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Archery is one of the key skills in Mount&Blade. With it you can
kill or foes or incapacitate their mounts from afar. However it does
require a good deal of skill, through both stats and reflexes.
[edit] The Basics
- Hold down
and the aiming reticle will shrink. However if you hold down too long
it will open up again. The idea is to fire when it's at its smallest.
- Practise shooting arrows in town or at the Training Ground
to get used to the feel of how the arrow arcs. Different arrows arc
slightly differently, but the best arrows will fire with a perfect
curve.
- Always aim slightly above your target. The further away they are the higher you must aim.
- Always make allowances for inaccuracy. It's better to shoot a
foe in the chest and do less damage than to miss a headshot and waste
the arrow altogether. Firing an arrow into a mob of allies probably
isn't a good idea either.
- Press Shift to zoom in for easier sniping. You can also switch to first-person (R)
for an even closer view. Remember that the arrows still start their arc
from your character's location when using these view modes.
- To become an efficient sniper you'll need to raise your
Archery proficiency to at least 150, so be sure to shoot as many arrows
as you have during each battle to get your level up.
- Head shots deal double damage, so get them if you can. The
enemy's neck also counts as a headshot. With practise you can also
score a headshot against an enemy holding up a shield by aiming just
above his helmet—the arc should carry the arrow down just enough to
penetrate.
- Just because you see an opening behind your opponent's
shield doesn't mean you can hit them. The shield's hit box extends
slightly beyond its visible region, and will catch any arrows aimed
near the very edge. Instead, aim for a part that can't be covered by
that shield type. Enemies with round shields have no leg protection.
- If you've nocked an arrow that's no longer needed you don't have to waste it; just hit block () to to disengage it. This is a crucial skill for conserving ammunition.
- When buying arrows, be sure to buy the "big bag" variety if
you can afford it; you get a handful of extra arrows for a slight bit
more, and these can make all the difference.
- Don't skimp when buying arrows. Bent arrows are pointless
and will make your aim even worse. Bodkin or Khergit arrows deal +3
damage and are well worth the higher price.
- Get a good bow. Even the best arrows will be made less damaging when fired from a cracked bow.
- Always have a melee weapon equipped of a type that you have a
decent proficiency level with. The arrows won't last for long, and
against the tougher enemies you'll need an unlimited weapon to fall
back on without returning to the supply chest. Even if you sacrifice
both a weapon and a shield to carry triple a normal stash of arrows it
still won't last long enough for all but the most skilled.
- If you are going to use a horse you will probably want a
Courser (ideally with the Spirited modifier). With a Courser and a few
points in Riding you can outrun most enemies, allowing you get far enough out of reach to slow down and wheel around to fire at your pursuers.
- You can't shoot to the right when riding. You can only shoot
forwards, to the left, or behind you. The reticle disappears when
shooting behind so it's probably a waste of arrows; instead try
swinging around and firing from your good side.
- The faster your horse is going the bigger the penalty on the reticle's accuracy; you'll need to raise Horse Archery a good few levels before you'll see any improvement. 4-5 should do, but 6 or more is the ideal.
- Riding penalties are only in effect when your horse is moving. If you stop your horse (hit S until it stops or use Ctrl+J
to stop immediately) you can fire just as well as if you were on the
ground, except of course you have a higher vantage point and can easily
escape from danger.
- The slower you go the less penalised your archery is. If you
have a nimble horse with a good turning circle you might be able to
move at less than top speed and therefore have an easier time of
aiming.
Using a crossbow is another possibility. They're slow to load but
deal good damage and shoot almost straight over long distances. The arc
and overall handling is completely different from using a bow. With a
crossbow it's more down to how good your crossbow is rather than how
high your skill is, but the more powerful ones can't be reloaded while
riding.