Hi there
Why is it that the AI mostly is able to heal 50% of its casualties after a battle?
Why is it that mostly light units are healed when the player wins?
At least in my campaigns...
And can this be modified for EB II?
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Hi there
Why is it that the AI mostly is able to heal 50% of its casualties after a battle?
Why is it that mostly light units are healed when the player wins?
At least in my campaigns...
And can this be modified for EB II?
Because you use mostly light troops as arrow pin cushions and cavalry shock absorbers in the first minutes of battle, while you keep your elites in reserve. The first x % of casualties get healed, those who fall last are out of luck.Quote:
Why is it that mostly light units are healed when the player wins?
I've always assumed it is hard-coded, but I may be wrong.
You sure about that? I don't think the order of soldiers that drop has any significance.
I always thought the type of wound the soldier in the unit recieved also had something to do with it, though. For instance; I always notice that units that get heavy casualties from a cavalry charge get no men back, while a unit that was decimated by arrow fire is usually almost completely restored at the end of the battle.
Yes, I am sure about that for EB1.
I have paid attention to that in countless battles.
Don't know for Medieval2, though.
Quite interesting, but very unlogical. Why should the units that lie the longest time wounded on the battlefield survive, while those, who get wounded short time before the battle ends, and then very quickly can be brought to the chirurgeon or whoever, die?
I agree, and it irks me too, SwissBarbar.
I was under the impression that it was missile casualties that were more likely to heal. There is some research in the Ludus Magna, but it's ancient and IIRC Aemilius Paulus posted evidence some time ago that it was not correct. I cannot find his post, unfortunately.
It's not that enigmatic, guys.
Some battle result screenshots to illustrate my point:
Battle for Chach, Saka vs. Eleuthereu, spring of 272 BC, battle difficulty: normal
1) Sent in Early Saka Nobles first, then Saka HA, then Saka FA:
https://i276.photobucket.com/albums/...g?t=1260914425
2)Sent in Saka HA first, then Early Saka Nobles, then Saka FA:
https://i276.photobucket.com/albums/...g?t=1260914287
3) Sent in Saka FA first, then Saka HA, then Early Saka Nobles:
https://i276.photobucket.com/albums/...g?t=1260914498
Most casualties were casualties by missile fire, but I can assure you, you'd get the same results for melee sieges. I'm just too lazy to demonstrate.
That evidence is pretty hard to argue against, you're right....
Now why would the system work like that? It doesn't make any sense!
I guess maybe it was an ease of programming issue.
Okay as far as my researches to this topic goes:
1. Fleeing units get nearly every man back they lost after starting to run, if you win the battle.
2. When a unit card starts to blink and you loose a lot of men in short time it is the same
3. Cavallery charge victims do not recover, but(!!!! really important) most units start to blink after getting charged by heavy cavallery, so they get most of there casualties directly after the charge back.
4. Cavallery tend to get less man back. Maybe because in EB they rarely blink.
5. Arrow fire casualties in EB seem to have a higher recovery rate, but I never experienced that in Vanilla. Dont know why
The thing about fleeing units and blinking is 100% true, but everything else is my conclusion after countless battles.:book:
Against Tollheits point:
Fight a siege battle and not only the units you let atack the walls first recover, but everybody also.
Check the AIGeneral trait. I edited the hell out of mine (no more 5 minute fights against the general himself), but I believe that the AI generals get a big bonus to their BattleSurgery stat. That would explain the healing discrepancies between human and AI generals. Remove that line and everything should equalize.
It was my understanding that the system was indeed that the first casualties received treatment and this makes sense to me at least. The first men who go down, usually in skirmishes, would be the first dragged to safety and worked on while the middle one would be downed and basically abandoned until the battle is over (leading to death) and the last ones downed would likely die due to lack of free surgical hands, which are tied up healing the early casualties. I'm sure there would be more realistic ways of handling it but it seems to make sense to me the way it is.
Yes.
In my example battles shown here, pretty much every unit routet (except for the last to be send in) and took losses while fleeing, but only the first few % of casualties total recovered. 0, nil, nada, zilch of other units, fleeing or not.
And it was a "siege battle", too, albeit without walls.
Well, the Early Saka Nobles in example No. 1 fled when they were down to 6 men - where do the other 40 recoveries come from?
From my experience it is always the first guys to die that have the greatest chance to recover. Co-incidentally these are often killed by missile fire. Tollheit is absolutely correct.
my experience shows that Tollheit is basically correct-I have high recovery rates for all initial contact units, regardless of unit type-missile units seem to recover most as they fight first in normal situations; I had a pezhetairoi unit get reduced to little over 20 men (of 123), but since they were the first to go into battle, all but 15 were healed (AS v. Carthage)*.
and yes, I had plenty of people heal from Charges-the above unit in fact took most of the casualties from the initial charge (a unit of medium cavalry+shoch troops).
*it was a guerilla style battle: soldiers hiding, taking cover, and ambushing each other. I basically had to take off the phalanx ability in order to "range" through the woods and do a sweep of the *******.
That does look pretty strong. I have referred to this thread in the Ludus Magna discussion. Feel free to post your research in the LM.
WOOW. Okay I researched myself and played 10 custom and 2 campain battles to do so and here are my results:
1. The units who are first getting casualties (Not just contact, not just killing enemies) are getting their soldiers healed.
2. When I atacked with 3 Units and let one of them rout, it had the most people restored.
3. Getting one man killed in the beginning is enough. I got one rider killed and 5 minuits later 30 more and they still got healed.
This blows my mind? Who made that system? :sweatdrop:
I guess that is the reason why the only efficient tactic in a long campain in EB is to always press forward. When I started to roleplay my battles I took huge losses :thumbsdown:
There is still something I didnt research:
What about reeinforcement?
I know^^
But Tollheit said he disagrees so I just researched it again.
Stil there is something that bothers me.
In a campain battle today I hold my cav back and atacked late but still they got restored half their casualties. WHY? :juggle2:
In my test battles it wouldnt have worked.
I am in full agreement with Tollheit's theory. I picked up on the casualties trend several months ago and scores of battles since then have only served to confirm my first guesses.
It tends to be the akonkistai and peltastai that I get most back after every battle. It must have something to do with the missles.
Me too. (Lo again Frontline btw ;))
I just said in another thread (before reading this one)
When I think about it, I'm not too sure about the "missile" casualties recovering bit either. The reason in my experience, that you get most of your Archer/Slingers back, is that generally they die first, as they are the first to be targetted by ai missile troops. If the ai has no long ranged missile troops, then your slingers/archers normally stay out of melee totally (unless you do some strange things with them;))Quote:
It's also to do with which units die first in a battle, without a shadow of a doubt.
E.g. If you assault a stone wall with say a unit of Pedites as Rome, and they win but lose 90% of their number, then after the battle (as long as you win and have a General with a <healer> anciliary), you'll get most, even all of them back sometimes.
This is true without exception to my knowledge. You seem to get a percentage of the total casualties back (assuming a healer ancil). The chirgeon seems to heal more than the doctor, who heals more than the herbalist. Then a random percentage is applied on top of that. Whoever gets "killed" first seems to have the highest chance of being healed, with those falling to missile fire also having a high probablity.
My theory based on close observation, is that you get X% of the first casualties back (as Tollheit said), and then every other casualty has a small random chance of healing. This is modified by the type of healing anciliary that the General has. Without the General and healing ancil, you only get the small random chance per man, which always exists.
The type of weapon the man fell too, may have an influence on the caualty recovering, but it may just be coincidence, or that they happened to fall first.
Ok tollheit, interesting points. But to really prove them you must try and disprove them.
Try losing large amounts of archers and light troops but do it late in the battle after other troops have fallen. The light troops seems to always recover, lets see if its because of a value recovery or if its because they are normally the first to fall. I've found that many of my archers and slingers come back after battle; but I like to protect them and make them avoid all enemy contact unless I am not paying attention and they get flanked. Even so they tend to recover considerably....why?
Point 2: Lazy or not you can't really justify anything unless you do actually try a melee battle. Arrows seem to equal units that recover, so only using units killed by arrow fire is only evidence to what we already suspect; try and do the same with a large melee fight.
Like drewski said, maybe you get a certain percentage of troops back plus a random chance per man. Is this testable? Refighting the same battle a few times should sort it out.
Given the state of battlefield surgery in Antiquity, you should be glad there are healed casualties at all.