pythium, Utgard, etc.
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April 27th, 2010, 08:29 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 564
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
Quote:
Originally Posted by llamabeast
Your maths is not correct at all, because the mages (should) survive the battle. So you can't calculate the cost of a shadow blast as being (cost of mage) + (cost of gem).
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The way I'm doing the math is based on the observation that battles against the AI tend to be close to "all or nothing" affairs. If I come to the fight with 50 troops, and he has 100, I'm going to lose 40 and he'll lose 10. If I can add 100 troops to that battle, he'll lose 80 and I'll lose 20. My losses when I win a battle are relatively minimal, and my losses are catastrophic when I lose a battle.
I'm looking for mages to provide a greater likelihood of winning... too often, it seems like they instead increase my losses -- my army of 50 troops and 5 mages meets his 50 troops, and my mages incinerate half of my troops in the process of killing his
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April 27th, 2010, 08:53 PM
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Corporal
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Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 141
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
Quote:
Originally Posted by krpeters
Quote:
Originally Posted by llamabeast
Your maths is not correct at all, because the mages (should) survive the battle. So you can't calculate the cost of a shadow blast as being (cost of mage) + (cost of gem).
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The way I'm doing the math is based on the observation that battles against the AI tend to be close to "all or nothing" affairs. If I come to the fight with 50 troops, and he has 100, I'm going to lose 40 and he'll lose 10. If I can add 100 troops to that battle, he'll lose 80 and I'll lose 20. My losses when I win a battle are relatively minimal, and my losses are catastrophic when I lose a battle.
I'm looking for mages to provide a greater likelihood of winning... too often, it seems like they instead increase my losses -- my army of 50 troops and 5 mages meets his 50 troops, and my mages incinerate half of my troops in the process of killing his
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This makes sense only on normal difficulties. On Impossible settings, with custom advantaged AI-Gods, the AI will outbuild you 10-1 on conventional units. Units like knights will achieve a very favorable KD ratio, but there is only so much they can do before the AI swarms all over you.
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April 27th, 2010, 09:48 PM
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General
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Join Date: Oct 2007
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
To answer your original question, magic is useful at ALL levels, but it depends on what you're trying to do with it. Most lower level magic is best used on small numbers of very expensive or otherwise rare things, rather than trying to be useful in army combats. For example spells like earth meld or mind burn are very useful on relatively small numbers of enemy elites. Under CBM, fire prison is an amazingly good spell. Try it sometime. It can be a real battle winner, especially if you rely on ranged units or something like summer lions. There are some exceptions to this though. Thunderstrike is an amazingly good spell no matter the number of troops the enemy has... it demolishes anything that does not have full lightning immunity, is pretty accurate, and can be spammed by thuggish mages who can survive without really needing troops to guard them. Try playing tir na nog, eriu, or ea caelum to get an idea of what I mean.
By and large though higher level magic is just much more efficient, especially buffs. Fog Warriors is one of the most powerful spells in the game IMO.
One thing that can help make your mages more efficient is using trick armies. Like say you're playing marignon. You can use summer lions to occupy the enemy army while your mages rain fire down on their heads, or have all your mages cast resist fire and then cast fire storm. Or with your C'tis example, using undead in combination with the raise dead spells (yes I know everyone's talking about these...), shadowblast, cloud of death, etc. Undead are immune to the effects of death spells so when you accidentally hit them they really don't care. A few wights or a bane lord or two can absorb all the missile fire they throw at you, and are quite tough to kill, and can hold the attention of nearby troops long enough for your mages to create an impenetrable wall of skeletons while dropping painful spells on them from afar.
Have you tried thugging? That sounds like something you'd feel is way too inefficient, but it works very well, and is really the best way to fight the AI. If you haven't and want to get a good idea of how effective thugging can be, try the following: Play Tir na N'og with an e9n4 bless. Try making armies that consist of 2 sidhe thugs, and 3 mages with air magic to at least level 3. Thugs should be equipped with a vine shield, a frost brand, and possibly rainbow armor to help with fatigue. Nothing else. Script bless, air shield, mistform, resist lightning, barkskin, attack closest. Script the mages to air shield, bless, aim, thunder strikex2, spells. As long as they don't have any flanking units, an army like this should be more or less invulnerable to conventional AI armies. The mages aren't really even necessary to be honest, they are just there to prove that it can be done :P Something like that is safer with death mages because of the skelly spam acting as a barrier to keep them safe.
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April 29th, 2010, 06:54 AM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 564
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Thanked 10 Times in 7 Posts
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Re: Troops vs magic, what am I doing wrong?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rookierookie
This makes sense only on normal difficulties. On Impossible settings, with custom advantaged AI-Gods, the AI will outbuild you 10-1 on conventional units. Units like knights will achieve a very favorable KD ratio, but there is only so much they can do before the AI swarms all over you.
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Exactly, as I try higher difficulty levels, I just get swarmed by enemy troops, so I'm looking for strategies to wipe out his swarms. What I find is that most of the magic is geared toward taking out small numbers of quality troops, not huge amounts of chaff.
What is all the excitement regarding Thunderstrike? I've tried it several times, and it never seems to work for me. My mages nearly always target the periphery of an enemy squad instead of the center, so I kill the three guys in the square it hits and injure half a dozen nearby. Very underwhelming. Is it critical to cast an aiming spell first to make this useful?
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