I don't know If maybe the English Feudal Knight should have yellow instead of white on his surcoat, but other than that, Its mind-bogglingly good! I'm beginning to wonder wether my PC can handle this when it's finished
I don't know If maybe the English Feudal Knight should have yellow instead of white on his surcoat, but other than that, Its mind-bogglingly good! I'm beginning to wonder wether my PC can handle this when it's finished
Actually I have a question to ask everyone: If anyone goes to a particularly medieval town, like York in England, or some places in Germany or France, could people take some photos, as I was wondering if we could map such photos onto the building textures to get realistic looking medieval buildings on the campaign map.
Hey, check these out. http://www.terragalleria.com/picture...-architecture/
Yes, thats a very good link, thanks
OK,but not now,leave them to the last.
making buidings takes much time,not only to create the models,but also organizing the settlement_plans (positions of the buildings in the settlements).
so lets focus on the units,we complete all the new units first and then the buildings.
Of course. What I really meant was apply those textures to the existing models and see what It looks like, but It is really unimportant compared to the units, as they are what players will see the most of.
yea,i know what you meant,dont worry.
i was talking to Morf,he's always enthusiast to make new works
OK
ooh! Hobilars, sounds good morf
hey men,what are the Hobilars? light cavalry?
CTW's unit description for Hobilars:
These mercenaries from Ireland offer their services as medium cavalry to both the English and the French. Equipped with lances and padded armour, their swift ponies can outrun most of the heavier cavalry. Like most mercenaries they are experienced and have access to good equipement.
Hobilars were not ALL Irish, so that could be clarified. 'Hobilar' came to be a term more used in France than anywhere else.
Also, remember that France was the birthplace of Feudalism and Chivalry, and french terms were in Norman-French conquered England and elsewhere.
French cavalry was slightly better than English/Norman cavalry and Spanish cavalry was also very good. The French and Spanish also had a much higher of proportion of cavlry to infantry, and in the frontier/border regions of Spain military colonies and villages were founded and the commoners living in them served as soldiers both horse and foot. These light troops, whether Christian or Muslim, were good.
Chris
take your time Morf