Yesss

Moderator: Thanas
...and this follows how, exactly?Thanas wrote:I see creative assembly have abandoned any claim to being experts at historical gaming. This is good, for now shitty games like Rome 2 will not be viewed by idiots as "historical" games.
I'm just upset that, if they're going for fantasy we can't get an official Middle Earth: Total War game.Thanas wrote:I see creative assembly have abandoned any claim to being experts at historical gaming. This is good, for now shitty games like Rome 2 will not be viewed by idiots as "historical" games.
What information on tactics? It's all along the style "and then steely host rushed the Enemy's flank, and there was much gnashing and clashing, and the enemy was cut apart where he stood, and Elves sang in victory". It's literally useless, Tolkien doesn't even bother with attempting to describe how mortal humans fought 30 feet tall demigods or what exactly everyone was doing between military campaigns.The Romulan Republic wrote:Tolkien actually does give some information on tactics. And civilian life for Hobbits, at least, gets a fair amount of detail. But I get the impression that economics was a field Tolkien didn't have much interest in or respect for.
I always thought Bilbo to be a rich heir, sort of like Paris Hilton. Except not nasty and from a family that got rich way back in history so far back that it might as well not matter. There are plenty of people in our world who are 5+ generations removed from the ancestor that made them rich.Irbis wrote:Even you hobbit example doesn't work - what, say, was Bilbo doing for living? How he could afford Bag End, seeing tunnelling all that was job for a whole squad of miners, not to mention furnishing and maintaining it? How he could have such big food surplus on hand for dwarves? We have mention he was from rich family, rich thanks to what exactly? We don't know, and in Silmarillion, it's hundred times worse.
Gondor is shown using guerrilla tactics/ambushing in Ithilian. Also, the different types of units it possesses are described in quite a bit of detail, particularly in the passage where reinforcements arrive at Minas Tirith before the Siege of Gondor.Irbis wrote:What information on tactics? It's all along the style "and then steely host rushed the Enemy's flank, and there was much gnashing and clashing, and the enemy was cut apart where he stood, and Elves sang in victory". It's literally useless, Tolkien doesn't even bother with attempting to describe how mortal humans fought 30 feet tall demigods or what exactly everyone was doing between military campaigns.The Romulan Republic wrote:Tolkien actually does give some information on tactics. And civilian life for Hobbits, at least, gets a fair amount of detail. But I get the impression that economics was a field Tolkien didn't have much interest in or respect for.
None of his heroes seem to have any sort of job or profession, just sometimes superficial 'he is gardener' or 'he is a smith' but who exactly buys from him and for what is skipped. They are all mythological figures and you can almost tell Tolkien thrown away mundane details to make them more so, but what works for fable-telling doesn't make for good setting-building.
Even you hobbit example doesn't work - what, say, was Bilbo doing for living? How he could afford Bag End, seeing tunnelling all that was job for a whole squad of miners, not to mention furnishing and maintaining it? How he could have such big food surplus on hand for dwarves? We have mention he was from rich family, rich thanks to what exactly? We don't know, and in Silmarillion, it's hundred times worse.
Yes, but again, rich thanks to what? Was his family big land owners? Investors in local craftsmen? Bankers? Traders? Nobility collecting taxes? Any sort of reply to that would be a big hint how to represent Shire in strategy game, but we have nothing behind superficial "it's like old, rural, unspoilt England".Purple wrote:I always thought Bilbo to be a rich heir, sort of like Paris Hilton. Except not nasty and from a family that got rich way back in history so far back that it might as well not matter. There are plenty of people in our world who are 5+ generations removed from the ancestor that made them rich.We have mention he was from rich family, rich thanks to what exactly?
That's not tactics. That's just showing unit formation or mention "Heroes are too weak to attack directly, so they just harass Enemy until protagonist shows up". You can maybe create some sort of unit roster from that, but it will be patchy and again, you will need to make a lot of stuff up.The Romulan Republic wrote:Gondor is shown using guerrilla tactics/ambushing in Ithilian. Also, the different types of units it possesses are described in quite a bit of detail, particularly in the passage where reinforcements arrive at Minas Tirith before the Siege of Gondor.
Rohan employs a shield wall or something similar on foot and uses horse archers for skirmishing in addition to their classic cavalry charges.
Mordor and its allies, unfortunately, tend towards simply swamping the enemy with orcs, but they do have fine siege engineering.
I always took the reason to be "because someone long, long ago did something that made him rich but that's so long ago it might as well not matter." It's kind of like asking one of the European nobility what their ancestors did to actually become nobles. Who knows? Who cares?Irbis wrote:Yes, but again, rich thanks to what? Was his family big land owners? Investors in local craftsmen? Bankers? Traders? Nobility collecting taxes? Any sort of reply to that would be a big hint how to represent Shire in strategy game, but we have nothing behind superficial "it's like old, rural, unspoilt England".
That would require serious contrivances. The Orcs would happily wage war against everyone, sure. The Elves and Dwarves may dislike or even hate each other, but they're both too smart to go to war unless it's over something concrete, and they're both self sufficient as civilizations and neither are imperialistic. The hobbits are obviously out of the equation entirely, as they have no standing military whatsoever. When it comes to epic scale wars between multiple factions, and by extension creating gameplay opportunities, Warhammer is the richest universe in existence.The Romulan Republic wrote:I'm just upset that, if they're going for fantasy we can't get an official Middle Earth: Total War game.
Agreed, and indeed, the background fiction of Warhammer (and its GRIMDARK futuristic counterpart) have been designed and repeatedly revised solely with the intention of providing a backstory as an explanation (or perhaps, an excuse) for the featured factions to frequently, or even constantly, wage wars with one another.Eipok_Kruden wrote:When it comes to epic scale wars between multiple factions, and by extension creating gameplay opportunities, Warhammer is the richest universe in existence.
I know full well what he meant. It's just that IMHO he really picked the wrong example. He picked the one and only character for whom we actually can trace the economic linage. Even if that is the fact that he is a member of the local gentry whose family has been rich since forever he is actually the one character we do know off.Cykeisme wrote:Regarding the offshoot topic
You can track his family lineage, but where do you get 'economic'? All we know is that Bilbo's family has been around for a long time. That's it. Nothing about what they did. More distant ancestors like the Tooks have a little more detail, like Bullroarer Took killing the goblin chief Golfimbul, but that's about it. Literally, all we know is that they've lived in the Shire a long time, as all the Hobbits apparently have.Purple wrote:I know full well what he meant. It's just that IMHO he really picked the wrong example. He picked the one and only character for whom we actually can trace the economic linage. Even if that is the fact that he is a member of the local gentry whose family has been rich since forever he is actually the one character we do know off.Cykeisme wrote:Regarding the offshoot topic
Hmm. Might even considering playing this game out in that case.Elheru Aran wrote:Re Bilbo: His family has a long history in the Shire and are basically semi-aristocracy, but in Tolkien's perfect world (pretty much the Shire) that was all they needed to be well off, really. He just never bothered to go into any detail about why or how, that's just how it was and he'd much rather write more claptrap about Elves singing another damn song, thank you very much...
Anyway.
RR, WHFB is actually less grimdark (ish) than 40K. I mean, sure, there's still plenty of skulls (hell, the Tomb Kings even use them as ammunition), but it's a bit more tongue in cheek and there's an actual notion-- at least until they started the Time of Ending-- that some day the 'good' side might actually manage to win by kicking Chaos's, the Undead and the Skaven's collective arses. It's less "WE ARE ALL DOOMED" and a little more "We might be doomed, now send in the Reiksguard and tell the Volley Gun to hit those Beastmen on the right because we are NOT going down without a fight, by Sigmar!"