In Rome Total War, when you chopose a higher level difficulty, what exactly changes to make it harder?
I'm rather curious, because in battles, they probably make the units stronger. Is this true?
but in the campaign map, how does this work?
In Rome Total War, when you chopose a higher level difficulty, what exactly changes to make it harder?
I'm rather curious, because in battles, they probably make the units stronger. Is this true?
but in the campaign map, how does this work?
for what i know,in hard difficulty that AI player get +4 attack in campaign compare to the original units of medium difficulty.In Very Hard difficulty,AI player get +7 attack for their units and get 10K plus denarii for each of the AI faction every turn.![]()
for easy difficulty,i am not sure,coz i played Rome:TotalWar in medium difficulty for my first campaign,after that,i never play in easy difficulty.Too easy you know,i can't get any challenge,then there will be no fun at all...
i oredi get very bored always killing routers...
Last edited by guineawolf; 08-03-2007 at 04:24.
In all warfare,speed is the key!
On Hard/Very Hard Battle: The AI gets a +4/+7 combat bonus, but its just as dumb.
On Hard/Very Hard Campaign: The AI gets a bonus when you Autoresolve a battle, and free Money. Plus, its much more productive, hostile, and won't do Peace Treaties, etc.
On Medium Battle/Campaign: No bonuses for you or the AI.
On Very Easy/Easy Battle/Campaign: You get the bonuses. Plus the AI's very laid back
Note: Battle "combat bonus" seems to effect AI unit morale and unit kill rates.
Perhaps somebody could explain exactly what the bonus does? I've always assumed its to Morale/Attack.
Last edited by Shieldmaiden; 07-29-2007 at 15:20.
"Now, once more I must ride with my knights, to defend what was and the dream of what could be..."
- King Arthur, Excalibur
I think the bonus is to morale and fatique
and on very hard the AI throws itself at you (in M2TW anyway)
king of scotland M2tw hotseat campaign.
Hello Shieldmaiden,
I found an thread that might can help you here.
See you in the battlefield!
Garcilaso
Names, secret names
But never in my favour
But when all is said and done
It's you I love
On Battlefield:
Easy: AI gets -4 attack
Medium: No bonus/penalty
Hard: AI gets +4 attack
Very Hard: AI gets +7 attack
That's all, no morale or anything.
Note that the numbers are not 100% exact, as the bonus is given through a parametre in the chance_to_kill formula, which produces for example 3,899 (which roughly equals 4). If you're interested, the formula is near the bottom of the original post of this thread, under 'useful formulae'.
Campaign:
The harder the difficulty, the more aggressive the AI towards you, the more difficult is to make alliances and stop wars involving you, and (I think) it gets more money bonus per turn.
Norman Invasion - The fate of England lies in your hands...
Viking Invasion II - Unite Britain in the best TW campaign ever!
Gods and Fighting Men: Total War - Enter the Mists of Myth in Ancient Ireland
This is stupid! mostly AI needs exactly morale. ATT/DEF bonuses only makes his peasants to crush militia in head-to-head combat and bireme to utterly crush trireme.That's all, no morale or anything.
In my opinion difficulty levels should not provide any bonuses to statistics whatsoever. I believe that the AI should possess more strategic intelligence in place of this deficit. In M:TW that was the case but in R:TW the factor seems to not exist at all. It's a pity really - it would be much more pleasurable to play against a more intelligent AI when you feel that you want to.
On the strategic map, I feel that a similar policy should be applied. Rather than an un-natural and often game breaking increase in aggression, the AI should be more careful and think more clearly about it's strategic and diplomatic actions and their implications.
Last edited by Omanes Alexandrapolites; 08-06-2007 at 14:32.
Dawn is nature's way of telling you to go back to bed
I do believe I concur, Omanes!
I find it disturbing that the AI get an unfair advantage, instead of actully being better. I would love it if the only difference in the difficulty was the AI's thought process.
However, I believe that this was probably the best choice. The Ai was very likely incredibly difficult to program, and CA probably couldn't make it any better. So, they had to resort to other methods to balance the difficulty.
I'm sorry, but I have to disagree. The CA managed to successfully create an AI in Medieval: Total War and Shogun: Total War which was much more intelligent that the one contained within Rome. The AI seemed to respond more cleverly to the players manoeuvres and made more natural and sensible manoeuvres themself - it also had the very useful habit of being able to gain a victory the player much more easily. It wasn't perfect, no AI is, but, despite it being older, it was most certainly superior to Rome's. They also managed to develop the more enhanced difficulty system which I described. It's a crying shame these, and many other features were lost - mostly because the CA wanted to target a larger and younger audience and focus on other aspects of the game.Originally Posted by Sonicdahedgie
Last edited by Omanes Alexandrapolites; 08-06-2007 at 21:29.
Dawn is nature's way of telling you to go back to bed
I'm gonna hafta disagree with you here, Omanes. I went back to MTW after playing RTW and BI, and man, the tactical AI is a mess, unless of course, you like playing ring around the rosie with the AI. Anyway, the ONLY 2 battles I can remember anything about in the series were both from BI, once as WRE against the celts and once as the Alemanni vs the WRE. These battles were fought so tactically sound on BOTH sides that they were truly a joy to play. It's the reason I still play the game, in hopes I might get another battle as good.
Hmm, that's odd. I have never experienced any problems comparable to that before in M:TW. From my experiences, you only have to chase the AI if they have horse-archers, but after their missiles have run out they usually charge. Sadly, I've seen what you are claiming has occurred more in Rome and BI and have lost many battles because the enemy refused to fight tactically and instead decided to run around the field.
Last edited by Omanes Alexandrapolites; 08-07-2007 at 08:25.
Dawn is nature's way of telling you to go back to bed
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