Contents
Basic
Military
Strategy
Managing
and
Conducting
a
War
Basic
Military
Units
Basic
Military
Tactics
Advanced
Military
Tactics
Aerial
Combat
Naval
Combat
Basic Military Strategies
The ultimate strategic consideration of
a war is a clear understanding of its purpose. If you know what you
want to get out of war, you have a finite measure for determining
whether you are winning or losing. Below are a few reasons to go to war
and ways to tell you've won.
War for Territory
Wars in Civilization usually start
over real estate, or more precisely the population growth that good
real estate allows. When a rival notices that your Victory Points are a
threat to theirs, they'll come after you in an attempt to grab some
land and Cities, re-balancing the supremacy equation in their own
favor. Likewise, nothing is likely to provoke you to war so much as the
sight of a prosperous, productive and under-defended foreign City on
your borders.
Wars for territory end when you've grabbed all the land you want.
Territorial Wars often become Total
Wars because it is often expedient to finish off an enemy while he
is weak, a condition that usually plays itself out when you're ahead in
a territorial battle. However, when you've got other problems or
enemies on your mind and you've already grabbed some defensible,
productive land, you may consider a War for Territory won any time you
feel like quitting.
War for Profit
Like the buccaneers of old, sometimes
it's worth a little violence to refill the coffers. Captured Cities
and plundered Improvements yield Gold, and Civilizations desperate for
peace offer rich bribes of tribute and Resources. A War for Profit is a
simple equation in value: did the maintenance and Production on the
Units expended add up to more or less than the benefits gained? When
fighting a War for Profit, keep your Units alive to fight another day,
take everything you can get your hands on and quit while you're ahead.
City-State War
City-States sometimes send you to war
against rival Cities. These mercenary missions grant great Influence
bonuses with one City-State while simultaneously allowing you to seize
the Resources of another. There's a very definite goal and little
political complexity involved in these conquest missions, making them
desirable in most situations.
You may also find yourself fighting on behalf of an Allied City-State
against a rival civilization. The motivation for this may transcend any
moral or treaty compulsion. City-States can be valuable sources of
Culture, Units, Food and trade, and loosing these benefits to a foreign
power is tantamount to loosing one of your own Cities. Generally
speaking it is best to make the protection of such a City-State a
sub-goal to a larger strategy of Territorial, Profitable or Total War.
Phony War
Phony War is a war you fight to
appease the call of another civilization. There are times when
conspirators may call on you to join in a war you're not all that
interested in helping out with. If geography plays into your hands, you
may find yourself able to profit from war without ever getting heavily
involved. Assuming there are allied lands between you and your new foe,
send a couple of Units to the front and have them hang around in a
safe, opportunistic location near a besieged enemy City. If your AI
allies are near victory, dash in and capture the weakened real estate.
Mission accomplished. Now make peace.
Total War
Total War is the movement to
obliterate a rival from play, replacing his power base with your own.
It is a part of most Civilization games at some point and the heart of
a Domination Victory.
Total War is not necessarily perpetual. It can be broken into stages of
Territorial War as expediency requires. But it is often best to commit
to Total War hook, line and sinker, destroying an enemy's Units without
pause or mercy, claiming or razing Cities, capturing his Capital and
mopping up leftover colonies.
Total War is expensive, but accomplished with intelligent planning and
economic management it can turn a long term profit and expand your
power base, making future conflicts more cost-efficient and increasing
your Research, Gold and Citizen output.
Defensive War
Defensive War is a war you got thrown
into without being ready for. It is a fight for survival. Defensive
Wars are often initiated by alliances of jealous kingdoms
simultaneously declaring hostilities against you.
When a Defensive War begins, abandon all precepts of peace. Stop
building anything without immediate Military merit. Buy as many Units
as you can with Gold, build Forts instead of Farms and prepare for a
quick opening fight.
Defensive Wars usually begin under the walls of your own Cities. Don't
let your citadels get surrounded. Move forces outside the Cities and
maneuver for flanking advantages. Punch your attacker in the nose. Use
your Cities as healing stations and artillery platforms for your field
Units. Break the momentum of the enemy's first assault, heal up, and if
necessary beat off the second wave and heal again.
Then move to attack. The best long-term defensive strategy is offense.
Don't huddle in your Cities awaiting the enemy. Meet him with field
forces in place, beat his armies either in your territory or on neutral
ground, and then go after his Cities. Make him (or them) regret war. If
confronted by an alliance, force one enemy to sue for peace, accept the
proposal and swing around and crush the others. Then go back and finish
the first guy off.
You've won a Defensive War every turn you're still breathing.
Managing and Conducting a War
Experience, Promotion and Creating Great Generals
Every time a Unit attack or defends it
gains Experience Points. The only exception to this is when fighting
Barbarians. There's a hard cap of 30 XP per Unit for Barbarian
encounters. After reaching that number they no longer grant experience
to an individual Unit.
XP allows you to promote your Units, granting them special powers.
Promotion also allows a Unit to heal instantly, which can become a
tactical advantage when exploited properly.
The XP you gain also fuels the development of Great Generals. The more
you fight, the more great Generals are born in your civilization.
Terrain
Terrain effects the movement and
combat value of Units. Woods, Jungle, Rivers and Hills slow you down.
Roads speed you up.
As long as men have warred with one another they have known that
attacking uphill is more difficult than attacking on flat ground. Hills
tire the offense out, slow movement and grant vision advantages to the
defender, who can see farther due to his height while his enemy can see
little due to the ridge line dominating his field of view. Civ5
simulates this reality by granting a large bonus to Units defending
uphill. Units defending fords likewise gain the practicable advantages
of defending against wading attackers.
Never attack uphill or across a river unless you have no choice. The
exception is when you hold a tremendous advantage in Technology,
Experience, flanking and/or the presence of a Great General that evens
the odds and allows for a likely Decisive Victory.
Hills, Forests, Mountains and Jungle also block line of sight and
direct fire. Archers can not shoot at Units they can't see! Remember
this.
Flanking
Even a simple two-Unit front can provide a flanking bonus if the enemy front is wedged between them.
When two Units border a single enemy,
they gain a flanking advantage against him. This multiplier compounds
the already important numerical advantage they enjoy.
Of all the incentives Civ 5 offers for keeping your forces
geographically tight, flanking is probably the greatest. Closely
arranged Units gain a strong advantage just based on proximity as long
as they carefully coordinate their advance.
Flanking is especially important when attacking the center of an enemy
concentration. Remember that a victorious infantry Units advance into
the Tile their vanquished enemy formerly occupied. This will often
leave a victorious Unit vulnerable to flanking and a fatal counter
attack. It is often best to defend in the center rather than allowing
such exposure through an attack. By doing so you* exploit the
natural advantages of defense, weakening enemy attackers and then
finishing them with fire from your ranged Units. Coordinate your
infantry attacks on the wider flanks of the enemy position, where their
victorious advances work to your advantage rather than against you.
The Great General
Civ 5 does not boast a complicated
command and control structure. The main simulation of C&C is the
Great General, who must remain within 2 Tiles of a Unit to effect it's
combat value.
The Great General is a non-combat Unit and can be destroyed by a single
attack. He should rarely be exposed to danger, commanding from a
well-defended position to the rear and center of your army. He need not
necessarily be stacked with a Military Unit so long as overlapping
Zones of Control prevent an enemy from reaching him.
Fog of War
Anything outside you Units' limited
range of sight is obscured by the Fog of War. While passing through
Tiles once reveals them on the map, any changes following a Unit's exit
from the area are unrevealed until someone gets close enough again to
see what's going on.
Your Units have a default visibility of only a few Tiles, though the
Americans enjoy longer sight and some Units can be promoted to see
farther. This visibility is further obscured by Forest, Jungle, Hills
and Mountains, all of which block what's on the other side of them.
Climbing on top of a Hill grants clearer vision.
Fog of War sometimes forces you to break army cohesion in order to
scout an area. When waling in enemy territory, keep the balance between
intelligence (your need to know what's going on around you) and
concentration in mind. When in doubt, move more slowly and keep close
together. Spreading out blindly is an easy way to lose a Unit in
hostile lands.
Fog of War also makes it important to remember that moving Units
positioned toward the front of an advance should take place earlier in
a turn than moving Units positioned toward the rear, as the
intelligence gained by your vanguard may help you position the rest of
your army more effectively.
Using the Map and the Strategic View
The Strategic View is a toggle option
that convert's Civ 5's lush 3D map into a simple 2D hex board. It
strips the finish off Civilization 5 and reveals a much more raw and
accurate picture of what's going on. The flat Strategic View map
shrinks the size of each hex, allowing you to see things in a broader
simultaneous scope. It displays vital terrain and LOS (Line of Sight)
information clearly, and helps you take a step back from Civilization
5's immersion and look at the mechanics of what's happening.
Every turn you are in an active conflict, take a peek at the strategic
view before you move. It helps.
Cost of War
War should yield more than it costs.
If the long-term benefits of war outweigh short term expenditures, then
war
is a viable tool of policy. Gaining useful cities with minimal
losses is good war economy. Bogging down for 70 turns is not. If a war
is costing you more effort and resources than it it gaining you, sue
for peace.
Many wars in Civ 5 will not be of your own choosing. Your rivals will
sometimes launch attacks at moments you'd rather be building farms and
vying diplomacy. That doesn't mean you shouldn't fight, however. When
your choices are victory or extermination, the math is easy. Fight or
die. And if you're going to fight, do it full tilt. Don't try to hold
off an enemy until he gets tired of war while still advancing your
cultural and infrastructure development toward peaceful ends. Throw
everything you have into military production and take the war to your
foe. Ultimately, it will cost you less.
Basic Military Units
Understanding Infantry
Infantry reign supreme in defense.
Waterloo proved that well-placed, fortified infantry hold an advantage
over any frontal assault, a principle Civilization 5 supports. The
percentage bonuses granted uphill fortified Units are impressive,
especially when positioned in such a way that flanking bonuses cannot
be brought to bear against them.
This is not to say that infantry are useless in offense. Like
Napoleon's Grand Column, a massed group of infantry concentrated on one
point already weakened by artillery can achieve breakthroughs on
fortified opposition. But also like the Grand Column, casualties will
be high for the attacker. Also, Civilization makes no allowance for
discipline and morale, two factors that made Napoleonic infantry
attacks so potent. Ill-disciplined, terrified troops run from masses of
bayonets inexorably marching toward them, but the AI has no such fears,
which removes some potency from attacks.
Defend whenever possible with infantry, preferably on good ground and
from a fortified position. Then counter-attach when your weakened
opponents are too exhausted to approach.
When on the attack, move toward your enemy with massed artillery behind
your infantry, and bombard the enemy front, forcing him to either
retreat or attack you.
Understanding Cavalry
Cavalry are intelligence Units
par-excellence. They move quickly enough to scout ahead of your main
force and dart back fast enough after detecting an enemy to avoid
annihilation, (or to nobly give their lives by drawing him into range
of your foot-soldiers and artillery). They can defend your flanks in an
advance and hover behind the lines to exploit break-throughs in the
enemy line.
Cavalry sometimes have enough movement to rush in, make an attack and
back away from their enemy, which can be particularly useful when
attacking a City on open ground. Companion Cavalry, for example, can
sometimes dive into a City, launch an assault and move out of range of
an opponent's ranged response.
Cavalry are fast enough that they can sometimes get around an
opponent's guard and tear his artillery to pieces.
Do not send cavalry into frontal, unsupported assaults against
entrenched or uphill infantry Units, especially Spearmen and Pikemen.
That's a waste of good horses and men.
Understanding Artillery
The two-tile ranged artillery has fallen a little far behind here. The infantry should probably let it catch up.
Of the three classic arms, artillery
are the most dependent on support for survival. Pitted against an
infantry or cavalry Unit they will die horribly, even after getting off
the first shot. A proverb for artillery: where your cannon are, there
your infantry shall be also.
Many artillery units require a part of their move to set up before
attacking. Carefully coordinate your artillery's movement to achieve
the maximum number of shots over several turns. If advancing artillery
into enemy artillery, try to give opposing gunners something else to
shoot at while you set up.
Fire with your artillery before attacking with your infantry and
cavalry. This softens up the defenders, resulting in more casualties
inflicted on the enemy and fewer on your attacking Units.
Concentrate your artillery. The effects of two or three ranged units on
a single target are generally more beneficial than spreading your fire
along a line.
Whenever possible, create a static position with your infantry, mass
artillery behind them, and blast away.
Basic Military Tactics
Staggered Positioning vs. Shoulder to Shoulder
While shoulder to shoulder positioning
of your Units grants a greater concentration and benefits against
flanking, a staggered formation creates overlapping Zones of Control
and helps you deny mobility to the enemy. By carefully advancing
staggered Units, it is possible to flank enemy forces as they advance
piecemeal. This is especially useful if you encounter the front of a
strung-out enemy column enfilade. By spreading your forces, you deny
the enemy the ability to advance into new hexes and can move forward
yourself to envelop his front.
Enfilade
The blue units from the north threaten an enfilade attack.
Enfilade refers to flanking fire. When you engage an enemy concentration from the long end of their line, you are taking him enfilade, maximizing any numerical advantage he enjoys, minimizing any numerical advantage he has over you, and positioning yourself for optimal flanking bonuses.
The flank of several lined up or
staggered Units should be your point of attack whenever possible, as
the mathematics of engagement favor you. You are, in effect, creating a
situation where many of your Units can engage a few of the enemy's at a
time. Attacking a flank is generally favorable to attacking the center
of a line in most situations.
Defilade
Defilade fire refers to fire from the
far side of a hill. Generally speaking, defilade does not function well
in Civ 5, as there is no tactical allowance in the engine for its
effects. There is one situation, however, where defilade is useful.
Since hills entice the AI but slow movement, you can sometimes place a
fortified infantry Unit on the far side of an empty hill with an
artillery Unit stationed immediately behind the infantry. The enemy
will move to the hilltop, but instead of attacking with infantry you
pound him with your artillery, weakening him, provoking an assault on
your fortified infantry and winning you the day.
Exploiting Breakthroughs
Whether you create a gap in the enemy
center or manage to roll up his flank, a well timed cavalry charge can
seal the deal on a large-scale engagement. While cavalry should not be
deployed against fortified or uphill Units, a hole in the line often
opens up exposure to reserves placed in less than optimal ground.
Cavalry can charge through a three hex center gap or two hexes around a
flank and catch these Units napping, seriously wounding if not outright
destroying them. The damage from one or two such charges can shift the
attrition ratio so much in your favor that you can order a general
advance the next turn, blasting the survivors with artillery, moving
your heavy hitting infantry forward, and mopping up survivors with your
cavalry.
This tactic comes into its own with Tanks, but we'll get to that later.
Salients, Formations and Flanking
Salients are bulges in a military
front. They are a tactical nightmare, as they allow the troops
surrounding them to maximize their field of fire while minimizing the
attacker's range of response. Never, ever, ever form an outwardly
curved front. You'll be overwhelmed by numbers and flanking bonuses
almost every time. Instead, find ways to wrap yourself around the
enemy, encircling his front in a half moon with reserves staggered
behind, or at the worst case engage him over the broad front of a
straight line.
You'll sometimes form a mini-salient when your advancing troops take up
possession of a Tile formerly occupied by a destroyed enemy Unit. If
the enemy has reserves close enough behind the line to strike and on
good enough ground to defend against a cavalry breakthrough, you could
have trouble. When this happens, pull your exposed Unit back as soon as
practicable practicable. If this is not possible, try to advance in
support of the Unit, positioning in such a way that he and your other
advancing Units are not exposed to flanking. You can also attack in a
different part of the line in an attempt to spread the enemy reserves
around and prevent a concentrated counter-attack, allowing you to pull
battered but surviving Units back on your next turn and replace them in
a cohesive defensive line with fresh new ones.
Advanced Military Tactics
Baiting Your Opponent
The most consistently effective tactic
in Civilization is baiting, placing yourself in a strategic position
that grants tactical advantage. By putting your strongest defensive
Units on good ground between where the enemy is and where he wants to
be, you can force him to attack you, gaining the strategic advantage of
offense combined with the tactical advantage of defense. Find a place
between an enemy force and a City he wants to attack or is desperate to
protect. Take up a position on high ground, (or even better, in Forts
you've constructed) backed by artillery and covered by cavalry, and let
him come to you. If you're between him and one of his Cities, make sure
you position out of the city's gunnery range. Send some horses darting
in to pillage his Improvements and watch his poor misguided troops
throw themselves to the slaughter.
You can also bait by taking a similar position on neutral ground and
pounding his forward forces with artillery unit he either advances,
retreats or brings up his own guns. If he advances, cut him to ribbons.
If he retreats, move up carefully, staying in position to repeat the
baiting tactic. If he brings up his own guns, concentrate your fire on
one flank, ruin it, get around him and roll up his artillery.
Retreat
It's not a retreat. It's an advance to the rear. While distasteful, there are times when pulling back is a good idea. If the odds against you are too stacked to defeat, it's better to get under the cover of a City's guns and fight in friendly territory where your Units heal faster.
...but following the attack the topmost Jaguar is wounded near an enemy City. Withraw him quickly to friendly territory for healing.
Retreat mindful of enemy Zones of
Control. Don't cross enemy fronts while pulling back or your Units will
lose movement and be ground to a pulp by pursuers. Keep your infantry
between your artillery and enemy Units, especially cavalry. If
possible, send your own cavalry on a feint around the enemy flank to
draw off attackers. If necessary, fortify a single expendable Unit on a
hilltop or at a ford as a rearguard to slow the pursuit. Your brave men
probably won't live through it, but they'll keep the rest of your army
intact.
Embarking
Infantry Units eventually gain the
power to embark, becoming temporary naval Units to cross water. These
transport ship versions of the infantry Units are slow and extremely
weak. They have no combat value at all against naval Units, reduced
effectiveness against land Units through direct amphibious assault and
they can easily be sunk by a single Barbarian Trireme or Caravel.
Embarkation is best accomplished with some escort, or in a rush with
the least important Units at the front and flanks of the formation.
These weak Units may then be sacrificed in an emergency so that the
rest of the convoy may escape.
Healing
A Unit that does not move or attack in
a turn heals a small amount of HP. This amount increases in friendly or
Allied territory, and increases even more if the Unit is stationed
inside a friendly City. Units in close proximity to Units with the
Medic Promotion also gain HP more quickly.
Regardless of location, the*Fortify until healed command is an
indispensable tool of the Civilization commander. It allows injured
Units to take a defensive posture while recovering their strength, and
then return to offensive operations automatically following
regeneration. The canny commander will employ it even in rear areas.
Units may also heal when advancing an experience level, although doing
so prevents them from gaining a special power through Promotion. These
periods of automatic healing are among the most explorable advantages
in Civilization. A careful general can time the casualty rate of his
troops so that key Units will regain full strength when it is most
needed, allowing an advance that might otherwise putter out to
continue, or a defense which might be overwhelmed to return to full
strength. Hovering over a Unit's status icon on the bottom left of the
screen reveals the XP of the Unit and the number required to reach the
next Promotion, and this should ALWAYS be checked when a Unit's future
health is in question. More close battles against the AI are won by
this than any other factor.
Added to this is the fact that while promotions are made available at
the beginning of a turn, a player need not accept them until the end of
a turn. This means that a slightly or even significantly wounded Unit
may be able to attack a second time, inflict and absorb more
casualties, and still be returned to full health before an opponent's
counter attack, maximizing the efficiency of your life gain. The battle
estimation pop-up that gives the player a statistical probability of an
engagement's outcome yields fairly accurate estimates of what to
expect, allowing the player to exploit this tactic with minimal risk.
This method is especially effective for Oda Nobunaga, as his wounded
troops still attack at full strength, meaning that injured Japanese
Units have an opportunity to inflict a strong measure of damage, be
driven to the point of death, and then restore themselves to full
health.
Units heal faster in friendly territory. When facing a long campaign
far from your homeland, consider sending a Settler with your army to
found a war City. While the industrial output of the City will be
negligible for some time, the Tiles around it will provide a safe haven
for your weakened Units to repair. By building a Road from it toward
your enemy, you can create a route to quickly rotate damaged Units out
of combat and healed forces back to the front. The firepower of the
City will also provide a little extra security in the event of a
retreat.
Sieges
A proper City encirclement, with infantry at the front, artillery on the high ground at the rear, and a Great General in position to bolster all Units.
Cities are tough nuts to crack. The self-heal, have a default ranged attack, produce defenders in mid-battle and have high combat strength in defense.
Unless you have Amphibious-promoted Units, don't attack a City by sea. The disadvantages and danger of ranged fire from the City are simply too great.
If a siege isn't progressing toward at least a stalemate, pillage, back out and try again later. It's better than losing your Units to attrition or relief, and the damage you do to a City heals quickly.
Assaulting Cities
Open the siege with a bombardment.
Infantry should usually only assault a City under Safe Attack conditions. Costly Attacks should only be ordered when a City is likely to fall the same turn.
Fortified Unites wait until a Safe Attack presents itself.
If a City is located on flat ground, some cavalry can attack effectively while exposing themselves to fire only every other turn by darting in from out of range, attacking and running out of range again.
Costly Attacks should be avoided until the City is on its knees, but they're an OK way to finish off a siege.
Scorched Earth
If you don't mind sending Workers to fix up afterward, or if you're planning on razing a captured City, your Units can pillage the Improved Tiles surrounding it. This both weakens the City and yields Gold, especially from Trading Posts.
Defending Sieges and Ranged City Defenses
Buy a powerful Infantry or Artillery Unit with Gold and place it in the City immediately if you know it will soon be besieged, and use it to blast or counter-attack Units assaulting your City. Concentrate all ranged fire on a single, vulnerable Unit. Don't spread your attacks around.
Get relief forces on the move and use them to threaten the enemy infantry and cavalry. Without infantry or cavalry, your enemy can't occupy the City. If he does manage to get inside, destroy any undefended artillery outside and then take the City back quickly before defenses are rebuilt.
Use the power of friendly ground to your advantage. Remember that when you fight on your home turf you heal faster than the enemy. This helps put the math of attrition in your favor.
Blitzkrieg
Late-Industrial
and Modern
Era conventional warfare adds several
dimensions to combat and alters tactics considerably. The traditional
arms of infantry
and
artillery remain intact, but cavalry
is transformed into armor (tanks) and air cavalry (helicopters) both of
which deploy under conditions significantly different than traditional
horse soldiers. Also added to the equation are airborne light infantry,
mechanized infantry, aircraft, surface-to-surface missiles,
anti-aircraft and anti-tank assets.
Tanks alter the balance of power in ground warfare from favoring the
defense to favoring the offense. Tanks are fast, can move after firing,
punch hard and are resistant to attrition. They transform cavalry from
a support arm to the primary offensive tool of field combat.
Tanks are mobile enough to attack flanks but also have the movement to
exploit gaps in enemy lines thanks to their shoot-and-scoot movement
attribute. While still vulnerable to tactical flanking, they are quick
enough to avoid being surrounded by most Units if properly commanded.
The main flanking danger to tanks is other tanks.
When battling tanks with tanks,
remember the wisdom of the Cobra Kai: "Strike first! Strike Hard! No
mercy, sir!" The tank that shoots first laughs last.
Tanks exist to attack. Even when conducting a defensive campaign, tanks
function best when they defend by attacking. An armor commander should
always be aggressive, outmaneuvering vulnerable Units and destroying
them.
As soon as Mechanized Infantry is available, bring it to bear alongside
Tanks. Mech Infantry provides a defensive balance to modern formations.
It also covers for the armored corps' vulnerability to City defenses.
Tanks suffer somewhat in City assault and should be used sparingly in
the role. Mech Infantry greatly assist tanks by assuming this role on
the battlefield.
Tanks should not be exposed to anti-Tank guns except when in a
favorable position for Decisive Victory against them. AT Guns that
manage to get the jump on Tanks will cut them apart.
Your own AT assets include AT Guns and Helicopters. AT Guns exist to
deny armor mobility into certain areas. Supported by infantry and
tanks, they create zones where unfriendly tanks find it difficult to
exist. They are not actually likely to kill many tanks unless the enemy
is stupid enough to advance into range, but they do allow you to
control the flow of battle, funneling enemy advances where you wish
them to go. AT Guns are also useful in methodical advances by mixed
forces, moving with friendly Tanks on the flank and
infantry/AA/artillery in the center. *
Helicopters are Tank killers of the first order. They exist to hunt
down and eliminate armored assets. Your tanks should advance under an
AA curtain whenever possible, as Helicopters can stop an armored
advance cold.
Aerial Combat
Aircraft must have a base of
operations. They base in either Cities
or on Aircraft Carriers and must begin and
end their turn aboard the same. An air Unit may rebase* in a new
City or Carrier at will, but this movement consumes their Turn.
Since aircraft may only sweep, bomb or intercept once a turn, stacking
aircraft is an important offensive and defensive consideration.
Interception
The only effective defense against air
power are Fighter/Jet Fighter interception and ground-based
anti-aircraft positions. Fighters and Jet Fighters can be set to
intercept any other aircraft entering their airspace. Such Units will
automatically attack any Fighter or Bomber which comes near before the
Bomber has a chance to strike ground assets. Interception can in turn
be countered by Fighter sweeps.
Fighters can only intercept one attacker every turn. Stacked fighters
increase the aerial supremacy of defensive forces in an area by
allowing multiple interceptions on the same turn.
Tactical Bombing
Tactical Bombing is the destruction of
individual ground Units by Bombers. As long as the Units attacked are
not located under an AA umbrella, Tactical Bombing is a low-risk way to
eliminate even the toughest ground forces. Ordinary ground assets may
fire at Bombers, but they are rarely a real threat to a healthy Bomber
Unit.
Strategic Bombing
Strategic Bombing is the reduction of
Cities by Bombing. It is a higher-risk, higher-reward strategy than
tactical bombing. The risk comes from the likelihood of intercepting
Fighters being based in the City, while the reward comes from the
Bomber's ability to flatten a City's defenses quickly, allowing your
besiegers to simply walk in.
Strategic bombing should be preceded by Fighter sweeps to clear
airspace of interceptors.
Missile Attack
Guided Missiles are a relatively cheap
way to damage enemy Units or Cities within ten hexes of your own Cities
or cruisers. They deal a stiff amount of damage and are a nice way to
soften up a position for infantry/armor assault. Guided Missiles are
expendable weapons. They operate like less powerful, cheaper Nuclear
Missiles. They lack the blast radius of Nuclear Weapons but also leave
no Fallout.
Guided Missiles are also covered in the Naval
Combat
section.
AA Assets
Nuclear Weapons
The price of such power is the ruination caused by Fallout, which taints the area around a City. While cleanup is possible, at the phase in Civilization 5 when Nuclear Weapons typically emerge it is rarely practical. Cities attacked by Nuclear Weapons are best razed following occupation, and the eradicated land shunned.
Naval Combat
First strike capability is essential to naval success. Much like a Tank battle, the seaborne attacker who gets in the first lick has the last laugh.
Destroyers are essential in this. They're blazing fast and should be used to scout the waters ahead of, behind, and around your main fleet assets, moving at the beginning of your Turn. They are expendable, disposable Units with weak attack power and little durability. If your Destroyers are doing their jobs right, then they're likely dying a lot. They exist to find the enemy and draw his fire so that you can position your heavies for counter-strikes on an opponent's main assets, especially his Carriers.
Bombers and Missiles are a fleet's main weapons. After your Destroyers find the enemy, sweep the air around any hostile Carriers with Fighters and then obliterate enemy flattops, Battleships, Cruisers and any visible Submarines at long range with Aircraft and Missiles.
Your own Submarines are best used in blockade and patrol of nautical passages, as their limited speed makes them unsuitable for most fleet actions. They are also useful for sneaky Missile attacks on enemy metropolises and Units outside the range of your own Cities.
Naval vs. Air
Coastal Bombardment
When bombarding Cities while are Units near the coast, stay at the edge of enemy firing range. Patrol the surrounding waters with Destroyers and keep a Fighter-filled Carrier anchored out of land-based artillery range as protection against air strikes. Don't waste your Destroyers by moving them in close enough to score hits with their own guns. They're fragile and their own firepower is negligible.
Battleships have the ability to launch sustained bombardments, Guided Missiles provide Cruisers and Submarines with a selective punch, and Bombers make a Carrier near-equal to a City as a base of destructive power, but none of these weapons approaches the destructive potential of Atomic Bombs and Nuclear Missiles fired from ships. There are very few places on any world map inaccessible to a Carrier, Cruiser or Sub-based nuclear weapon, and the destructive potential of several of these fired in tandem is incomparable to any other attack available in Civilization 5. The only really effective countermeasure against this tactic is destroying the fleet before it can launch, but unless you plot your naval campaign badly and mismanage your escorts, that's not likely to happen to you. Go forth and destroy.
Amphibious Assault
If you absolutely have to launch a beachfront attack, do it right. Pour naval fire into the enemy position until it's in the red. Cram as many tough naval Units into nearby waters as you can to draw fire. Use only embarked Units with Amphibious abilities, and make sure the assault job can be accomplished in one turn, as an embarked Unit has little chance of surviving two tuns in unfriendly waters.
Protecting the Embarked
Though it seems an ignoble role for a mighty Carrier, you will do well to escort all troop convoys with flattops after the emergence of aircraft. Bombers love a milk run, and troop ships put up no resistance at all.