So I am playing a 100 player map as Colorado, and I was attacking North-Western USA. The AI had 3 Lv 1 Fighters patrolling over Spokane. Yesterday I sent 3 Light Tanks up there to attack the city, thinking their planes wouldn't hurt me to badly, and I could take their airfield, but I woke up to find my tanks were all destroyed, and all they had in the city was a Militia. I also check and found out that I only took 2 morale from the fighters. I decided that I would send more tanks up, but with an AA gun this time. That should have easily been enough to blow an aircraft out of the sky on the first round, but instead I lost 20 morale while they lost one. What's going on here, and no, it's not the X-Factor.
Carl Wilson “Dad, how do soldiers killing each other solve the world's problems?” ― Bill Watterson, Calvin and Hobbes: Sunday Pages 1985-1995: An Exhibition Catalogue "Rule 1, on page 1 of the book of war, is: 'Do not march on Moscow'… Rule 2 is: 'Do not go fighting with your land armies in China." Bernard Law Montgomery, British general
3 Replies
22 Apr 2016, 21:03
Perhaps it's one bug! Send one ticket with the information.
"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius. "Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.
22 Apr 2016, 21:42
Thanks!
Carl Wilson “Dad, how do soldiers killing each other solve the world's problems?” ― Bill Watterson, Calvin and Hobbes: Sunday Pages 1985-1995: An Exhibition Catalogue "Rule 1, on page 1 of the book of war, is: 'Do not march on Moscow'… Rule 2 is: 'Do not go fighting with your land armies in China." Bernard Law Montgomery, British general
22 Apr 2016, 21:47
Carl Wilson wrote:
Thanks!
You're Welcome!
"I came, I saw, I conquered" Written in a report to Rome 47 B.C., after conquering Pharnaces at Zela in Asia Minor in just five days; as quoted in Life of Caesar by Plutarch; reported to have been inscribed on one of the decorated wagons in the Pontic triumph, in Lives of the Twelve Caesars, Julius, by Suetonius. "Alea iacta est" Gaius Julius Caesar.