The problem is that archers should move and rotate to get clear shots from the crenelles, not stand behind the merlons and shoot in the air.
Thanks for the wikipedia link!
The problem is that archers should move and rotate to get clear shots from the crenelles, not stand behind the merlons and shoot in the air.
Thanks for the wikipedia link!
I am happy since i never use siege equipment/spies, I just send 5 rams at the same time to the gate and usually one makes it. The losses are horrible even tho i use crappy units on the rams. If the enemy archers/xbows were any better i'd never make it past all 3 rings of a citadell
build at least one or two siege towers when possible, the tower and archer AI has a fetish for firing at them, and it makes it much more likely you rams will make it.Originally Posted by Gaius Terentius Varro
using siege towers as decoys for your rams works wellbuild at least one or two siege towers when possible, the tower and archer AI has a fetish for firing at them, and it makes it much more likely you rams will make it
It's not a map.
Exactly. Besides, the most important thing is to take the outer wall, you can reach the inner ones from it.
And besides, a castle assault should be a risky and bloody venture. I´m certainly no expert, but I suppose the whole point to build a castle in the first place is to hold off a large number of enemies with rather few men.
If 1.2 addresses this in its final form, it's going to be one heck of a patch.
I usually build two seuge towers and two ladders. I find the ladders actually more effective than the seige towers in scaling the walls but I usually send the towers in first becuase they are slow and then run the ladders to the walls after they have dropped their ramps. So I get to choose points where the wall is poorly defended for my ladder assault, and usually run my crossbowmen onto the walls this way.
Once On the walls I capture the nearest gate to let the rest of the army in and then use the walls to gain access to the inner fortess.
Last edited by Didz; 04-20-2007 at 10:10.
Didz
Fortis balore et armis
Yeah, ladders are great - up until the point where castles become too big to use them. Catapults are my fave - it does slow your army down and thus means you might take more turns to get to the enemy castle, but if you have catapults it means you can attack the very same turn you get there without having to stop and build rams/towers/ladders.
And while a couple of catapults will take up 2 slots that might otherwise be allocated to infantry, they more than make up for this IMO by taking out large chunks of defending units when the walls collapse. Theyre also invaluable for that bit after you take the gatehouse in cities, where you sometimes have masses of enemy infantry marching down the street from the central square towards you. A couple of catapults with flaming ammo, firing straight down the street works wonders in that situation.
I imagine that things like battlements and forests (and shields and rocks) give fixed bonuses to any defenders - i.e. each arrow has a % chance to hit the battlements/trees instead of its target, as opposed to individually calculating the trajectory for each arrow and determining what it hit.Originally Posted by Obadiah
Probably for a flight of, say, 90 arrows, the game takes into account unit formations, locations, terrain, armour, accuracy etc etc etc etc and then works out how many of the arrows score 'wounding' hits (e.g. 20), how many score 'killing' hits (e.g. 10), and how many miss (60), then plays a load of arrow firing animations on the archers, then animates the arrows appropriately, then finally plays animations for the target unit - wounding animations on 20 soldiers, death animations on 10 soldiers, and 60 arrows hitting the ground.
This is a little off the topic of the thread, but I had to comment on this.Originally Posted by Gaius Terentius Varro
To each his own I guess and no offense intended, but I never understand statements like this. I know a lot of people distain the use of purchased seige equipment because they don't like hauling them around, and have had bad experiences with them in field battles, but why waste a 1000 florin's worth of men when a single 360 florin ballista will take down any gate of any of any size castle or city while your troops have a coffee break in relative safety.
Add to this the fact that many times after the gate is down the enemy will park one of its best units right behind the portal, so you can continue to make valuable kills because of the low trajectory of the weapon. I have actually taken out the enemy commander this way on more than one occasion.
I play with the timer off, so I have time to do this---besides sieges were not timed events in real life. (I am not taking the official siege association's sanctioned competion events into consideration here--their membership dues are just too damn high)
I also alway put a spy in a settlement that I am about to attack, but not so much as to open the gate, but for the intelligence of knowing what kind of troops are behind the walls. This helps me decide if I assault immediately, or waste a turn while I build towers. If it is made up of a few fluff troops, I barge ahead, but if the defending force is more substantial I am going to plan accordingly. If one is not in the Pope's good favor, waiting a turn while you build towers and rams can cause one to have to call off the assault when the Pope gives you a warning to stop between turns.
Even if I get the message that my spy has opened the gate, I blow them down anyway for the reason stated above plus having them permanently open is less of an impedance to my troops. Of course I always bring along the heavy stuff to take out towers and wall if they are a problem, but then I have alway thought it advantageous to bring a gun to a knife fight.
Cheers
Last edited by Forward Observer; 04-22-2007 at 19:24.
Artillery adds dignity to what would otherwise be a vulgar brawl.
I must admit I never go through the gate, not even when one of my spies leaves it open. As soon as a unit sets foot inside you can guarantee that the AI has some really nasty surprise lined up for it. The usual is a fast cavalry unit that just trashes it before it can deploy.
I prefer going over the walls, that way you can capture the gate intact, if it isn't already open and once the walls are clear running some archers or crossbows up using ladders measn that you get the chance to use the walls against the defenders and get your own back.
Likewise there is direct access from the wall to the inner courtyard of every castle so it avoids the needs to lay seige to the inner defences. In fact, if your quick you can actually beat the defenders to their own keep.
Didz
Fortis balore et armis
OT, but I have not found that. For example, assaulting a fortress at Gaza (1.2 unofficial patch, there was no way to get my men from the outer wall to the inner wall, even though the walls were connected. If I clicked on the inner wall adjacent to my men (separated only by a tower/house thing), they just stood there: there was no move icon on the unit, as the target was inaccessible.Originally Posted by Didz
iirc it's not every castle, only those of [north/south/east?] european design...
From wise men, O Lord, protect us -anon
The death of one man is a tragedy; the death of millions, a statistic -Stalin
We can categorically state that we have not released man-eating badgers into the area -UK military spokesman Major Mike Shearer
I think the inner wall passage only works for the defenders? Not too sure on this.
Oh please don't tell me only europeans forget to lock the tower doorOriginally Posted by sapi
? Will that explains why I could not move from wall to wall. I was trying to do it in the Holy land.
Now I need to read the bug reports to find out if it is a bug that I can or can not move wall to wall. I vote for can not
unless my spy opened the front gate too. Thanks for the Info. I would like the defending archers to do more till I am outside looking in. SadCat
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I've not come across a castle yet where its not possible to pass men through from the outer to inner wall.Originally Posted by econ21
However, its normally only possible on one side. The fact that you mentioned a 'Town/House thingie' suggests to me that you were trying to wrong side as the side where it is possible only has a small tower set on the curtain wall facing the outer courtyard. The actual join between the inner and outer wall is just plain wall with no towers on buildings guarding it.
The passage through the building might be accessible to defenders only, although I'm more inclined to beleive its just not accessible to anyone.Originally Posted by RickooClan
However, the access on the other side is unguarded as mentioned above.
Last edited by Didz; 04-23-2007 at 12:29.
Didz
Fortis balore et armis
I did try both sides - neither were accessible.Originally Posted by Didz
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