Durk wrote:Several factors - I assume your were CSA defending Richmond in good weather, seemingly the only negative would be the defensive posture. Were the troops well rested or had they rushed into Richmond? Probability is a major factor. The failure might have come with only a 5% probability of failure. A useful exercise is to back up and rerun this turn a couple of times. This will let you know how anomalous this particular outcome happened to be. An army will almost always support an attacked corps. Corps are much less likely to join. In the instance of corps marching to the sound of guns the strategic rating of the corps commander might just tip the balance.
Durk wrote:Interesting new twist. It is my understanding forces inside structures (cities/forts) will not join unless they have a sortie command. Try that?
Durk wrote:See how when I click on the unit inside the structure a dialogue appears in the unit information box at the bottom of the screen stating the unit is in the structure (Inside Southport)? If it does not say they are 'inside' they are outside in the region.
Only units in the fort get the fort bonus, usually in a separate battle.
The same place you find the sortie button, you find a 'enter structure when move is complete' button. The only time this might not work is if a battle loss causes a retreat to other places.
ArmChairGeneral wrote:1stVermont,
The tabs above the Unit Panel show an icon when the stack is in a structure, so you can tell at a glance who is in the structure and who is out.
Although in your case it sounds like the stack you are missing was in the structure, another common culprit for Corps not participating in battles is the Stack Selection Mechanism. Stacks in Offensive posture choose another stack to attack based on random weighting of sizes (but cannot select an Army stack if there is another stack that they are eligible to attack). If you have more stacks than an attacker, and the stacks that get targeted are not wildly overmatched, some of your Defensive stacks might not participate in the battle. This makes sense: no one is attacking them, so they have no one to defend against. (If one of your initial stacks is heavily outnumbered then it is possible a non-targeted stack can enter the battle to rescue it after the first round.) The takeaway from the Stack Selection rules is to always combine into as few stacks as possible when preparing for battle.
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