[The extension bmp has been deactivated and can no longer be displayed.]
Rafiki wrote:When you enter a region entirely controlled by the enemy, you are automatically switched to offensive posture.
IIRC, what the BRS says (or at least, what it means) is the 15% of your units suffered command penalties, which is different from being entirely out of command
Tordenskjold wrote:But it does not i any way explains why all my units was out of command.... The question still stands.
AndrewKurtz wrote:If you looked at that stack, did it show a "%" in red? If so, you did not have enough command points for the stack. You had the same number of generals for 50% more troops. So that would make sense that you had some out of command issue.
Rafiki wrote:If all your units suffer even a 1% command penalty, they'll get listed in the BRS as having command problems. You say that when you entered the battle, 15% of the Union troops were out of command; are you sure that it wasn't that the Union stack had a 15% command penalty?
Tordenskjold wrote:The exact phrase in the BRS was:
"At the start of the combat, there where 50 sub units of your side that where not commanded"
When entering battle the % beside the enveloope was 15. The tooltip says when I point at the envelope (last sentence):
"The stack receive 9 Command Points from your leader(s) and need 12 to operate at full efficiency".
Tordenskjold wrote:Yes, I have never said otherwise. But, the Battle Resolution Screen claims that EVERY unit was out of command. You see?
Tordenskjold wrote:Thanks for trying to help out, but seems you missed crucial information in my frist Thread.
Rafiki wrote:To summarize:
- There isn't a bug in the command calculations for battles
- The phrasing in the BRS could've been better, e.g.:
"there where 50 sub units of your side that where not commanded" => "there where 50 sub units of your side that where insufficiently commanded" (or something)Rafiki
Tordenskjold wrote:Thanks for your assistanse everyone! It seems all units are affected.
What I don't get is: What difference would it make if the out of command % is 15 or 35? I mean, If 15% affects all units, what kind of difference would 35% make?
Remember, the message was:"At the start of the combat, there where 50 sub units of your side that where not commanded". Which must have been very close to EVERY sub unit I attacked with.
You had some military control, i.e. more than 5%, and therefore did not automatically get switched to offensive posture.Tordenskjold wrote:My question still stands. I experienced yesterday that a non active general of mine entered a enemy controlled area (Military controll) and the stance did not change from blue to orange. Both parties had the blue stance and no fight took place. When thinking about it, this has happened a lots of times. So what is actually true?
Tordenskjold wrote:My question still stands. I experienced yesterday that a non active general of mine entered a enemy controlled area (Military controll) and the stance did not change from blue to orange. Both parties had the blue stance and no fight took place. When thinking about it, this has happened a lots of times. So what is actually true?
turska wrote:Not really related to the first post, but i had a terrible battle outcom as well.
So... I had a Army of the Potomac (as a USA) camping outside enemy town, i moved a single division to the location as a reinforcements from nearby area and the CSA tried to break my peaceful summer camp. My 50 000 vs CSA's 40 000.
The result was that my newly arrived division got mauled to pieces. Now it only has 4 arty units left and rest of the division were wiped out. Rest of the corps (or units on same area) took zero losses.
Battle result was about 7000-8000 casualties for me and about 3000 (or something) to CSA.
arsan wrote:This is probably a case of separate stacks on the same region not supporting each other.
Bear in mind that the regions are very big and that separate stacks inside a sama region can be miles away from each other and can be able or not (as in your case) to support each other on combat, or at least go to support so late that the battle is over by then.
A pretty usual occurence on the real ACW.
It depends of a die roll and of the delayed commitement option you have selected on the options menu.
What you explain seems to mean that the CSA army attacked only the newly arrived division and mauled it before your big stack arrived to the rescue.
Pretty bad luck for you![]()
Having separte stacks on a region can be dangerous if too near to enemy armies.
Also, you should know that the battle report window represents all the forces on the area, even if some of them (in separate stacks or inside a structure) are not commited at all to the battle.
Its confusing, but seems to be a limitation of the current battle report system...
Hope it helps...
Cheers
Evren wrote:As Rafiki pointed out, if you had enough military control in a region, your stance doesn't necessarily change. But if you had a military contol below 5%, your stance automatically changes to attack during the resolution phase (not in the movement phase, you won't be able to seet this change visually in the movement phase, if that's what you mean), and your forces will try to attack enemy forces in the region. In your example, even if your military control was zero and there wasn't a battle, it can also happen. Maybe your forces arrived late and there was a delay, etc..
Hope it helps.
Return to “AGEod's American Civil War”
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 21 guests