Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 30 of 33

Thread: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

  1. #1
    Member Member amritochates's Avatar
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Samarkhand
    Posts
    145

    Talking Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Yes! Yes! Yes! Dismountable Units ala MTW albeit better are back again.

    Quote:
    For example, cavalry units like Dragoons are actually mounted Calvary units with sabres, they're able to ride in and fight battles and then dismount load their rifles and start shooting, before mounting up again and moving. So they fight both melee and ranged combat

    Ps. anyone actually seen this in screenshots yet ??

    From the new reviews.

    As a bonus my recommended specs for ETW:
    OS
    Operating System Windows XP or Windows Vista
    Processor
    Intel Core 2 Duo @ 2.2 GHz, or AMD Athlon 64 X2 4400+
    Memory
    2 GB RAM
    Graphics Card
    NVIDIA GeForce 8800 GTS 640MB or ATI 2900XT 512MB
    Sound Card
    Sound Hardware DirectX 9.0c compliant card

    Ps. these are the recommended specs for Crysis- IMHO anything that can run Crysis at maximum settings will also run ETW at max.
    In the three years of war, necessity gave birth to invention. During those three years, we built bombs, we built rockets, we designed and built our own delivery systems. For three years, blockaded without hope of imports, we maintained engines, machines, and technical equipment. We spoke to the world through a telecommunications system engineered by local ingenuity. In three years of freedom, we had broken the technological barrier. In three years, we became the most civilized, the most technologically advanced black people on earth."
    - General Chukwuemeka Odumegwu Ojukwu


  2. #2
    Ranting madman of the .org Senior Member Fly Shoot Champion, Helicopter Champion, Pedestrian Killer Champion, Sharpshooter Champion, NFS Underground Champion Rhyfelwyr's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
    Location
    In a hopeless place with no future
    Posts
    8,646

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Yep this is one heck of a feature. Can't wait to try it in the demo! Please don't just be naval battles...
    At the end of the day politics is just trash compared to the Gospel.

  3. #3
    Death and Glory TW modder Member Flying Pig's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Location
    Looking for a place to land...
    Posts
    313

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    errr... less pleased. Tactically, if I dismount cavalry and start a firefight, my horses are going to run away and I'll lose a great unit
    Death And Glory TW Needs You - Sign Up Now! All it takes is one PM!

    Ὦ ξεῖν', ἀγγέλλειν Λακεδαιμονίοις ὅτι τῇδε
    κείμεθα, τοῖς κείνων ῥήμασι πειθόμενοι.

    Ō zein', angellein Lakedaimoniois hoti tēide
    keimetha tois keinōn rhēmasi peithomenoi.

    Go, thou that passeth, to the Spartans tell
    That as per their orders, here we fell.

  4. #4
    Just another Member rajpoot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Neverland
    Posts
    2,809

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Flying Pig View Post
    errr... less pleased. Tactically, if I dismount cavalry and start a firefight, my horses are going to run away and I'll lose a great unit

    I thought horses of the kind that were taken into battle were trained to bear all this stuff, crowds, yelling, gunshots and stuff?
    How else does a group of horsmen charge into a formation firing at them otherwise?


    The horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.

  5. #5
    The Dam Dog Senior Member Sheogorath's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    1,330

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Typically horsemen DIDN'T charge into a large formation of men who were firing at them.
    Cavalry in this era was NOT the beat-all-end-all it was in the MTW era. It was, actually, approaching obsolescence. A frontal charge against trained infantry was suicide. And even almost unprotected cannons could inflict serious damage of charging cavalry (Light Brigade, anybody?)
    Cavalry's use by this point was generally limited to flanking and running down routers. REALLY heavy cavalry and lancers MIGHT risk a frontal charge against an enemy that was already wavering, but if the infantry stood their ground and fought back, they would almost certainly win. A pointy bit of metal on a stick is very effective against a target as big as a horse and cavalryman.
    Although, given, troops would have to be well trained to hold against the sight of a hundred men in funny hats screaming and bearing down on them with swords and suchlike.
    Tallyho lads, rape the houses and burn the women! Leave not a single potted plant alive! Full speed ahead and damn the cheesemongers!

  6. #6
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Hm cavalry were hardly the "the beat-all-end-all" in the time of MTW nor can it be considered to be anywhere near obsolescence in the time of ETW. Its main strength has always been its mobility that meant quick flank/counter attacks.


    CBR

  7. #7
    The Dam Dog Senior Member Sheogorath's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    1,330

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    The standard use of the bayonet was the beginning of the end for cavalry. I said 'approaching', though. After the Napoleonic Wars, cavalry just become more and more ineffective, with things like rifles and machine guns.
    And, like I said, a frontal charge against men with bayonets would be nearly suicidal for any horseboy crazy enough to try.
    Tallyho lads, rape the houses and burn the women! Leave not a single potted plant alive! Full speed ahead and damn the cheesemongers!

  8. #8
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Frontal charges versus pikes or dismounted men-at-arms were not the best thing to do either.

    Machineguns are not part of the ETW era so not relevant. The Napoleonic era saw extensive use of massed cavalry.


    CBR

  9. #9
    The Dam Dog Senior Member Sheogorath's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    1,330

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    And the first world war saw massed use of human wave attacks against heavily entrenched machine guns.
    Just because the military leaders of the time are using it doesn't mean its still an effective or efficient method of fighting.

    I am quite aware that machine guns were not present in Napoleonic times. However, bayonets were. Cavalry were limited to a very specialized role. As was mentioned, flanking and chasing a fleeing enemy, or fighting other cavalry.
    Dragoons might be the exception, but they were regarded as rather the low end of cavalry.
    Tallyho lads, rape the houses and burn the women! Leave not a single potted plant alive! Full speed ahead and damn the cheesemongers!

  10. #10
    Just another Member rajpoot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Oct 2007
    Location
    Neverland
    Posts
    2,809

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Sheogorath
    (Light Brigade, anybody?)
    That put me thinking again, the Light Brigade was nigh annihilated, but if I'm right they did manage to destroy the artillery battery they had charged.
    While this case was one of it's kind, this is something that happens all the time in Imperial Glory. And it's digusting to see your 12 pounders being killed by suicidal cavalrymen, specially considering how much the 12 pounders cost and how much did the cavalrymen cost.
    I hope that that the canons in ETW are a bit more robust. Or else they are cheaper.........one can't have an infantry unit standing by the canons all the time, just to ward off some nutjob horsemen!!

    Edit: infact what they should do is, not allow the cavalry to directly charge at an artillery unit at all..........or something of the sort........else we might be having Light Brigades every day in ETW.........
    Last edited by rajpoot; 08-28-2008 at 07:39.


    The horizon is nothing save the limit of our sight.

  11. #11

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    regarding the obsolecence of cavalry, I had the impression they were pretty central to (european)warfare until repeating rifles came, after all theres three primary qualities to a unit, mobility, durability and firepower, and while the cav might lack the last two, they certainly had the first in that particular era.

  12. #12
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Sheogorath View Post
    And the first world war saw massed use of human wave attacks against heavily entrenched machine guns. Just because the military leaders of the time are using it doesn't mean its still an effective or efficient method of fighting.
    That is true and if the Napoleonic Wars indeed showed mainly bad results from the way cavalry was used, the comparison to WW1 would be fair. But history tells us otherwise:

    http://www.napoleon-series.org/milit...n/c_eylau.html

    I am quite aware that machine guns were not present in Napoleonic times. However, bayonets were. Cavalry were limited to a very specialized role. As was mentioned, flanking and chasing a fleeing enemy, or fighting other cavalry.
    Dragoons might be the exception, but they were regarded as rather the low end of cavalry.
    Cavalry has always been mainly fighting other cavalry. A classic army deployment was to have infantry in center and cavalry on the wings. Hannibal used it and did not face muskets nor bayonets. Same thing can be said of 17th century battles in say the Thirty Years War. Of course cavalry could be used in the center as a reserve and Marlborough had that as his main strategy in his battles: attacks on the wings to make the enemy weaken his center and then send in a large cavalry force supported by infantry to win the day.

    Dragons started out as mounted infantry but by the time of the Napoleonic Wars it was considered a part of the heavy cavalry force.

    Quote Originally Posted by india View Post
    That put me thinking again, the Light Brigade was nigh annihilated, but if I'm right they did manage to destroy the artillery battery they had charged.
    While this case was one of it's kind, this is something that happens all the time in Imperial Glory. And it's digusting to see your 12 pounders being killed by suicidal cavalrymen, specially considering how much the 12 pounders cost and how much did the cavalrymen cost.
    I hope that that the canons in ETW are a bit more robust. Or else they are cheaper.........one can't have an infantry unit standing by the canons all the time, just to ward off some nutjob horsemen!!

    Edit: infact what they should do is, not allow the cavalry to directly charge at an artillery unit at all..........or something of the sort........else we might be having Light Brigades every day in ETW.........
    Well that is quite historical actually. Artillery needed either infantry or cavalry support as its main enemy was cavalry. It might try to loosen up its formation and even split up to attack the flanks of artillery.

    The Light Brigade attacked the wrong target so no wonder they ended up taking heavy losses.


    CBR
    Last edited by CBR; 08-28-2008 at 14:06.

  13. #13

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Well calvalry were effective in WW1 so I can imagine they were effective in ETW. No you don't charge head on into infantry with bayonets but most of the time the infantry didn't have bayonets on all the time. So a head on charge to infantry with no bayonets is a good idea. Calvalry were even used in WW2.
    Last edited by Belgolas; 08-28-2008 at 14:08.


  14. #14
    The Dam Dog Senior Member Sheogorath's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Posts
    1,330

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by CBR View Post
    That is true and if the Napoleonic Wars indeed showed mainly bad results from the way cavalry was used, the comparison to WW1 would be fair. But history tells us otherwise:

    http://www.napoleon-series.org/milit...n/c_eylau.html


    Cavalry has always been mainly fighting other cavalry. A classic army deployment was to have infantry in center and cavalry on the wings. Hannibal used it and did not face muskets nor bayonets. Same thing can be said of 17th century battles in say the Thirty Years War. Of course cavalry could be used in the center as a reserve and Marlborough had that as his main strategy in his battles: attacks on the wings to make the enemy weaken his center and then send in a large cavalry force supported by infantry to win the day.

    Dragons started out as mounted infantry but by the time of the Napoleonic Wars it was considered a part of the heavy cavalry force.


    Well that is quite historical actually. Artillery needed either infantry or cavalry support as its main enemy was cavalry. It might try to loosen up its formation and even split up to attack the flanks of artillery.

    The Light Brigade attacked the wrong target so no wonder they ended up taking heavy losses.


    CBR
    Considering the timescale involved (assuming you count chariots), WWI and the Napoleonic Wars are right next to each other. Cavalry had been in use for about three thousand years.
    And while there were successes with cavalry, there were also miserable failures. Yes, this is true with pretty much everything in war, but in this case, most of those failures resulted from the use of cavalry outside their niche. Frontal charges against infantry. Or cannons.

    And, I believe, cavalries main purpose was to fight infantry. Cavalry was the 'air force', it could win you a battle, but attempting to storm a city/fortification with it was probably a bad idea.

    And they were still mounted infantry. While they could function as heavy cavalry, they typically had inferior horses (in most cases), and weren't regarded as being part of the 'true' cavalry force (again, in most cases).

    Canister shot would do even worse things to cavalry than it would to infantry. Bigger targets meant more hits. A frontal charge against an artillery battery was a terribly stupid idea for ANY force. Infantry OR cavalry. Cavalry might close the distance more quickly, but artillery crews themselves were hardly harmless.
    Either way, even an 'unprotected' artillery battery could inflict serious harm upon pretty much any attacker.

    The target doesn't matter. The light brigades attack showed the effects artillery fire could have on cavalry. The French used their cavalry in the correct way and snuck around to take out one of the Russian batteries while it was concentrated on the British.
    Tallyho lads, rape the houses and burn the women! Leave not a single potted plant alive! Full speed ahead and damn the cheesemongers!

  15. #15
    Member Member Matt_Lane's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Sheffield, UK
    Posts
    130

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    There should be a distinction here. Heavy cavalry with there large mounts and heavy blades are meant to crush enemy infantry and cavalry through weight and speed. Attacking infantry in defensive formation or in a prepared position is highly unlikely to succeed as the French found our in Waterloo. Instead an element of surprise is required, attacking from the flanks or using the terrain to mask their approach.

    Light cavalry would be used as scouts, for foraging, chasing down routing troops or as a screen to mask an army's movement. Sending them in against infantry or heavy cavalry would be unwise.

    I think having dragoons dismount in the game provides depth but they should not represent a serious infantry element as their carbines would not have the range of muskets and they were none more for their dash and daring rather than their solidity under fire.

  16. #16
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Sheogorath View Post
    The target doesn't matter. The light brigades attack showed the effects artillery fire could have on cavalry. The French used their cavalry in the correct way and snuck around to take out one of the Russian batteries while it was concentrated on the British.
    The (wrong) target meant everything for the Light Brigade as this illustration shows: half the shot fired came from enfilade fire and no room to spread out and/or outflank.


    CBR

  17. #17
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Matt_Lane View Post
    I think having dragoons dismount in the game provides depth but they should not represent a serious infantry element as their carbines would not have the range of muskets and they were none more for their dash and daring rather than their solidity under fire.
    I think it is a nice addition to Total War but I do wonder about how important they will be on the battlefield. Unless the battlefield size has been considerably increased then what is the point in having them.

    But a force of pure cavalry will of course have more speed on the strategic map and dragoons acting as infantry in case of a fight. So maybe more for use as deep raiders than in the regular armies.


    CBR

  18. #18
    Pining for the glory days... Member lancelot's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    Land of Hope & Glory
    Posts
    1,198

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by india View Post
    That put me thinking again, the Light Brigade was nigh annihilated,....
    Sorry to butt in, given that I dont frequent the forums much anymore but- that is a fallacy perpetuated in part by the poems of Tennyson and the delay in accurate news getting back to the UK.

    Men KIA were quite heavy but the unit was far from annihilated. I believe that the leader of the charge actually asked his superior, 'can we go again?' when he returned from the first charge...if my memory is not playing tricks on me.
    Last edited by lancelot; 08-29-2008 at 01:33.
    "England expects that every man will do his duty" Lord Nelson

    "Extinction to all traitors" Megatron

    "Lisa, if the Bible has taught us nothing else, and it hasn't, it's that girls should stick to girls sports, such as hot oil wrestling and foxy boxing and such and such." Homer Simpson

  19. #19
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Total losses seems to be around 40%. Nearly 20% of that were POW. Even more horses were killed but that was quite normal for cavalry units, as the horse represented a larger target.


    CBR

  20. #20
    Senior Member Senior Member Cheetah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Dec 2001
    Location
    Hungary
    Posts
    2,085

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Actually the Light Brigade is the best example of the efficciency of cavalry charge vs artillery positions. As CBR said due to bad wording of the command and possible deliberate missreading of it (by Nolan) they attacked the wrong target. They had to ride down a valley both sides occupied by russian troops. As a consequence they got fired on from 3 sides all the way! Yet they DID ride home the charge, they captured the artillery, they chased away the cassacks guarding the artillery (units 2 or 3 times the sizes of their own!!!), and returned back losing only 1/5th of their number! The only reason why it turned into a debacle because they got almost no support at all (only the french Chasseurs supported them by attacking the russian troops on one side of the valley) and thus they were forced to retreat. Had they got support from the Heavy Brigade (which already saw action that day and its leader was less eager to fight) it would have been possible to hold on to the captured artillery and the charge would have been counted as one of the finest cavalry charges ever, which I think it was.
    Lional of Cornwall
    proud member of the Round Table Knights
    ___________________________________
    Death before dishonour.

    "If you wish to weaken the enemy's sword, move first, fly in and cut!" - Ueshiba Morihei O-Sensei

  21. #21

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    If you want to find out what cavalry can do check Somossierra pass charge (30 XI 1808) where one regiment of polish cavalry (actually it was one squad of 210 men, only in the end reinforcements of 240 reached) opened a way to Madrid for Napoleon.

    There cav charged 4 spanish gun batteries (3*2 guns and 1*10 guns) with 3000 men defending. Only way was narrow road going slightly uphill. fist charge broke through first 3 batteries, and was reiforced during the fighting on the 4th. Losses were very high (about 1/2 of the first wave were dead or wounded), but they succeded in action that Napoleon infantry was unable to succeed.
    As you see cav can charge gun batteries and win, even in situation that seem to be completely impossible for cavalry.

    16 V 1811 at Albuhera regiment of cavalry crushed english inf brigade (English even lost standarts) by flank attack on their line, changing what could have been heavy french defeat into a draw.
    Last edited by O'ETAIPOS; 09-10-2008 at 19:33.

    EB ship system destroyer and Makedonia FC

  22. #22
    the G-Diffuser Senior Member pevergreen's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Brisbane, Australia
    Posts
    11,585
    Blog Entries
    2

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    In the capture of Beersheba, the 4th Light Horse Brigade took 38 officers and 700 other ranks prisoner as well as four field guns. In the two regiments, only 31 men were killed (including two officers) and only 36 men wounded (including eight officers).

    One Australian who was dazed after having his horse shot from under him, recovered to find his five attackers with their hands up, waiting to be taken prisoner.
    That's what I call a nice cavalry charge. Too bad its outside the time period. (WWI)
    Quote Originally Posted by TosaInu
    The org will be org until everyone calls it a day.

    Quote Originally Posted by KukriKhan View Post
    but I joke. Some of my best friends are Vietnamese villages.
    Quote Originally Posted by Lemur
    Anyone who wishes to refer to me as peverlemur is free to do so.

  23. #23
    Camel Lord Senior Member Capture The Flag Champion Martok's Avatar
    Join Date
    Mar 2002
    Location
    In my own little world....but it's okay, they know me there.
    Posts
    8,257

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    I'm a little concerned that units like Dragoons could be overpowered in the game. Given they'll be able to not only dismount in the middle of battle, but remount as well, I have to wonder whether there will be any point to recruiting any cavalry other than them.

    I'm curious as to how this will be balanced. Will Dragoons be hideously expensive, perhaps, and/or have only very mediocre stats? Restricting them to being recruitable in only one city per faction, maybe.
    "MTW is not a game, it's a way of life." -- drone

  24. #24

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Sounds likely that Dragoons will be your Baroque answer to the paratrooper; able to ride ahead and seize key points, objectives, piques, buildings, etc. on a battlemap, with the aim of establishing a good position or disrupting the foe's deployment. few in numbers and light on firepower by comparison with conventional infantry, their effective use will be risky and may depend on the support of other arms: particularly packets of lancers held in nearby cover. light infantry could suffer great fatigue just to catch up on big battlemaps and faced with ranged artillery hard cover will be decisive.
    But vain the spear and vain the bow,
    They never can work War's overthrow;
    The hermit's prayer and the widow's tear
    Alone can free the world from fear
    (Blake)

  25. #25
    Member Megas Methuselah's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2007
    Location
    Prairie Grasslands
    Posts
    5,040

    Thumbs up Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    You could kill their horses....

  26. #26
    Clan Takiyama Senior Member CBR's Avatar
    Join Date
    Aug 2002
    Location
    Denmark
    Posts
    4,408

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Quote Originally Posted by Martok View Post
    I'm curious as to how this will be balanced. Will Dragoons be hideously expensive, perhaps, and/or have only very mediocre stats? Restricting them to being recruitable in only one city per faction, maybe.
    The easy thing would be lower stats which, especially for the early part of this era, would only be historical. Cuirassiers were generally supposed to be bigger men as well as on bigger horses than Dragoons.


    CBR

  27. #27

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Just trying to say that a unit that may get ahead fast is already balanced by opposing artillery and lack of friendly heavy support, i doubt it will need much dumbing down. used carelessly they will get blown to smithereens & shot away by the musketry. i think empires may differ greatly from what we have been used to, because the effect of having many ranged units, muskets and cannon, may be to support defensive play.
    But vain the spear and vain the bow,
    They never can work War's overthrow;
    The hermit's prayer and the widow's tear
    Alone can free the world from fear
    (Blake)

  28. #28
    Member Member Zarky's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Finland
    Posts
    381

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    I´d like to point out that during the time period ETW covers there were horseboys crazy enough to frontal charge, Finnish Hakkapeliitta, but they were mainly used in 30 year war, and by Sweden.
    Homo Sapiens non Urinat in Ventum - the wise man does not piss against the wind.

  29. #29
    Insomniac and tired of it Senior Member Slyspy's Avatar
    Join Date
    Nov 2000
    Location
    England
    Posts
    1,868

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    Dragoons did not operate as mobile infantry for the entire period in question. By the Napoleonic Wars, IIRC, in most cases only the regimental designation remained, the actual units fighting as either light or heavy cavalry. Dragoons lacked the firepower, durability and flexibility of infantry while being more expensive. They also lacked the thrust of true cavalry and the speed of light cavalry. I've always viewed them as a poor man's cavalry, a bit of a relic from the days before armies became professional.
    "Put 'em in blue coats, put 'em in red coats, the bastards will run all the same!"

    "The English are a strange people....They came here in the morning, looked at the wall, walked over it, killed the garrison and returned to breakfast. What can withstand them?"

  30. #30
    Dux Nova Scotia Member lars573's Avatar
    Join Date
    Apr 2004
    Location
    Halifax NewScotland Canada
    Posts
    4,114

    Default Re: Yipeeeee ! Dismountable Units

    And yet they were the only kind of cavalry Britain feilded during ETW time period.
    If you havin' skyrim problems I feel bad for you son.. I dodged 99 arrows but my knee took one.

    VENI, VIDI, NATES CALCE CONCIDI

    I came, I saw, I kicked ass

Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Bookmarks

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •  
Single Sign On provided by vBSSO