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this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 12:22 am
by freeboy
what I learned today.. sieges need good art or you loss all your attacking troops...
you can get those little cities to function, in a river etc by clicking on them direnctly.. it really is easy to win, if you set the levels correctly low [:D]

Thanks for the patch.. time to raise the bar.. although it really was fun using my well trained and "specialized" troops to run rufshod over an enemy position.. largest battle to date in detailed combat was 53k rebs getting routed in about ten turns by 83k union troops, not my best either as they always go west


RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 2:24 am
by Bungo_Pete
you lose all your attacking troops?.This game is looking more and more like civ2 witha civa war wrappa[>:] pass.

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 2:59 am
by cdbeck
Take it from a civ fan, this game is NOTHING like Civ. Other than it contains cities and armies anyway (which would make civ like EVERY military game). If you must make comparisons, I would say that FoF plays like Europa Universalis, expect for that it is strictly turn based and you actually control the battles. You jump in the game with sizable forces, an entire economy completely set up, anda whole set of different provinces with different concerns. Economic change is incremental (you are not going to turn Harrisburg, PA into a horse producing wonder, for example), another comparison to EU (but not civ, where cities are carbon copies of one another).

Sieges take many many turns of just having an army parked outside. You don't always have to have artillery, but it helps. Depends on the size of the fort/city, the size of the enemy force, and the size of the sieging force.

Son of Montfort

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 3:23 am
by Grotius
In fact, you can choose a siege method ("encircle") that doesn't rely so heavily on artillery; essentially, you try to starve the defenders out.

And I agree with Son-of-Montfort: much as I love "Civ," this game is not Civ. It is a far deeper military sim, coupled with some of Civ's production and tech features.

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 3:46 am
by freeboy
I keep looking forthe seige method any clue on how to change?

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 3:53 am
by Airborne82nd
Hey Freeboy.  The first turn move into the area you want to seige.  The 2nd turn you begin the seige by clicking on the military unit (corp/div/etc).  The next turn you click on the seige encampment site (not the military unit)and you are given options to change Normal (default) to one of many different types.

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 3:55 am
by freeboy
does that seem odd to anyone other than myself? why not just add it to the down list when you click the start encirclement.. THANK YOU,, myy next game wiull up the ante and play against a much harder reb foe..

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 7:32 am
by Joram
Agreed, it seems cumbersome. However, there is some graphical information provided with the siegeworks too but frankly, I'd give that up for a simpler dropdown.

RE: this is really cool

Posted: Sat Dec 09, 2006 12:49 pm
by Titanwarrior89
Montfort. Ive played Civ myself and you have hit the Nail on the Head. For a "yankee" you're pretty smart.[:D]
ORIGINAL: Son_of_Montfort

Take it from a civ fan, this game is NOTHING like Civ. Other than it contains cities and armies anyway (which would make civ like EVERY military game). If you must make comparisons, I would say that FoF plays like Europa Universalis, expect for that it is strictly turn based and you actually control the battles. You jump in the game with sizable forces, an entire economy completely set up, anda whole set of different provinces with different concerns. Economic change is incremental (you are not going to turn Harrisburg, PA into a horse producing wonder, for example), another comparison to EU (but not civ, where cities are carbon copies of one another).

Sieges take many many turns of just having an army parked outside. You don't always have to have artillery, but it helps. Depends on the size of the fort/city, the size of the enemy force, and the size of the sieging force.

Son of Montfort