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Warcraft 2: Battle.net Edition cheats / Warcraft 2: Battle.net Edition hints / Warcraft 2: Battle.net Edition faqs / Warcraft 2: Battle.net Edition solutions Warcraft 2: Battle.net Edition hints More Offensive On the Ground The Orc Ogre-Mage spells Bloodlust and Runes make the Orcs much more offensive on the ground war than the Humans whose Paladins have to rely on Healing and Exorcism. Healing does not make them offensive in most situations and Exorcism is only useful if the enemy has Death Knights. Bloodlust Bloodlust can turn one Ogre into the attack power of three. Bloodlust also triples the damage of Dragons. Bloodlust can allow Death Knights and Troll Axe throwers to take on Dragons by themselves. Bloodlust is almost always freely available once researched as there are often plenty of Ogre-Mages around to cast it and at full mana an Ogre-Mage can cast 5 Bloodlusts. Bloodlust is an offensive spell and is much more effective in increasing the attack power of the Orcs, than Healing, a more defensive spell does for the Humans. Bloodlust can often turn the tide of the game if the Human player is slow to Castle or does not build a lot more Paladins to compensate. Bloodlust is also instantly effective as the Orc player usually already has plenty of Ogres as the Bloodlust spell is researched. Healing in comparison only helps the Paladins out if they survive the battle. Orcs Are More Intimidating A group of Bloodlusted Ogres and the Bloodlust sound makes it a much scarier experience then facing a group of Healing Paladins. Although some might argue Human Invisibility and Invisible Blizzard attacks are much scarier. Runes Orcs have the unique ability to use their Ogre-Mages to lay down Runes. Runes can be placed in the paths of oncoming enemies to damage them and reduce their numbers before the two sides actually connect. Runes can also be placed in the middle of a Peon Mining stream to quickly take out a number of them. Runes can be placed around Mages to keep them from retreating. Combined with Bloodlust, Ogre mages are very powerful. Runes can also be cast on strategic locations to prevent invasions and attacks. This is one of the few spells that can actually cause an enemy to retreat at the sight of. Upgrade Prices The Blacksmith offensive upgrade prices for the Orcs are less Gold intensive. Gold is needed very early for Peons and Grunts, so it's often easier to have a mix of Gold and Lumber, even tho Lumber takes longer to harvest then a large collection of Gold. For the last offensive Orc weapon upgrade, the price is 900 Gold, 300 Lumber. Humans in comparison is 2400 Gold, no Lumber. Since Ogres and Grunts are heavily Gold priced (800, 600 Gold respectively), there is rarely a large collection of Gold built up. While it's faster to mine Gold than Lumber, quite often you have a collection of Lumber built up by this point in the game making the upgrade feel cheaper than paying 2400 Gold. Hasted Death and Decay Death Knights can cast Haste on each other to speed up the damage of Death and Decay. A Hasted Death Knight can quickly cast Death and Decay making it easier to attack collections of grouped units before they respond, and also increasing the chance the Death Knight will have, to fully cast the spell before being killed. The Death Knight can also more effectively pull off the "Mage Bomb" by casting a Death and Decay on the enemy then quickly casting Death and Decay on itself severely damaging and killing units that respond to the Death and Decay using Haste. Hasted Peons Although largely useless, Hasted Peons can repair buildings faster as well as mine Gold and chop Lumber at a faster rate. Ready for Battle Much Quicker As the Orc player gets to the Fortress/Castle Stage, they only need to build one building: Altar of Storms and upgrade their Ogres. A group of Peons repair-build the Altar of Storms to quicken it's construction which gives the Orc player an even bigger jump. Then after two short upgrades: Ogre-Mages, Bloodlust, the power of the Orcs are virtually tripled. At the Castle stage the Human player is more vulnerable to attack as they must alter the makeup of their forces. Resources are a big hindrance here as the Human needs much more before their superior magic can come into play. They need more Peasants and Gold to have as many Knights and Mages as needed to oppose Bloodlusted Ogres. Orc players do not suffer from this problem except when facing other Orc players with Bloodlust. Resources Humans sometimes require a lot more to effectively counter Orcs. They either have to build a lot more Paladins to counter the Bloodlusted Ogres, and/or build Mage Towers and a Church, Mages and must research Blizzard which require a lot of resources. Then they need to research Invisibility or somehow sneak Mages in to Blizzard Orc Peons. The Orc player often only needs an Altar of Storms to research Bloodlust. After Fortress The Majority of games against lesser skilled Human players can be handled using Bloodlusted Ogres. Prevent the Humans from building Mage Towers and Churches. Killing Mages Mages are very expensive, the best way to attack Mages is to limit the enemy's ability to mine Gold. If that is not possible, attempt to attack them directly using Bloodlusted Ogres. Cast Runes around the Mages and in front of them in the hope that they will walk over the Runes and be destroyed. Invisible Mage attacks There are only a few possible defenses against Invisible Mage Blizzards on the Peons. You can place Runes around the area, but the player will most likely walk around them or wait until they disappear. You can place Towers or Cannon Towers around the Mine so that once the Mage starts casting Blizzard he will be killed before his spell causes serious damage. But quite often Mages can find a perfect place to cast that is out of range of the Towers. Another option is to place a few Catapults around the Gold mine that will instantly kill the Mage when it appears. This also is usually quite impractical. The best solution is to wall in the town completely using buildings and walls. Invisible Mages cannot walk through buildings so buildings are the best bet at protecting against such a strategy. Mage/Paladin Healing combo Orc players often head straight for the Mages. Humans may Slow incoming Bloodlusted Ogres and cast a Blizzard on them then run their Mages toward your Guard and Cannon Towers. At the same time the Paladins beat on the Ogres backs, and also Heal the Mages as they are being attacked until the Ogres die to the Paladins and possibly Towers. For the Orc player it is best to attack the Paladins first as they are the ones Healing the Mages. After the Paladins are gone, the Mages will be without protection and more easily killed. Try a surprise attack. If possible, use Demolition Squads to blast your way or Transports to land your way into the fight from an unexpected direction. This can catch the enemy off-guard and unprepared to defend against your assault. Exorcism on Death Knights Try if possible to get rid of that Church before they get Exorcism. But if they do get it and use it correctly, you might avoid making any further Death Knights. Unholy Armor can prevent Exorcism if you need to make a quick hit on the enemy town. This will require more than two Death Knights. Fighting Invisible Transports Invisible Transports usually can't be Invisible all of the time. Often people with Invisible Transports bring them right back to their island when they are done attacking so watch their shores. Wait for the Transport to appear off shore or land back on the enemy shore then sink it using Destroyers. When you see units unloading onto the shore quickly cast Death and Decay where you see them unloading, use Ogres to place Runes around the the Transport. Build Towers out of range of ships yet still within range to attack units landing on the shore. Often the enemy will not have time to unload before you can destroy them using a combination of Towers, Runes and Death and Decay. Easier to Learn, Hard to Master The Humans are more intuitive than the Orcs. Their buildings and building names make sense right from the start while the Orc Buildings require a little more time to learn. However, once the Humans reach the Castle Stage, the player must be very good to defeat enemy Bloodlusted Ogres. Quite often, less skilled Human players are very strong until the Castle Stage when playing Humans well requires more control and strategy. More Strategy Some argue the Humans require much more strategy than the Orc player. The Orc player often needs and builds only Bloodlusted Ogres, while the Human player has and needs all sort of spell combinations, units and strategies to counter the Orc threat. A Human victory over Orcs that reached the Fortress/Bloodlust stage is often something to brag about because of the skill level and strategy required. More Damaging Attacks Humans can clear out any Death Knights with Exorcism, and can use Mages and Invisibility to destroy all of the Orcs mining operations. The Human player can then slow enemy Bloodlusted Ogres, and catch them without Bloodlust to finish them off. Mages can instantly kill any Death Knight or Dragon with Polymorph. The Orcs really have just one severely damaging attack, attacking with Bloodlusted Ogres, and Human players playing Orcs always know that is coming. The Orc player in contrast doesn't often have any idea what the Human player is going to do. This Orc player overconfidence and predictability can sometimes be their downfall. Upgrade Cost On maps with less Lumber such as Oil is the Key and Nowhere to Run, the Blacksmith upgrades which require less Lumber than the Orc counterparts can be a slight advantage. Healing Humans can use Healing to keep expensive units such as Mages and Gryphons alive battle after battle. If units survive an attack, Healing can make them brand new again. Holy Vision Humans can use the Paladin spell Holy Vision to spy on the enemy while the enemy can do nothing to stop it. Exorcism While the Orcs do not have a very good counter against Mages other than directly attacking them, Humans have several good counters against Death Knights. A Human player often has plenty of Paladins and once the Exorcism spell is researched, there is plenty of mana and Exorcism to go around. A Paladin needs only to get within 10 of a Death Knights to cast the spell. Orc players often stop building Death Knights once Exorcism comes out because of the fear of Exorcism. Mages Have More Effective Spells Than Death Knights All Human spells are useful for specific purpose. Mages have more spells that are effective in everyday playing. Death Knights have more "trick" spells such as Whirlwind, Raise the Dead, and Unholy Armor which really don't come into play as often. The only real advantages that Death Knights have over Mages is their one extra attack range and Unholy Armor, Hasted Death Knight "Mage Bomb" trick. While Death Knights can use Death Coil to heal themselves, Human players can just use Paladins to Heal their Mages which is much easier than trying to find an enemy to Death Coil to heal the Death Knight. Invisibility Invisibility is an exclusive Human spell that Orcs can do little to counter. One way to fight an Invisible unit is to use attack ground with Catapults and Juggernaughts and hope you hit them but this really isn't an effective counter and is something that is usually pulled off once in a life time. Runes can be thought of as the best counter to invisible Mages. Humans can use Invisibility with all sorts of spells and units to make nearly uncounterable attacks. One of the most effective Spell combos for the Humans is the Invisible Mage that casts Blizzard on the enemy Peons mining Gold. The Orc player can attempt a Hasted Death Knight Death and Decay attack but this is nowhere as effective as the Invisible Mage attack. Slow Humans can instantly cut in half the attack power and speed of any unit. One Mage has enough mana at full to to cast five Slows. Polymorph The Orcs have no instant kill spells other than Runes. Humans Mages can instantly kill nearly any unit with Polymorph, especially Death Knights and Dragons. Orc players sometimes get in situations where the enemy has Death Knights or Mages and they have no real way of getting in to kill them other than direct attacks with Bloodlusted Ogres or a complicated spell combo of Unholy Armor and Haste on a Death Knight using Death and Decay. Often the Mages just survive and Heal using Paladins. But Human Mages can usually clear out any group of enemy Mages and Death Knights with Polymorph. Using an Invisible Transport the Human player can land a Mage, pop out, Polymorph, then get back in the Invisible Transport and run. For longer distances, another Mage in the Transport can pop out, make the Mage Invisible, then the Invisible Mage sneaks in, casts Polymorph, then runs back to the Invisible Transport. This is very hard for an Orc player to counter. Walls and Runes are really the only defense against this and not an effective one at that. Invade By Surprise One thing you have to watch out for is alerting the enemy to your coming attack. This will give them time to Bloodlust. What you must try to do is get in there beating on the Ogres before the enemy knows what is going on. Death Knights Upgrade Knights to Paladins and research Exorcism. Using Exorcism you can easily clear the map of Death Knights in hit and run attacks. Basic Strategy Warcraft II is a Game of Production Quite often the more you resources you mine and harvest and the more units you produce, the better you do. If you find yourself falling behind in unit battles, try building more Barracks and Shipyards. Also build more Peasants to mine Gold and harvest Lumber. Take over multiple Gold mines so that you can mine more Gold. Remember to place your Town Hall properly so that can fit enough Peasants on mining and also will allow them harvest correctly Peasants Are the Key Peons and Peasants are responsible for all production. They are the most important units in the game and the key to winning. Quite often Peon management is just as important as controlling attacking units properly. Build a lot of Peons, enough to generate more than enough resources and keep them protected. Take and defend expansion positions to further your security. The More Peasants the Better Unless Gold is limited (small mines of 25k and below), the more Peasants you have the better. Just how many should you build? Many players build about 14 Peasants then stop. That will usually not cut it. You should have about 25 Peasants minimum. Keep training Peasants until you are into the Castle/Fortress Stage. Some say 30 peons will get you enough Lumber and Gold to do the job. Another way to find the ideal number of Peasants is to keep building them until you more Gold and Lumber than I know what to do with. How do you count Peasants? Count up your other units spread around the map, look at the food used and subtract the other units from the food used. You can also just estimate. Continually Training Peasants, Especially In the Beginning Train Peasants in a steady succession from the beginning. If at any time you have to wait for a Farm to train another Peasants, you are getting behind. Stay ahead in your building of Farms. Don't be afraid of making too many Peasants. If you find you have too many Peasants mining Gold, send them to another Gold mine to build a Town Hall or move them onto Lumber. The second a Peasant gets done training, you should immediately train another. You must try to keep this up through the Stronghold level and into the Fortress level. Now you can't always build Peasants, because you fall behind in food supply due to lack of Farms. You must try to minimize the lag between building Peasants. So keep building those farms and stay ahead. Sometimes, however, you must make a choice as to whether to build an offensive unit or a Peasant. You need to have enough offensive units to defend yourself. Keep a Balance Between Gold and Lumber You should have enough of both resources. If you find you have a lot of Gold, put more Peasants on Lumber. If you have lots of Lumber, get more on Gold. What often happens is you put too many peons on Gold and do not have enough wood but have lots of Gold. The same can happen with Lumber, lots of Lumber and no Gold. You must avoid both. Why? Because it slows or stops you production. You could have 30,000 Gold and 0 Lumber and you wouldn't be able to build much besides Gryphons, Mages and Footmen (all Gold only). Keep in mind that Lumber takes much longer to get than Gold so you may have a lot more Peasants on Lumber than on Gold. Out Produce the Enemy In land battles of equally powered units, control plays a big key, but generally the person with the most units and similar or greater upgrades, wins the battles. Each Barracks can only train one unit at a time. To train more units at once to form large offensive and defensive forces you need to have multiple Barracks. It's not uncommon to see high skilled players to build 7-10+ Barracks. Be careful, however, to only build Barracks that you can support. If you have five Barracks but are only training out of two, those 3 Barracks are wasted. Build extra Barracks when resources start to build up. To support multiple Barracks build several expansions. The same is somewhat the case on water maps. Generally two Shipyards are needed to quickly build up an attack fleet. Often players with only one Shipyard are not able to keep up in production against players with two. Keep Your Money Spent There is no reason at all to save up Gold and Lumber. Warcraft II is not won by accumulating wealth but rather instead by crushing your enemy. If you find you have too much Gold and Lumber, spend it on more Barracks, Shipyards, upgrades, Mage Towers, and offensive units. You can't always keep your money spent and you don't always need to, but keeping money spent is a good overall plan. It is often very embarrassing to lose a game when you have plenty of resources but just didn't bother to use them. Food To create a new unit you must have one Food grown. The Food limit of 1 is the same for every unit regardless of type or perceived size. A Town Hall provides 1 Food support, while Farms provide 4. Be sure to build enough Farms so that you will be able to create units when you need them. At the top right portion of the screen to right of the resource counters is a listing of Food Used/Food Grown. The indicator turns red when you have used more Food then you have Grown Keep a watch on that indicator and build more Farms as necessary so that you will have enough. There is no penalty for using more Food then you have Grown, but you will not be able to create any more units until more Food is grown or less Food is used which usually means some units die. Multiple Units on Only 1 Food There is a trick to allow you to get the most units out of one remaining food. When you have only one extra Food Grown left, train units from all of the unit producing buildings such as Barracks, Shipyards, Temple of the Damned, Gnomish Inventors. Once the units are started they will be created regardless of the Food used once they are finished. Using this method you can get quite a jump in units over the Food limit. For example if you have 1 Food left, then instruct all 8 Barracks to make a unit at the same time you can jump 7 over the limit. Freeing Up Food Space Sometimes you run into a situation where you need to quickly build specific combat units but you do not have Farm space, the time necessary to create a Farm or possibly the resources to build it such as you have run out of Lumber. In desperate situations, kill some Peasants or the most useless unit you can find to free up Food space for units that would better address the situation at hand. While this may seem an extreme solution to lack of Food it can help out in dire situations. Learn How to Control Your Units This is very important. For more info, look at Unit Commands and Controls as well as Hot Keys and Special Commands Upgrade Upgrades are key in Warcraft II. When using land units, quickly build a Blacksmith and begin upgrading as soon as possible. Make sure you Always stay a level ahead of your enemies in both ships and units. If you see they have level 3 ships build level 4 or 5. The same with land units, upgrade them in the Blacksmith. Every level you up upgrade ships and Barracks units Footmen and Knights will pay off if you have enough units. Something you should never have is level 1 Knights. Get at least one or two upgrades before making Knights. You can check the upgrades of your units without having to click on the Lumber Mill, Blacksmith or Foundry. Select a unit then take note of the Stop and Attack icons which will indicate the level a unit has been upgraded. Enemy units however will not be able to tell which upgrades you have researched. Level 4 for example could mean 2 armor upgrades and 1 weapon upgrade or it could mean 2 weapon upgrades and 1 armor upgrade. Don't Be Afraid to Lose Units While it's good to save any units you can for a later battle, do not become so protective of them that you are afraid to use them. Know How to Counter Each of Your Opponent's Moves What I mean is no matter what your enemy does, you should know what to do. Examples: If they keep Blizzarding your town, go find and kill those Mages. If people are Dragon making you, get out the Axe Throwers and Bloodlust. For every move, you should know the counter. Recon Is Key: Know What Your Enemy Is Doing At All Times If you want to know what to do against the enemy, you should know what the enemy is doing. This means recon. Recon is one of the most important things in the game. Poor recon is the usual cause of lost games. Perhaps you didn't notice the enemy had an expansion with no defenses, or that the enemy was building up a certain kind of unit, or that they were wide open to certain kinds of attacks in certain locations. Good Recon does not have to be delayed until you get Flying Machines. On land maps, send out a Peasant or Footmen to all the Gold Mines and make sure no one is building 2 Town Halls early. Recon is so important because you can often attack the enemy when they have no defenses early in the game. Place Flying Machines on patrol over Gold mines that you expect the enemy to expand to. Be warned that the enemy might not build there if they see the Flying Machine. Try if possible to keep it within view of the Gold mine without giving away it's location. Do a fly by the enemy mines and compare their Gold Mine to yours. Take note if the enemy is mining more Gold than you then build more Peons and place them on Gold. Keep up in the resource race. On Low and Medium Resources, Do Not Upgrade to Stronghold/Keep Too Soon The normal upgrade time for a Town Hall is usually when you have more than 18 or so Peasants. You can get into great problems if you upgrade too early. What sometimes happens is that people get greedy and want the Ogres/Knights just a little too soon. So they make a few or no Footmen and then upgrade directly to Keep. During this period, the enemy runs in with a bunch of Footmen and catches the enemy before they can build enough Knights to defend themselves. At this point you don't have enough forces to repel all those Footmen. Even if you do start making Knights, the enemy can position their Grunts around the Barracks so they can Kill any Ogres that pop out. This is a situation you do not want to be in. Skipping the Footmen Stage Some people decide to skip building Footmen and go straight to Knights. This really risky. Here are the trade offs. If the enemy comes in with Grunts you are dead. If they don't, you will get a lot of Knights and will most likely be able to overpower them. This might be something you might want to try on maps where the enemy has difficulty in reaching you such as Nowhere out of this Maze. Combine this strategy with a few walled in towers, or by walling yourself in, it might be possible to pull this off. The enemy may just bring in a catapult, break open your defenses and send in the Grunts. Be Very Careful In the Early Part of the Game The first 10 or so minutes of the game are extremely important. Any mistake or delay in building Peasants, Farms, or getting resources can cost you the game. You have to carefully watch each and every unit and make sure they are all doing exactly what you are telling them to. After your town starts to roll, this becomes less necessary and you can devote time to attacking the enemy. Lower resources starts require more precise movements early on in the game as they can easily determine the outcome of the game. You must learn exactly what to do for each plan and resource. Run Away! If you see yourself in a battle that you just can't win, run away. The happens when someone has a walled in Cannon, Guard Tower, or when the enemy has more troops. . Know when it's a good time to fight and when it's time to run. You want to run away if you are Human and see the Bloodlusted Ogres. If possible run with the Ogres following until the Bloodlust wears off, then turn and attack. If someone casts Unholy Armor or has a Flame Shield on run until this spell wears off. Don't Repair Buildings If You Can't Stop People From Attacking Them This is the most common Newbie mistake. If you have units coming out of a unit producing building, or have reinforcements on the way to save the building repair it. Repair buildings that are key to a wallin. Otherwise do not waste resources on a losing battle. Don't Repair a Building Unless You Have to Repair key buildings such as Black Smiths, Stables, Town Halls, but do not repair buildings without a good reason. Buildings are not destroyed by fire no matter how many hit points they have left so the only reason to repair a building is because it's important, or to require more Goblin Sappers to destroy it. Know Why You Lost Warcraft 2 is a game of learning. When you lose you should know why. By knowing why you lost, you know what you can improve on in future games. If you don't have a clue, ask the players who defeated you after the game how they won. Be sure to not accuse them of cheating but be sincere in your request. If they are nice, they will give you their input. Have your friends watch you play. Often they can give you good advice about how to play from another point of view and to correct your mistakes as you go. Offense vs Defense The best defense is a good offense. Don't spend too much time building defenses for your town. Be sure to wallin your town if possible. A huge defense may protect you from attacks but to advance in the game you need to attack the enemy town and prevent them from expanding. Instead of building too many Towers and Catapults you will have much more success building more offensive units, expand to more resource spots, upgrade, and attack. Quite often, people spend plenty of time building lots of Towers in their town which does not leave enough resources to build any units to protect all these Towers. Towers can easily be killed by Goblin Sappers, Catapults and Blizzards. You might want to build one or two Towers by your mine, or at most 3-4 Guard Towers but don't over do it. Building Orders Building Orders can allow you to build to specific units and buildings as quickly as possible. Building orders are very important on low resource games, and less so but still important and helpful as more resources are available. While building orders will not be listed here, many people are willing to share their favorite building orders on the fan sites. Placing your Town Hall When you start the game, find the mine first. Next decide how close to the Gold Mine you want to place your Town Hall. If you want to put a lot of Peasants on Gold, you should move it back a space from the closest possible building distance. Be warned, the further the Town Hall is away from the Gold Mine, the longer it will take the Peasants to mine Gold and return to the Hall. You will have to train more Peons just to keep up with the enemy who has their Town Hall closer to their mine. Do not place your Town Hall against the left side of the screen or up against Trees on the left side so that the left side is covered. If the left side of the Town Hall is blocked, the Peons/Peasants might pop out on the wrong side of the Town Hall or Gold Mine which will mean they will have to walk longer to walk to and from the Gold Mine. This may put you behind the enemy in resource gathering. The computer "remembers" where the Peasant Mined or Harvested, and will generally place the Peasant out to the left or right of the Town Hall, up or down depending on where the mine is located (occasionally, if the mine is directly above or below the town hall, they'll pop out above or below the Town Hall). Here is the reason Peasants sometimes will come out of the town hall the wrong way: The order remains the same as the pop-out order if the position is blocked, only flipped. What this means is that this is one example for the pop-out order: This will be the order of the Peasants if the Mine is to the lower left or below the Town Hall. usually is to the left or right of the Town Hall, but not above or below it. What happens if the Town Hall is up against the left edge of the screen in this case? The Peasants will pop out at position 6 - opposite the direction of the mine! The most basic of solutions is to build your Town Hall without any major obstacles to its left or right. However, you can also apply a bit of analysis and wisdom to figure out the safest position for it. When the Town Hall is this far from the mine you will need a lot of Peons to get a steady flow of Gold as seen here. This is very slow mining. Another Town Hall should be built closer to the mine. What If Peons Pop Out the Wrong Side of the Mine? Occasionally, the Peons decide to come out on the wrong side of the Mine away from the Town Hall depending on how the Town Hall is placed in relation to the Mine. When this happens, build some walls around the mine until they come out on the right side. Because the left side of the Gold mine is blocked by trees, the Peons pop out on the far side. Proper map making should solve this problem. If you insist on playing maps where this problem happens, build walls around the mine until the Peons pop out closer to the Town Hall. You can also chop away the Lumber to the left of the mine which will probably be faster and cheaper than building walls. Use Buildings As Walls Walls are cheap but they only have 50 hit points. Early on it was discovered that Buildings make much better walls. Buildings have more hit points, cover a greater area, can be repaired, and are useful. Farms in particular are often used as walls. One drawback of using Farms, however, is that they have 400 hit points which is exactly the damage done by Goblin Sappers. When using Farms as walls you must be careful to make multiple layers of Farms, or build actual walls in front of the Farms to make them less desirable as targets. Learn how to Wallin Your Town Walls Farms replaced walls for defense, but walls are still useful. Build walls in front of buildings to protect them from Goblin Sapper attacks as seen here around Towers as shown here. Use walls to spell out messages to your friends! Avoid Placing Buildings In-between the Town Hall and Mine Try not to place any buildings in between the Gold Mine and Town Hall. These buildings may interfere with the movement of Peons trying to mine Gold. If your Peons have to walk too far, or have to walk around some object to get from the Gold Mine to the Town Hall, you will get behind in resources. This is often enough to cost you the game. Keep the path between the Town Hall and the Gold Mine clear. A Farm in the way cause the Peons to be confused as to how to return to the Great Hall. A Second Farm build here fixes that problem. Buildings in between your Town Hall and Gold Mine hurt yourself much more than the enemy attacking you. Although the Peons may still be able to find their way back to the Great Hall, they will take much longer to do so which will get you behind in production. Keep Buildings Separated To make it more difficult and less inviting for the enemy to use Demolition Squads to blow up your buildings, place them a Farm's distance apart so that the enemy will need 1-2 Demolition Squads per building to blow them up which will mean they will lose more resources on the Demolition Squads than you will have lost on the buildings. When you place buildings tightly packed together they become perfect targets for a Blizzard or Death and Decay. Keep buildings separated so they do not become targets for Demolition Squads or Blizzards. Offensive Building When attacking the enemy take units from the Barracks then send them to attack the enemy town. The closer the Barracks is to the enemy the faster these offensive units will reach the enemy town. If you have a long distance from the Barracks to the enemy town they will be able to build quite a few units before your units reach their town. Whenever possible send a Peon over near their town and hide some Barracks there so you can quickly build units and send them into the enemy town. Some players go so far as to build the Barracks in the middle of the enemy town. You must however get them completed and have enough units to protect them for this to effective. Sometimes you see a person building a Barracks near your town, head over and start attacking it and destroy it because the enemy has nothing to defend it. That offensive building did not pay off for them. Only do this when you can protect the Barracks or when you think you can hide the Barracks. Hide Buildings When the enemy looks for important basic and advanced buildings often they look at your main town for them. Sometimes you can hide advanced buildings such as Blacksmiths, Lumber Mills, Ogre mounds, Mage Towers, Dragon Mounds outside your town where the enemy will not notice and find them. Using this strategy you can sometimes make the enemy think you don't have these buildings and that you cannot build certain units. They might catch on however once they see units that require those buildings but do not find the buildings that allow those units to be made. Hiding buildings happens more when you have lost your main town and are defended but can also be seen in normal play as well. The downside of using this strategy is that once discovered you must defend these buildings which are usually a long way from your towns and Barracks. 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