its me the only who thinks that charriots should damage both the enemy and my troops who engaged the enemy? this wont mean an extra difficulty, just engage the enemy with ur weakest units and sourround and exterminate with charriots
its me the only who thinks that charriots should damage both the enemy and my troops who engaged the enemy? this wont mean an extra difficulty, just engage the enemy with ur weakest units and sourround and exterminate with charriots
Personally, I think it's only logical that a general with a cavalry bodyguard would be far superior to one with chariots. After all, if chariots had truly been the better choice, they wouldn't have been abandoned everywhere except in Britain, now would they? And as far as I know, in Britain it was a matter of not having enough horses big enough to ride, so it's no surprise that chariots aren't very good.
If we believe Caesar, they were effective enough against surprised soldiers who had never seen them before, but could be easily dealt with by disciplined troops who knew what to expect. But I somehow doubt it'd be easy to simulate that in the game...
Bookmarks