Central to the game is building up a party.
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The party screen displays detailed information about your forces. It is opened by clicking the Party button when on the world map or by pushing
. The party screen is unavailable during combat.Points | Bonus |
---|---|
0-1 pts | (+0) |
2-4 | (+1) |
5-7 | (+2) |
8-9 | (+3) |
10 | (+4) |
You can recruit men from taverns and villages. Troops in the village fief and have improved their prosperity you can go there to recruit higher-level faction troops.
Your standing with a village affects how willing they are to join you; if your standing with them is 0 or below you may be told that nobody is willing to join your party. Troops hired in taverns don't care about your standing and will join you as long as you have the cash.
You can also recruit men by taking prisoners or freeing the prisoners of your enemies. Your enemy's prisoners can be freely added to your party from the post-battle party screen. To recruit from your own prisoners click Camp, choose Take an action, and select Recruit some prisoners into your party. Prisoners will accept on a per-stack basis—no matter how many men are in the stack the whole lot will agree to join or not, and only one stack at a time will be available regardless of how many stacks you have. You can only try to recruit from your prisoners once every 24 hours. Bear in mind that each prisoner you recruit costs you three points of morale (freed prisoners cost none) so you may want to build up your morale before you recruit a large number at once.
Some of your recruited prisoners will randomly run away in the night. This only happens on the first night; you can get around this by putting them in a town or castle garrison and resting until morning, then returning them to your own party.
You should aim to have a good balance between different troop types. While you can win battles with a purely cavalry or infantry force a few ranged troops will definitely be helpful. If your chosen faction lacks a particular troop type you can recruit from prisoners or neutral villages to get what you need.
Troop positioning is crucial; troops are loaded in a top-to-bottom manner, so those at the top of the list will see the most combat. Wounded troops are skipped. Generally speaking, you should put the most powerful troops at the top of the list, with the more vulnerable troops lower down the list. This means the lower-level troops won't see much combat (sometimes none at all) but will still gain overall experience. You can upgrade these weak troops more quickly by learning Wound Treatment will significantly improve troop healing speed and as such improve the supply of available troops.
Generally speaking, cavalry have a huge strategic advantage due to the extra freedom and maneuverability offered by horses. Footmen tend to fare poorly against cavalry but are strong against archers. Ranged troops are last of all; while they can seriously damage non-ranged enemies before they even get close, their ammunition and reloading rate is very limited and their accuracy is low. Ranged troops tend to have the lightest armor so are in great danger if enemies draw within striking range. Once they reach higher levels ranged troops will become significantly more effective, and the highest-level ones will be able to deal significant damage to cavalry and infantry even from very long distances. Even if you don't really intend to go the cavalry route, having some decent mounted troops to chase after the enemy's riders will be very useful, and will help reduce the number attacking your footmen.
In almost all cases, high-level troops will trounce lower-level ones regardless of the target troop type's usual advantages. This is especially true of non-ranged troops going up against ranged troops: projectiles deal limited damage against heavy armour, and by the time they reach the ranged troops they will have a good amount of health left. Once you have built up a force of high-end troops (especially cavalry) losses will go down significantly except when facing similarly high-level forces.
For castle sieges your men will all start on foot, so take this into account if you are using cavalry. Some cavalry troops will still do well on foot (such as Hired Blades and Swadian Knights) but others are at a serious disadvantage (such as Caravan Guards).
Morale is a driving force behind your party's success. If your men are happy your party will move faster on the map. If their morale drops very low some men will begin deserting. You can view your current morale by going to Reports and then choosing the party morale report.
The following factors affect morale:
The minimum party morale is 0 and the maximum is 99. These numbers are enforced throughout the calculation of the party's morale which means that even if you have a large negative impact (for example -200 from party size), the morale will be set to 0 before considering other factors. This means you can still reach high morale by having a large bonus from later factors. As the last factor for party morale, recent events has the potential to have the biggest impact on your party's morale. You can have a party as large as you would like (subject to your renown/leadership/etc) without fear of members deserting you as long as you keep your troops fed and keep recent events high enough.