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Edited by Almighty_Harbinger, 14 June 2016 - 10:41 PM.
Posted 29 March 2015 - 04:14 PM
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Edited by Almighty_Harbinger, 14 June 2016 - 10:41 PM.
Posted 05 April 2015 - 10:16 PM
Hi there!
I'll just post some random things that come to my mind watching the video:
- use shortcuts for buildings inside the base (f farm, b blacksmith, p pippin etc.)
- don't take the land powerpoint if your opponent does not take it. Only then you take it to counter his land by replacing it with yours if he would gain strategic advantage from it. Wait until you know what army your opponent is AND what powerpoint he is choosing or, if you want to creep early while knowing that he has gondor take heal. In general you always want to get heal with the purpose to get quickly enough powerpoints for gandalf the white.
- use the hobbit to lure one of the wargs away, kill him, then the other.
- at least one blacksmith too many before horses
- creeping with 2 soldiers + pippin and heal should give you something like 2 rank 2 soldiers and pippin level 3 ideally.
- no use for the land at all
- game was over at this point if the other gondor plays standard horses, he should be able to get almost all remaining creeps and you will never get gtw (gandalf the white) before it is decided.
- his hobbit could have killed your horses if you attacked him.
- make sure to split horses up - one horse is enough to creep, just lure one warg away at a time and don't fight the wargs too closely to the lair so that all horses of a batallion are dealing hits.
- early outpost is not a good idea, if your opponent had all creeps and a few fully upgraded horses you would just lose it all again wasting money and time.
- delete your buildings in time before he is gaining experience for destroying them.
- skipping larger parts now, over 20min and you still don't have gtw.
..so you both played to your skill level and had good ideas, the fine details need improvement though
"To know what question we may reasonably propose is in itself a strong evidence of sagacity or intelligence. For if a question be in itself incongruous and begs for uncalled-for answers, it holds, sometimes, besides embarrassing the proposer, the disadvantage to seduce the unguarded listener into giving absurd answers, and we are presented with the ridiculous spectacle of one (as the ancients said) milking the he-goat, and the other holding a sieve beneath."
Posted 24 April 2015 - 10:02 AM
Posted 24 April 2015 - 10:46 AM
"To know what question we may reasonably propose is in itself a strong evidence of sagacity or intelligence. For if a question be in itself incongruous and begs for uncalled-for answers, it holds, sometimes, besides embarrassing the proposer, the disadvantage to seduce the unguarded listener into giving absurd answers, and we are presented with the ridiculous spectacle of one (as the ancients said) milking the he-goat, and the other holding a sieve beneath."
Posted 24 April 2015 - 02:31 PM
lol
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