Board Thread:Roleplaying/@comment-17114085-20150131101228/@comment-17114085-20150131190503

Pacman the great wrote: (No, they don't negate it, but they do reduce it substantially. Anyway, plains don't make you four times faster, particularly when you're on a forced march, where order isn't a priority and a quarter of the army drops out due to tiredness. Plains could concievably half your journey, not quarter it.)

The five hundred archers stopped firing at the archers and shot the Staleheart do likewise necromancers. The nobles and heavy infantry, who number about  four hundred, charged towards the direction of the firebolts, raising their shield for defence. The regular infantry, who didn't have shields, dispersed amongst the trees near the mangonels, ready to defend them. (Well that is what I said, you were the one that said it negated it. And now we've come full circle in the argument, this is exactly where we started. And I think we talked it to death. I honestly don't have either the patience nor the internet connection to continue this argument. As I am in my beach house so my connection sucks.)

(So from that troop count you have 500 archers, 400 heavy infantry and thus 300 regular infantry. As you still only have about 1200 soldiers like when you attacked Sungard.)

Riverwood archers continued to fire down on the soldiers near the town. Now that they have broken rank due to the battlemages attacking the infantry were easier targets to pick off due to the heavy infantry no longer having their shieldwall set up. Falkreath's forces started to suffer casualties near the town at a significant rate as the 200 archers fired down on them. (I think it was 200, or was it 300? I don't remember, but I know that Riverwood has 700 in total.)