For a complication
to our scenario. Let’s say I have
500
peasants,
100 Light
Infantry, and
5 knights.
That’s a
pretty beefy force, no? AR 250 and DR
250. Pretty solid.
They get
into a scrum with let’s say, a force of nasty orcs, who they beat up, but who
in turn beat them up to the tune of a BR of let’s say 120, and automatic casualties they can’t tank to
the tune of 40, so they have 160 BR worth of damage they need to expend their
DR on.
The force
isn’t homogenous like last time, there’s a lot of peasants, and some other
units higher up. Now a player would be tempted to blow his peasants first, or
cherry pick some other unit as a sacrifice. This is well and good, but it’s not
a good representation of the randomness of combat.
What’s
important to remember if we ultimately only have six basic types of units. Peasants,
Light Infantry, Heavy Infantry, Cavalry, Archers and Knights. So we can split the threat up between them.
We could
march right up the scale, taking one casualty out of each category, but that’s
silly. You’d never bother taking a knight since they’d be on the bench or in the
ground too quick, so instead, I came up with this system.
You cannot
assign more than 10% of the damage you’ve incurred, to a category; except, you
can assign up to 25% of the BR to the lowest
tier unit type you have on the
battlefield.
What I mean
by this, is that casualties walk up a sort of ladder.
Peasants get
hit first.
Then Light
Infantry.
Then
Archers.
Then
Cavalry.
Then Heavy
Infantry and
Finally,
Knights.
Whoever the
low man on your totem pole is, you can toss 25% of the BR at them. Any BR you
have left over rolls back around again. Anybody except the low man on the list,
can opt to take no casualties on a pass, but that means that more casualties
will pass through the stack. They can also allocate less than the minimum
damage, even if this only incurs injuries.
Low man must
take maximum on first pass. After that, they only need to take enough BR to
incur an injury.
So looking
at our part above.. The army has 160 BR to allocate. 40 BR can go to the
peasants. 16 BR goes to the other categories. The maximum number we can
allocate doesn’t change from pass to pass. Keep in mind also, these all
represent the results from a single battle, not an ongoing one.
Obviously
you can’t assign BR to non-existent categories though, so the maximum amount we
can assign on this pass is 72. That’s 40 BR from the peasants, and 32 from
assignment to the Knights and Light Infantry, who’d eat 16 each.
Now, 40 BR
is pretty flarking nasty for peasants. Each peasant only has .2 DR, so that
means that 200 of them end up on the block. 100 dead, 100 injured.
16BR hits
the Light Infantry next, they’re meaner though with 1 DR each, so it kills 8
and injures another 8.
Then the
Knights get hit. 16 is one full knight, and one partial. So two injuries. Why
two injuries and no fatalities? Remember, we round injuries up and they only incurred one full
casualty.
Our army now
has a problem though, that’s only 72 BR dealt with out of 160 and we still have
88 to go! First round didn’t even take off half. Well, it rolls through again. This time however, you can pay
off the BR with the injured, at the cost of making them, well, dead.
On the “upside,”
we still apply the amount of BR we can allocate based on the initial BR. So we can again plug 40 into the peasants, and
16 into each other group, as a maximum.
So the
peasants come around again, we allocate 40 BR to them, again..which means 200
more of them up for the chop. We can choose to instantly toss the injured 100
we have in their graves, and then we’d end up with 100 fresh troops making up
the difference in BR (50 injured and 50 more dead), or we can instead opt to
grab a whole new bunch and put another 100 in the ground, and another 100 on
the injured list.
To
summarize:
Option 1:
We have 100
Peasants Injured. And 100 Dead from the First Pass.
We Can Opt
to have the 100 injured die to pay
off half of our BR requirement this pass.
To make up
for the deficit of BR, we then put 100 new peasants up as casualties, so they
incur 50 fatalities and 50 injuries.
Net result: 250
dead, 50 injured. We have 200 troops fresh.
Option 2:
We have 100
Peasants injured, and 100 dead from the first pass.
We opt to
inflict casualties on 200 fresh troops. We end up with 100 dead, and 100
injured.
Net result: 200 dead, 200 injured. We have 100 troops
fresh.
The first
option saves more of our men for fighting, at the cost of sending more to the
graveyard. If we knew for a fact this unit of orcs was the end of it for this
month, we might opt for the higher injury count.
Let’s assume
we decide to keep more men fighting. Orcish horde after all. We go with option
1.
We hit the
Light Infantry again, they now have to make the same choice. They toss their 8
injured from last time, and take 4 more fatalities and 4 more injured. They
want their fighting strength higher. There might be another orc army nearby.
The Knights
on the other hand, are taking a pounding. 16 more BR worth of expenditure on
them, is quite a bit! That’s two more knights out of commission at least. Well,
this is where what I mentioned comes into play, they don’t need to take their
maximum.
The Knights
instead opt to take 9 BR. This incapacitates one more knight, but doesn’t kill
any of them. So two hale and hardy knights, and three on the bench with
injuries.
The Knights
could entirely shirk on this, mind, and decide to take nothing.
However,
this means that more rolls back around to the peasants and now they have to
decide how to incur the 23 last BR from this battle. The peasants, if their
commander wanted, could also opt to pay a minimum, and kick it up to the light
infantry, but in the peasant’s case, they’d only be able to take .1 BR without
losing a unit.
So at the end
of the day, we end up with 3 injured knights, a few dead light infantryman, and
piles of dead and injured peasants.
The unit
then would act as if its dead units were lost, and as if its injured units were
unavailable, if it got attacked again, or chose to attack again, this turn.
As you can
see, this is just on basic unit vs basic unit. When you take into account the
modifiers for say engaging an enemy, defending, being attacked while routing,
and so forth.. The situation can get a lot more swingy. And deciding what units to lose or keep, can
be complicated on the basis of upkeep, rearmament, and so on.
The injured
pop up back to fresh on the start of the next month. Yes, even if they got
their butts kicked on the last day of the prior month.
Lost units,
by the by, are lost. Your grandpa can’t train your son to be a Heavy
Infantryman if he died on the battlefield. You need to rebuy them.
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