jackx
Posts: 353
Joined: 7/8/2009 From: Germany Status: offline
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Yes, that'd indeed be the main purpose for dismounted troops. I can even see a use for the new assault formation here - that could be given to dismountable, non-close-order cavalry (Hussars, Croats) that could still be expected to actually assault an enemy and drive them out of build-up terrain or dense vegetation. The alternative, if formations can be made dependant on terrain type/features (as was planned for defensive) would be to allow units in skirmish formation to initiate assault combat in terrain where fighting would not take place in close order anyways. Squares aren't really too hard to break, what is ridiculous though is the current ability of any and all infantry units eligible to do so to virtually always form square, which means you cannot roll up an enemy line with a cavalry charge, no matter how shaken and disrupted it is. :/ Against squares, numbers are key. Hit a single square with as many squadrons as you can, and it should crumble quickly due to morale loss. A square's firepower isn't that great, usually not enough to actually stop a charge, so the morale loss (and casualties) will start to add up, and the infantry will be caught in a downward spiral. I fooled around a bit with Mollwitz earlier today (which included taking out 3/4 of the Prussian artillery with the Württemberg dragoons in a mad, but spectacularly successful charge), and ended up wiping out a grenadier battalion in two turns, using 4 squadrons of cuirassiers. ~240 KiA/WiA and 210 captured, for a loss of maybe 150 cavalry over two turns. It still felt pointless, because afterwards I couldn't fall on the rear of the advancing Prussian infantry (which nevertheless never managed to take Mollwitz), but that is a problem with infantry forming square, not the relative strength of squares.
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no truth - no justice all false belief blinded by morality there shall be ... no peace
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