Way to complex. Fine if you're the officer in charge of one formation, but you're a general in charge of many. The general commands the officers, the officers command the men.
Way to complex. Fine if you're the officer in charge of one formation, but you're a general in charge of many. The general commands the officers, the officers command the men.
How exactly is it "way too complex" to click on two or three unit cards, then click on a submenu and select a formation from those I listed above? What exactly is simpler about having to manually drag the lines out yourself whenever you want to overlap different units? This is like saying the group formation menu is "way too complex" and you should have to order your troops into "missile first three lines" one a time.
Furthermore, there's no reason to believe that in in Total War games you're really playing as the general. You can give very specific orders to units nowhere near communicable reach of the general, that couldn't possibly have been discussed ahead of time. If anything, Total War is more like playing the commander of each unit individually, unless in the TW universe they had walkie talkies and satellite map technology in the classical and middle ages.
"Cutting down the enemy is the Way of strategy and there is no need for many refinements of it." - Miyamoto Musashi, The Book of Five Rings, The Wind Book
Age of Discovery: Total War - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=381499
ZenMod for Shogun2 - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=445862
I am not certain that 'way too complex' is what was meant -- perhaps he meant not appropriate to simulate the command decisions of the general. Integrating the pikes and muskeeters by intergrating two normal sized units into a large unit might be a reasonable programming possability. Probably too late in the development cycle to do it for S2TW though. It would be nice if such integrated formations were an option though. If done properly, the AI could then do the same.
Would you expect less from a Viking?
Merging units, not way too complex. But giving orders to subsections of a formation consisting of two or more units, yes, that is way too complex. I don't see why you should have to do that, rather than having the merged units make use of their subsections on their own discretion.
That's what runners were for. Evidence - no, proof - that you're playing as a general: you command ALL your units, not just one, or a few. You can select several units and group them in various battle formations, something which only the general could do. As if that wasn't enough, you're the one who's calling the shots on the strategic map.Furthermore, there's no reason to believe that in in Total War games you're really playing as the general. You can give very specific orders to units nowhere near communicable reach of the general, that couldn't possibly have been discussed ahead of time. If anything, Total War is more like playing the commander of each unit individually, unless in the TW universe they had walkie talkies and satellite map technology in the classical and middle ages.
It is precisely no more complex than ordering groups of units into a group formation, or ordering a single unit into loose or wedge formation. You click on two or more unit types, and click a button, instead of dragging lines out yourself.Merging units, not way too complex. But giving orders to subsections of a formation consisting of two or more units, yes, that is way too complex. I don't see why you should have to do that, rather than having the merged units make use of their subsections on their own discretion.
Lol, runners are not instant battlefield communication, they could in no way justify the degree of precision you have as supposedly the general of your Total War armies. Calling the shots on the strategic map is even more evidence you are not RPing the general in Total War as generals did not decide construction projects and tax rates. You're playing some kind of spirit in Total War figure basically who can influence all these different individuals in a nation to make different choices. You're definitely not the general, and even if you were, what in the blue blazes stops a general from shouting "spearmen in the front two lines foward, back two face rearwards" or "swordsmen, alternate lines with those archers!" ??That's what runners were for. Evidence - no, proof - that you're playing as a general: you command ALL your units, not just one, or a few. You can select several units and group them in various battle formations, something which only the general could do. As if that wasn't enough, you're the one who's calling the shots on the strategic map.
"Cutting down the enemy is the Way of strategy and there is no need for many refinements of it." - Miyamoto Musashi, The Book of Five Rings, The Wind Book
Age of Discovery: Total War - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=381499
ZenMod for Shogun2 - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=445862
Then what is all this about:
1a. Order alternating lines, choosing the one to be in front. So, if you're combing zweihaenders and landsknecht (or two types of pikes, such as pike militia and noble pikemen), you could order a line of zweihaender then landsknecht, then zweihaender then landsknecht then so on (or a noble pikemen, then a pike milita and so on).
2a. Order one unit to front, then other in back, so two lines of zweihaender and two lines of landsknecht.
3a. Order them to stand next to one another rather than in front or back, so, a zweihaender standing beside a landsknecht.
4a. Order one unit to "enclose" the other, so noble pikemen in the back, front, and side lines, and the pike militia in the center.
5a. Order them interspersed randomly amongst each other, but within the same space and maintaining that formation.
See, that's what I was referring to. KISS, or only the designer is going to like it.
It's a GAME. It doesn't claim to be 100% accurate. On the campaign map, you can give any order to any town that you own. Instantly. That doesn't mean that you're not the ruler of your faction.Lol, runners are not instant battlefield communication, they could in no way justify the degree of precision you have as supposedly the general of your Total War armies.
Of course you're not the general on the campaign map. There you are the faction leader. On the battlefield, however, you're the general.Calling the shots on the strategic map is even more evidence you are not RPing the general in Total War as generals did not decide construction projects and tax rates.
You call the shots for your faction on the campaign map, ergo you are the faction leader.
You call the shots for your army on the battlemap, ergo you are the general. And how does the advisor address you in STW, MTW and RTW? Possibly M2TW as well, but I can't remember at the moment.
Because it's a GAME. You're not a spirit of some kind, you simply have far more powers than you would IRL.You're playing some kind of spirit in Total War figure basically who can influence all these different individuals in a nation to make different choices. You're definitely not the general, and even if you were, what in the blue blazes stops a general from shouting "spearmen in the front two lines foward, back two face rearwards" or "swordsmen, alternate lines with those archers!" ??
Take Silent Hunter, as another example. You are undeniably the captain of your submarine. When you give an order, they reply, "Jawohl, herr KaLeun," or "Aye, aye, sir". So you're the skipper. And yet you can move the camera about outside the sub, even when submerged, you can "fly" far off to see what ships are in a convoy, what sort of escorts they have etc. And in SH3 you even have a gauge telling you how well the enemy can hear you. All sorts of things way above the limitations of actual skippers. Because it is a game.
And true, you can turn those options off in the realism settings, but you can also select "restrict camera" in TW. Which wouldn't make much sense if you were some kind of spirit, now would it?
You still have yet to explain how ordering units with different weapons into a single mixed-unit formation is any more complicated than ordering an individual unit to form a wedge or ordering multiple units in "sorted double line".
Lol, aren't you the one yapping about historical accuracy in the other thread? I'm aware the pretense of the game is you are that you are the ruler of your faction but real rulers are not omnipresent. Thus, the entire point I'm making here, is if you can stretch that premise in some circumstances, why exactly doesn't it make sense to give mixed-unit formation orders on the battlefield, if this is supposedly the directive of "unit commanders" (which never give any orders independent of you in the game now anyway).It's a GAME. It doesn't claim to be 100% accurate. On the campaign map, you can give any order to any town that you own. Instantly. That doesn't mean that you're not the ruler of your faction.
So then you're the "unit commander" when you call the shots for individual units. If you can switch roles like that easily I don't see why you are so insistent on larping as the general on the battlefield, or how exactly mixed-unit formations somehow disrupt your pretending you are the general anyway (since actual generals *did* order such things, it's the entire basis of pike-and-shot warfare, e.g. terico squares).Of course you're not the general on the campaign map. There you are the faction leader. On the battlefield, however, you're the general.
You call the shots for your faction on the campaign map, ergo you are the faction leader.
You call the shots for your army on the battlemap, ergo you are the general. And how does the advisor address you in STW, MTW and RTW? Possibly M2TW as well, but I can't remember at the moment.
Then you can cook up practically whatever justification you want to explain how and why things work in the gameworld the way they do and it shouldn't interrupt play-pretend "I'm the faction leader" bit.Because it's a GAME. You're not a spirit of some kind, you simply have far more powers than you would IRL.
Did you think I forget it was a game or something? I don't see what this entire rant about being the general or faction leader or whatever has to do with how ordering your pikemen to take the back two lines and swordsmen front two , or two alternate standing next to one another after merging them as one unit is somehow "too complex" or doesn't "simulate the command decisions of the general" (which is an entirely subjective feeling anyway, given the level of abstraction the game already has in regards to giving commands now anyway).Take Silent Hunter, as another example. You are undeniably the captain of your submarine. When you give an order, they reply, "Jawohl, herr KaLeun," or "Aye, aye, sir". So you're the skipper. And yet you can move the camera about outside the sub, even when submerged, you can "fly" far off to see what ships are in a convoy, what sort of escorts they have etc. And in SH3 you even have a gauge telling you how well the enemy can hear you. All sorts of things way above the limitations of actual skippers. Because it is a game.
Still waiting for an explanation of how individual unit and group unit formations differ from merging and mixing units into formations as regards a general giving orders. For the last time, how is dragging out lines manually for me to overlap mixed units better "simulate the command decisions of the general" than clicking on some unit cards and clicking a button from a preset formation?And true, you can turn those options off in the realism settings, but you can also select "restrict camera" in TW. Which wouldn't make much sense if you were some kind of spirit, now would it?
"Cutting down the enemy is the Way of strategy and there is no need for many refinements of it." - Miyamoto Musashi, The Book of Five Rings, The Wind Book
Age of Discovery: Total War - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=381499
ZenMod for Shogun2 - http://www.twcenter.net/forums/showthread.php?t=445862
It wouldn't be a problem if that's all it was, but it isn't. You are proposing this:
1a. Order alternating lines, choosing the one to be in front. So, if you're combing zweihaenders and landsknecht (or two types of pikes, such as pike militia and noble pikemen), you could order a line of zweihaender then landsknecht, then zweihaender then landsknecht then so on (or a noble pikemen, then a pike milita and so on).
2a. Order one unit to front, then other in back, so two lines of zweihaender and two lines of landsknecht.
3a. Order them to stand next to one another rather than in front or back, so, a zweihaender standing beside a landsknecht.
4a. Order one unit to "enclose" the other, so noble pikemen in the back, front, and side lines, and the pike militia in the center.
5a. Order them interspersed randomly amongst each other, but within the same space and maintaining that formation.
You are still pretending that I am attacking the very idea of merging units - I am not. I am opposed to all the micromanagement you propose in addition to simply merging units. You have yet to defend this proposition, and it seems you are dodging it.
You'll have to be more specific. Which thread?Lol, aren't you the one yapping about historical accuracy in the other thread?
Anyway, this hasn't got anything to do with historical accuracy, but realism. And 100% realism is neither achievable, nor desirable.
It's not that it wouldn't make sense, it's that it would be far too detailed when considering you have more than that one unit to control. What if you have eight mixed units, in addition to missile units and other non-mixed units? How are you going to give specific orders like placing Zweihänders at the front in this formation here, at the back in that formation there, even mix again in this formation here, etc. etc., all the while manouvering all other troops and monitoring everything? What's wrong with letting the AI officer of each unit decide which group tactic is best at any given time?I'm aware the pretense of the game is you are that you are the ruler of your faction but real rulers are not omnipresent. Thus, the entire point I'm making here, is if you can stretch that premise in some circumstances, why exactly doesn't it make sense to give mixed-unit formation orders on the battlefield, if this is supposedly the directive of "unit commanders" (which never give any orders independent of you in the game now anyway).
Because you ARE the general on the battlefield. You commanding individual units IS the simulation of you sending runners, signalling with drums, horns or banners, except that the game makes it instantaneous. Because it is more playable that way.So then you're the "unit commander" when you call the shots for individual units. If you can switch roles like that easily I don't see why you are so insistent on larping as the general on the battlefield
I wish you would stop with that strawman, and actually address my points. I challenge you to quote me as saying anything against the merging of units.or how exactly mixed-unit formations somehow disrupt your pretending you are the general anyway (since actual generals *did* order such things, it's the entire basis of pike-and-shot warfare, e.g. terico squares).
You mean like you just cooked up being a spirit?Then you can cook up practically whatever justification you want to explain how and why things work in the gameworld the way they do and it shouldn't interrupt play-pretend "I'm the faction leader" bit.
It is too complex because it gives you too many options. Merging units: fine. But anything beyond that is micromanagement that you simply do not have the time to do in larger engagements, and it would only distract you from the bigger picture. While you are busy controlling the individual units in one group, you will be neglecting the rest of the army. Minding the army, you can't be giving orders within specific units. Again I ask, what's wrong with letting the AI handle how your merged groups behave? It will for the computer enemies, and will do so simultaneously for as many units as can fit on the battlefield. Whereas you can only do one unit at a time.Did you think I forget it was a game or something? I don't see what this entire rant about being the general or faction leader or whatever has to do with how ordering your pikemen to take the back two lines and swordsmen front two , or two alternate standing next to one another after merging them as one unit is somehow "too complex" or doesn't "simulate the command decisions of the general" (which is an entirely subjective feeling anyway, given the level of abstraction the game already has in regards to giving commands now anyway).
If you are going to use quotes, RESPOND TO THE QUOTED TEXT. I'll lead the way by responding to the quoted text above:Still waiting for an explanation of how individual unit and group unit formations differ from merging and mixing units into formations as regards a general giving orders. For the last time, how is dragging out lines manually for me to overlap mixed units better "simulate the command decisions of the general" than clicking on some unit cards and clicking a button from a preset formation?
If you cannot see the difference between merging units, and merging units and still ordering the individual units within the new group around (as opposed to letting the AI handle it), then I can't help you. What you are saying is that you can't see the difference between one action and 20, but believe me, 1<20.
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