Parachute Hamster Posted May 26, 2003 Share Posted May 26, 2003 Hi! Last night I was playing a QB with infantry only. It was a meeting engagement with thick fog and a large town. During the battle I was surprised to notice that while my regular troops can normally take some gun firing before routing, in this battle some of them were not even shot at and they panicked. I started wondering, if weather conditions affect troop's morale? It would be logical thinking about sounds of fighting coming from somewhere, and you can't see more than 5 meters or so. Could someone please tell me if i was right, or was it something else? Thanks! 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securityguard Posted May 26, 2003 Share Posted May 26, 2003 I posted a thread about this awhile ago, although I don't think anyone knew. However, its greatly shown in night battling that low visibility = troops freaking out for no reason. I've had my men retreat when they were not being shot at and ducking due to sound contacts VERY far away. I do think its modeled, at least from what i've seen. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Parachute Hamster Posted May 26, 2003 Author Share Posted May 26, 2003 OK, thanks. Nice to hear i'm not just paranoid yet 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Joachim Posted May 26, 2003 Share Posted May 26, 2003 Originally posted by Parachute Hamster: OK, thanks. Nice to hear i'm not just paranoid yet Worse than getting shot at without cover is getting shot at - from nowhere - without any cover in sight - not knowing where you will run to when you really start to panick... I had problems advancing veteran squads in 60m viz. After battle map of a Sov advance showed that in 30m viz the few veteran and regulars squads had reached and scouted the (undefended flags) while the bulk of the green force was on two heaps - err.. four heaps, that is - one of the two spearheads was split in those who panicked (100+), those who were in the last wave of that spearhead (150+) and those 300+ who had advanced into the sights of a single crack plt on 40% ammo. Now I know why the tiny CM soldiers panick in low viz. Gruß Joachim 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
securityguard Posted May 26, 2003 Share Posted May 26, 2003 Also, remember hamster, if your own men are shooting close, your other men will be frightened from their fire. I think the AI handles everything as enemy in terrible visible conditions. I've lost many sharp shooters to HQ's who thought they saw an enemy sneaking about. 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chad Harrison Posted May 26, 2003 Share Posted May 26, 2003 I experience the same thing in that bad of weather. Obviously your troops are spooked and it is my guess that either they were fired on and you didnt hear it, your own troops fired, or they could no longer see their hands in front of their face and so they ran. Chad 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ParaBellum Posted May 27, 2003 Share Posted May 27, 2003 Oh, night battles in fog are fun! I once had a Panzergrenadier platoon in CMBO sitting in their foxholes watching two US infantry platoons massacre each other while stumbling through barbwire obstacles. As the remnants fled in panic to the rear they were gunned down by the third US platoon. Enemy casualties: 50+ casualties Own ammo expenditure: 0 [ May 26, 2003, 07:35 PM: Message edited by: ParaBellum ] 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Chad Harrison Posted May 28, 2003 Share Posted May 28, 2003 Originally posted by ParaBellum: Enemy casualties: 50+ casualties Own ammo expenditure: 0 Is that a record? 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
MikeyD Posted May 28, 2003 Share Posted May 28, 2003 This isn't just a 'game' phenomenon. I recall one old WWII jungle fighter tell a story of how his platoon was strung out along the perimeter in foxholes in th dead of night. At one point he looked up to see a Japanese soldier peering down at him! He didn't dare fire his gun for fear of bringing down the wrath of God (his whole platoon firing blind in his direction)! He watched the Japanese soldier move from foxhole to foxhole in the dark then depart. A half hour later his unit received a memorable mortar attack! 0 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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