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  • Whoa, stacks!

    In the recent preview a Firaxian said something intriguing about stacks. He talked about armies and how they helped each other out in combat, a new unit coming in when the old one was hurt, etc...

    But he also said in general that no more did the death of one unit mean the death of a whole stack. And this is w/o armies. He said that the strongest from each stack will fight, and when one dies, the second strongest comes in and so forth.

    Wow... maybe I just misinterpreted the interview, but I hope not.
    Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
    "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

  • #2
    Lorizael, I concur with your impression concerning the damage taken to units while they are stacked. But if you want to move this stack of units as a force, you will need an "Army." IMO, individual units can be stacked together for defensive purposes, but if you want this stack to move, you will need to give individual movement orders to each of your units, unless of course, it's an army - in which case it can be moved as one force (one movement order).
    ____________________________
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    • #3
      Yah but that isn't as much as a bother as it used to be because you will be able to send units to a specific spot so you don't have to move them every turn.
      Click here if you're having trouble sleeping.
      "We confess our little faults to persuade people that we have no large ones." - François de La Rochefoucauld

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      • #4
        Army=three units (four with pentagon)

        the army is a ministack, you can build armies, or turn a great leader into an army...the army is a land transport of sorts...when an army attacks/get attacks the strongest unit fights when it gets damaged the next strongest fights, this keeps going until the army is either victorious or until all of the units in the army are dead

        stack

        the stack is simply a group of units (and/or armies) on a single square...in civ3 there is no longer collateral damage so if 15 warriors hold a square, it will take 15 attacks to clear them out, unlike an army a stack fights one unit at a time, so if a stack of units get attacked the strongest unit defends until it is dead, and not until it gets damaged

        this is what we know

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        • #5
          Originally posted by korn469
          ...
          stack

          the stack is simply a group of units (and/or armies) on a single square...in civ3 there is no longer collateral damage so if 15 warriors hold a square, it will take 15 attacks to clear them out, unlike an army a stack fights one unit at a time, so if a stack of units get attacked the strongest unit defends until it is dead, and not until it gets damaged

          this is what we know
          Italics added

          Excuse me?
          Korn, can you document that? I had not heard that it was different than with Civ2, other than for armies.

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          • #6
            this is from soren johnson Firaxis

            There is no collateral damage in Civ III, so stacks are not wiped out after a loss.
            check it out here


            so unless he meant to say that collateral damage works like it does in SMAC, then it would take 15 attacks to clear out 15 warriors

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            • #7
              I stand corrected,
              and your conclusion is reasonable, though not NECESSARILY true.

              I don't know what other conclusion to draw either. Perhaps we'll find out next week after the gag rule expires.

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              • #8
                It seems like "stacked" units will be like in SMAC, not CivII. And it seems that "armies" pool there offensive/defensive points together to act like one big super unit.

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                • #9
                  Stacks ala SMAC

                  Well, that's what I get for not having SMAC experience!
                  Rather than ask re what I'm missing, I suppose I'll just wait for the game.
                  ...
                  Scrap!!
                  So, does the attacker automatically advance after clearing the square, as in CtP?

                  Why not just sacrifice a Warrior to do reconnaisance if you don't know how many and how powerful the stack is? Did SMAC show you how many is in the stack ala CtP? ... (and numerous other questions...)

                  Basically, all my concepts of how combat works are down the drain!
                  Everybody, ignore all my previous posts regarding combat!!


                  Run away, run away!

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                  • #10
                    Originally posted by Nemo
                    It seems like "stacked" units will be like in SMAC, not CivII. And it seems that "armies" pool there offensive/defensive points together to act like one big super unit.
                    To my knowledge, Armies don't pool their offense and defense points together - if they did, it would create a far to powerful unit.

                    Other than that though, I really don't know how the combat in civ3 works - we've heard a lot of things from Firaxis, and they've been, it seems, particularly scarce with information on combat. which makes me
                    If the voices in my head paid rent, I'd be a very rich man

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                    • #11
                      Zanzin,
                      Read the thread "Please Explain Armies." The last post date was October 12. It explains armies rather well, with plenty of Dan posts.

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                      • #12
                        Originally posted by Zanzin
                        To my knowledge, Armies don't pool their offense and defense points together - if they did, it would create a far to powerful unit.
                        Just the hitpoints it seems. Dan corrected some wrong points in my summary but not that one.

                        From Dan:
                        IMHO, the only real motivation for using an army is that you get to pool hitpoints. Consider that if you have the Pentagon and you put 4 elite units into an army, you've got TWENTY hit-points to play with during an assault. It allows you to even the playing field somewhat if you have a lot of weaker units and you need to take out a couple of stronger ones, but it doesn't tip the scales so far that you're going to see warriors taking down a tank.
                        To doubt everything or to believe everything are two equally convenient solutions; both dispense with the necessity of reflection.
                        H.Poincaré

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                        • #13
                          A link would be nice
                          I'm building a wagon! On some other part of the internets, obviously (but not that other site).

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                          • #14
                            To end some of the speculation

                            From cgonline

                            "Leaders are a new type of military unit that act as a sort of transport for other military units and make combat, well, pretty much completely unlike combat in past Civilization games. They have ditched concepts such as the unit zone of control in favor of different game mechanics, such as restricting enemy units from using roads and rail systems within your borders. "In Civilization II, if you attacked a stack and you defeated the best guy in the stack, they all died," Briggs grins. "Not any more. You have to defeat them one by one. One thing you can do is build an army. The way you build an army is you have to get a Leader, and you get Leaders from successful combats. If I had an Elite guy, and he got promoted, it would produce a Leader." If you send a Leader back to one of your cities, he can do one of three things: he can finish production of whatever project the city is working on, he can lead an army, or he can build a Military Academy that allows the city to produce armies that don't require Leaders. "It's like 'teach a man to fish...' that kind of thing," says Briggs.

                            A regular stack of units fights one unit at a time, strongest unit first. An army lets all the units jump into the fray. "When it attacks, the first guy attacks until he's about to die, then the next guy stands up and attacks until he's about to die... Armies are really powerful, because you can do a lot of damage all at once." So a stack of Musketeers facing an army of Musketeers of equal size would almost certainly lose. Not that you'd ever see two stacks of Musketeers fighting it out, since only the French can build Musketeers."

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                            • #15
                              Originally posted by Zanzin


                              To my knowledge, Armies don't pool their offense and defense points together - if they did, it would create a far to powerful unit.
                              lol!

                              If you put enough units together in the right ammounts ( and they DID pool attacks ) to get 99 the army would become nuclear!!!

                              Anyhoo.

                              I was my understanding ( and this would make both the program more understandable and easier to add new units to ) that when you made an army it just became one big unit. It pooled hp and ( I was thinking about this, this morning ) probably either takes the highest defence / attack values ( which it silly cause you'd just army a howitzer ( if possible - see artillery units thread ) and a mech infantry ) or ( more likely if they DO go with the one-big-unit idea ) takes the average attack / defense values of all the units in it ( the numbers wouldn't get TOO silly as there's only gonna be at most 4 units there )

                              Anyone heard if naval units can be 'armies'

                              ( For the balance a military academy is prolly going to be one big / long ****er to build in order to get across the idea that the time which could have been used by your leader to lead a vast host is being used to create some namby-pamby boot camp. )
                              A witty quote proves nothing. - Voltaire

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