Hi everyone. I am new here, and have just bought MTW2, after playing RTW along with mods etc... And was wondering if you could change the unit size of units, as you can in Rome. The battles seem to lack the large scales that Rome had. Thanks!
Hi everyone. I am new here, and have just bought MTW2, after playing RTW along with mods etc... And was wondering if you could change the unit size of units, as you can in Rome. The battles seem to lack the large scales that Rome had. Thanks!
You can do this through Options -> Game Settings -> Unit Scale.
"People don't think the universe be like it is, but it do." -- Neil deGrasse Tyson
In Soviet Russia you want Uncle Sam.
But beware of pathfinding problems, especially during sieges...
"The cheapest form of pride however is national pride. For it reveals in the one thus afflicted the lack of individual qualities of which he could be proud, while he would not otherwise reach for what he shares with so many millions. He who possesses significant personal merits will rather recognise the defects of his own nation, as he has them constantly before his eyes, most clearly. But that poor blighter who has nothing in the world of which he can be proud, latches onto the last means of being proud, the nation to which he belongs to. Thus he recovers and is now in gratitude ready to defend with hands and feet all errors and follies which are its own."-- Arthur Schopenhauer
it's when your men run around into walls,get stuck and other stupid stuff. like rather than walk through an open gate they would rather climb up a ladder then down the wall stairs.
Exactly. The bigger your unit size, the more space it occupies, the more it gets spread out, the more often you have some stragglers left behind, etc. All this leads to more pathfinding problems. Which is already a pain in the :meep: anyway. Sometimes I just can't be bothered anymore manually fighting sieges because of that.
@Pallandiell: Danke![]()
"The cheapest form of pride however is national pride. For it reveals in the one thus afflicted the lack of individual qualities of which he could be proud, while he would not otherwise reach for what he shares with so many millions. He who possesses significant personal merits will rather recognise the defects of his own nation, as he has them constantly before his eyes, most clearly. But that poor blighter who has nothing in the world of which he can be proud, latches onto the last means of being proud, the nation to which he belongs to. Thus he recovers and is now in gratitude ready to defend with hands and feet all errors and follies which are its own."-- Arthur Schopenhauer