Mad Hab
Warlord
I find amusing that the longbows have a range of 3 on Civ 5 while the cannons still have a range of two. The person who had this idea probably didn't his/her homework on the 100-Years War.
It goes more or less like this: the Brits acheive several meaninful, against-the-odds victories against the French at Crécy, Poitiers and Azincourt. Not getting into details, in most of those battles well-positioned longbowmen shredded to pieces the French knights and crossbowmen.
But by the end of the war, the French had reclaimed all the territory they had lost, and won the final major battle at Castillon. Before that, at Formigny, the British longbowmen tactic failed, partially, because the French deployed, for the first time, two cannons at the battlefield. And guess what? They could strike the longbowmen with the cannons while staying away from the operational range of the longbows...
I'm not saying that the longbows should have a range of 2 - but instead that the cannons should have a range of 3 (and, maybe, also require iron to build)...
Best regards!
Mad Hab
It goes more or less like this: the Brits acheive several meaninful, against-the-odds victories against the French at Crécy, Poitiers and Azincourt. Not getting into details, in most of those battles well-positioned longbowmen shredded to pieces the French knights and crossbowmen.
But by the end of the war, the French had reclaimed all the territory they had lost, and won the final major battle at Castillon. Before that, at Formigny, the British longbowmen tactic failed, partially, because the French deployed, for the first time, two cannons at the battlefield. And guess what? They could strike the longbowmen with the cannons while staying away from the operational range of the longbows...
I'm not saying that the longbows should have a range of 2 - but instead that the cannons should have a range of 3 (and, maybe, also require iron to build)...
Best regards!
Mad Hab