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Post by edi on Mar 26, 2012 13:50:08 GMT -5
Flawless victory:
Do commanders lost to disease count against the goal? Win every battle without losing a commander, but if the leader of the army gets diseased by a spell but survives the battle, do I still lose the trial when he kicks the bucket from disease?
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Post by vladikus on Mar 26, 2012 15:07:19 GMT -5
Good question... I will ask the community to chime in about this because I hadn't thought it through. My inclination is to say yes, no matter how the commander dies (whether battle, or he was standing on a lake in late winter admiring the scenery, or perhaps a meteor fell while the old wizard was in the library), that's it.
Though this certainly increases the difficulty of the challenge by some magnitude... what do others think? Again, I don't want to make it impossible.
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Post by edi on Mar 26, 2012 15:32:58 GMT -5
Restart it is for me then. However, the Flawless victory challenge itself is not that difficult in principle. Just never use high lords for battle leaders.
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Post by gp1628 on Mar 26, 2012 17:15:00 GMT -5
The concept that everyone elses job in the army is to make sure the main leaders never have to go to war and die doesnt seem too far fetched. I like the RPGness of it.
It does add another level of difficulty that you must carefully gather enough resources to GET more commanders while the enemy is already on the move. But it still might be doable.
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Post by mysterious on Nov 17, 2012 11:08:55 GMT -5
hey guys,
i'm new to the forum and kinda new to the game. the trial sounds fun, so i'll give it a try!
my questions:
whats the deal with the generator script? is this still in use?
what is the required proof of a win? the thread wasn't clear about that
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Post by vladikus on Nov 20, 2012 20:09:34 GMT -5
Welcome!
The generator script is still in use--it is only slightly out of date, but none of the trials should be different than the ones that are generated (only there are a few more added).
The posts for winning are by the honor system, but you're free to post up more substantial evidence.
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