There are some racial traits which unlock some tech from the start. On the other hand this saves only 6-8 turns and there is no more benefit from them. So I never take "Civic" and "Warriors" traits. And you?
But what if Civic (like Scholar gives +10% research) will also give +25% gold for all the game, would this be worth taking this trait?
What if Warriors will give Training tech and +1 exp level for all troops, would this be worth taking this trait?
Thus we have nothing for Warrior Caste trait. But what if it gives +10% to Attack to the race (like Lucky gives bonus to Accuracy and Dodge), would this be worth taking this trait?
I would expect Warrior Caste trait to give me some kind of 1-per-Faction-Academy that strongly enhances the units trained in the city it was build in. That seems more fitting imo.
Interesting idea but one-per-faction buildings don't help AI because it trains units anywhere.
Samurai - is the example of warrior caste. They could be trained in various cities. May be all cities should give a bonus? And what bonus?
If your basing your Warrior Caste changes on the Samurai than beef up the attack since samurai are known for there ability with the Samurai sword. Meaning offensive statss (attack and accuracy) would fit. But you could look at early greek states and think of the Warrior Caste in a more defensive thing like the Phalanx, meaning you'd want to instead increase it's defensive stats (defense and hit points).
While I mostly agree with the warriors trait, Civics has more benefit then just 6-8 turns. You can build a Bell Tower very early which is the highest early production building, unless you find a clay pit, for Kingdom. Empire with death magic gains oppression so you generally cap your unrest at 0, so you won't be getting the full benefit. The exception to this is if you take the rebels faction trait. I generally build the cleric first for the 2 fame points then the bell tower as soon as I can. The earlier the better.
Warriors - This is generally worthless in most cases
Warrior Caste - 1 level can make a difference but it's not that exciting
I don't think that +25% gold income would be worthwhile. Money just isn't worth that much in the game due to how expensive rushing anything is and how much it costs to buy stuff in the shop, with cheap items and low rush costs costing tens or even hundreds of turns worth of income. A 25% income bonus might sound nice, but it's only going to cut the time requirement for being able to afford something by 20%, and when we're already talking about tens or hundreds of turns to afford something, the difference there is rather neglectable - sure, taking 40 turns to get enough money to buy something is better than taking 50 turns for the same, but not that much so.
Better would be something like a small unrest bonus (perhaps -5 in all cities, or something like that), or a production bonus (perhaps +1 per material), or some kind of civic-minded demiwonder that gives -1 global unrest per city in your empire or something like that.
I also aggree with Illauna that Civics is better than you're giving it credit for. I wouldn't say it's great, but it at least unlocks something that's useful in all cities from the start of the game (Bell Towers, which reduce unrest, thereby improving production and research). The trait granting the Training technology doesn't compare to this in any way unless you're in a slower rush (get up an early fortress, build the structure unlocked by Training, build army, crush enemy).
I have long thought that Warriors and Warrior Caste should be merged. I would also suggest that, if you merge them through a mod, you should use Warrior Caste as the trait which gives +1 level to trained units and the Training technology, because to me a warrior caste is a portion of the population which is dedicated to training for warfare; an extra level and the Training technology would seem to suit this. If you want to keep Warriors around, then I'd suggest going with a flat bonus (e.g. +1 attack) rather than a percentile bonus so as to allow its benefit to be overshadowed by advancing technology. This would make Warriors be a better choice for a more aggressive early game, but perhaps not as good in the later portions of the game.
A past suggestion involving the merger of Warriors and Warrior Caste suggested that whichever trait lost its bonus should provide a wage reduction.
Other suggestions might be:
I'm sure if you look, you can find other suggestions, or think of some yourself. I would suggest, though, that you keep Warriors and Warrior Caste as traits which are of greater benefit in the early game than in the late game, the way they currently are, rather than turning them into something that's great all game long or which is of greatest benefit in the late game.
Just wondering, why does it make sense that they should only be good in the early game and not the late game? The only traits I ever choose are ones that are good long or good the whole game, so I wouldn't use it if it was only good in the early game.
I might use it if it was +1 Attack, +1 Defense, +1 HP per unit.
I do kinda like the sling idea, or maybe call it a throwing spear.
I could agree with this idea.
I like the merge suggestion for Warriors.
I also like a Gildar bonus for Civics, as that seems closest to the intention of the Tech. Although Joeball is right that the (Gildar-part of the) economy of LH is pretty flawed at the moment.
My big question about the Research traits is: do they count towards the cumulative costs of Research techs? If you start with a tech, Warriors for example, does the first research you do count as your first or your second research?
If it counts as your first, all the Research traits will give you a -fairly minor- bonus throughout the game.
Does anyone know how this works?
One thing to consider with civics is that i normally play on epic setting which means research for me takes considerably longer, so getting the additional tech from the start actually helps a lot as it gives me a good number turns advantage over the other players in terms of technology. Not to mention with it taking so much longer to research things my unrest (due to bell towers) is generally far lower than theirs during this time, meaning my production and income is more efficient during what is the most critical part of the game.
However if you don't play in epic than the advantage isn't as large. I don't know if i'd be as interested in it at that point.
I agree.
Merging Warrior Caste and Warriors is a good idea. Neither trait is that great and even merged they won't be that over powered.
I am not really sure that we are talking about what a "Warrior Caste" usually entails. A caste system generally means that society is divided into clear groupings and ranked against each other with relatively little potential to move from one caste to another. Usually, whatever caste your parents were in is what caste you are going to be in.
So there might be a caste system that breaks down like this:
Royal
Political
Warrior/Military
Engineer/Scientist
Trader/Merchant
Manual Laborer
Anyone in a caste can give orders that must be followed to anyone in a lower caste. With a breakdown like this, warriors would have a lot of power in the society it applies to. Obviously, there would be rules in place to prevent orders like "give me all your money" that serve to govern what sort of orders are lawful and which not, but the warriors would still exert a great deal of control over the comings and goings of such a society with a rank structure like the above.
Most societies don't even have castes anymore and even in caste based societies, warriors aren't usually ranked nearly so highly. Caste societies with rank structures like the above are most often found in lawless countries where local warlords who can rule as much as they can conquer. This occurs primarily in third world countries like Africa and former Russian territories.
In any event, if a race was going to have a warrior caste and count it as an advantage (like spend racial picks on it) then whatever the pick does should in some way reflect a rank structure like the above. Just giving some country a free military tech doesn't really accomplish that.
I don't know if it is possible to mod this, but a more thematic ability would be to make Warrior Caste give +20% to military research and -10% to both of the other kinds of research. That would better reflect the concepts that warrior prominence is above that of the economic and magic castes and they get to use some of that sway to force more research to be done to benefit themselves at the expense of the lower castes.
The game doesn't tell us if there are any different castes in the societies. I fell the Warrior caste means that the whole society belongs to Warriors Caste. Ithers who don't belong to it are outcasts.
I didn't find a way to speed military research and to slow others, but there is a personality Warmonger which makes AI sovereign to research more military techs. Trog sovereigns usually have this personality.
A caste based society never has everyone in one caste. That would negate the whole reason to have castes to begin with. The trait isn't named well, IMHO, but the only logical thing you can take from the name is that the society that picks the trait would have a specific warrior caste and give prominence to it.
It's too bad that research speed has to be the same for all 3 types. Being able to differentiate themselves that way would be pretty nice if races could do that.
The "warrior caste" trait is applied to the Trogs, who in the mythology, were a race especially bred to be warriors (vs. all of the other Fallen taken as a "nation" of sorts.) If you think of the entire Trog race as the caste, it kind of makes sense, i.e. it's the "Trog caste - good for warriors, nothing else."
Looking a how most people are interpreting it, and the de facto state that the former empire combining all of the Fallen is no more, it might have made more sense to call it "Warrior Culture", "Warrior Doctrine", "Savage Society" or something else that doesn't imply all of the other things that go along with caste.
Warrior Culture or Savage Society would be better for what you are describing.
Still, it wouldn't make sense for every member of a certain race to be a warrior.
In the real world there are a lot of organizations one might say has a warrior culture, like the U.S. Marines. They say every Marine's first job is to be a warfighter and their second job is whatever they do outside of battle (cook, IT, administrative, etc). There are also various commando kind of groups where everyone carries a rifle and one person has comm equipment, another explosives, and so on.
You can't really take that concept very far, though. The active duty Marines account for less than 300,000 people out of more than 300,000,000 Americans and that is one of the largest "warrior cultures" you are going to find.
There would be no way you could apply that to, say, all of America. If every man, woman, and child in America was a warrior then all of society would collapse as nothing else ever gets done.
No matter how you slice it, societies need laborers, traders/merchants, scientists/researchers, technicians/engineers, and so on in order to function.
I could see the Yithril having a straight up warrior caste where the warriors make the majority of important decisions for the whole culture and it sounds reasonable based on what I know about them, just free Training isn't going to really do anything to show that in game.
If it is just that their race is more hardy than usual or something then they could get a + to HP/unit, or if they spend a lot of time training with weapons growing up they could have +1 attack per unit or +10% attack or something.
The free training technology just isn't a great way to convey what it sounds like everyone means.
Some countries have proffessional armies, some countries have recruit armies. In these countries every male should serve in army for some period and thus gain some army experience.
@Raiddinn - the U.S. (which is what I assume you mean by "America") is not really a good model for the in game cultures, nor are really any modern nation-states; these are supposed to represent relatively small societies of survivors from a global magical apocalypse who are just piecing back society together. However, for some examples of modern day cultures that enforce more or less universal military training, see Switzerland:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Swiss_Armed_Forces
...and Israel:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Israel_Defense_Forces#Service
If you wanted a closer analogy to what the game might be thinking of, though, you'd probably look at tribal societies that equate being a warrior with gaining full stature within the tribe, such as the Maasai:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maasai_people#Social_organization
Either way, I think the concept is that the general culture provides a higher baseline level of fighting knowledge and competence, so that taking any random recruits is likely to provide a more highly skilled unit vs. green recruits from other cultures.
All that said, I think there are probably many ways to represent this in-game, and probably any minor fighting bonus would approximate it well enough for game purposes. The main question for webusver's initiative is whether the existing traits are balanced, which doesn't really get into how "realistic" the trait is.
I agree, this is an excellent description of the similarities between Earth and the player's (and AIs') initial settlements in FE?EH. However, a 'successful' settlement soon grows into multiple settlements and becomes a kingdom or empire (in game lingo). The early model based on a tribal style culture does give way (evolve? devolve?) into larger and more complex societal structures. Perhaps the historical stage where city states are in competition with a newly rising stronger-city-state attempting to extend its influence and control neighboring city states might be a good model to use?
Without trying to force this game into a detailed simulation (which it's not), if you wanted an example of an evolving city-state with a "warrior culture" you could perhaps look at Sparta.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spartan_army
Getting back on-topic, some things that might be alternatives for a revamped "Warriors" or "Warrior Caste" faction trait could include (either in addition to or instead of the minor +Attack/+Defense/+Init bonuses mentioned above):
Thanks to everybody for suggestions!
I've added these features to Patchwork mod https://forums.elementalgame.com/450250/page/2/#3427839
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