I accidentally made my opponent forfeit a fight in support of themselves!
During school, when I was "testing" with different substances, I would frequently mess around while impaired. One evening, I chose to play one of my #1 games, Total War: Shogun 2, and stupidly began a serious multiplayer coordinate while stoned.
Absolute War: Shogun 2, like different games in the Total War franchise, has players controlling huge militaries on the combat zone and duking it out continuously.
For multiplayer matches, every player is given a spending plan to restrict the number of units they can place in their military. The expense of a unit in the military is subject to its solidarity and uniqueness. For instance, having a little unit of unbelievable samurai will cost equivalent to placing 4–5 regiments of feeble laborer infantry in your military.
In this match, I had spent about a large portion of my financial plan on costly mounted force units and uncommon ninja units, since I needed to try different things with their exceptional capacity to go imperceptible for brief timeframes.
Nonetheless, because of my medication confused cerebrum, I rashly squeezed the "submit" button, which flags the game to secure my unit decisions. So I needed to battle my adversary with a military worth a large portion of the designated esteem, nearly ensuring my thrashing. Rather than relinquishing, for reasons unknown I chose to proceed with the match.
At the point when a fight begins in Total War, units that are out of the adversaries view or are covered up in timberlands don't show up on the guide. Players are just mindful of the places of their own units and those of the foe that has been found. This is to recreate how armed forces, in actuality, would utilize the landscape to mask their powers.
With a large portion of my ninja units covered up in the backwoods, I just had my rangers regiments sitting on a slope, well considering my adversary. They walked their whole armed force to my rangers, yet likely because of the way that they thought I was springing a snare, warily just sent a couple of units to manage my cavalry. Since my cavalry was on a slope, I got a colossal harm reward for racing into their units and squashed the underlying exploring power he sent.
Much to his dismay, I had no terrific arrangement to manage the remainder of his monstrous power and didn't have the foggiest idea how much longer my blade cavalry could wait.
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