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What about actual swashbuckling? As in using the buckler shield to make it hard to read attacks? In fact what will attacking look like? Is it going to be the same 4D type bollocks or something new and inventive?
I don't know enough
Currently there are eight attack directions I think... but why dont you just play? Game is working-ish if you want to smash bots, don't know if hosting locally is working atm but it was...
Q: Will there be any emotions? Like hand shake or dance? Shaking head with spamming RMB and hugs with fist hit are awesome but still.
I've been campaigning for emotes since the beginning, there's a ton of ideas for them and I hope we get to implement every single one.
For all the non-believers, look no further than this thread for proof that while strat battles are won/lost in NA3/EU3, strat wars are won and lost on the forums.
latviano told me that you guys need some help with subtitles stuff. I'm from spain and I can help with the translation. Send me a PM ;)
Will there be battle bugles and lines of trumpeters?
During the first half of the Middle Ages, music was found in the courts and churches of Europe but not on the battlefield. The Crusades changed that, as they did so much else. Impressed by the Saracens' use of military bands as both a means of instantly transmitting orders to distant formations and as a weapon of fear and affray, as Bartholomaeus Anglicus expressed it in the 13th century, the Christian knights soon emulated them. Among the Saracen instruments adapted were the anafil, a straight, valveless trumpet; the tabor, a small drum, sometimes snared; and the naker, a small, round kettledrum, usually deployed in pairs. The earliest mention of their use in combat appeared in Itinerarum Regis Anglorum Richardi I, a history of the Third Crusade published in 1648. In one battle fought in Syria in 1191, it describes trumpet calls being used to signal the start and recall of a Christian cavalry charge.When veteran Crusaders returned to Europe, they brought instruments and ideas with them. As they were absorbed into various feudal or mercenary armies, the use of martial music spread rapidly. Such music also acquired new modifications, as different soldiers adapted it to their local tastes and practical needs. To the trumpets and drums were added shawms (early double-reed wind instruments) and bagpipes. Bands accompanied armies on campaign, played aboard ships or added their pomp to tournaments, festivals and other court functions.
You are a horrible human being clockwork.