Unread postby Mytical » 22 Dec 2006, 09:35
Yes 1 black dragon is always better then 1 fury, or just about any other dungeon tier creature. That is why they are tier 7. Any tier 7 creature is greater (even if only slightly) then any 1 of any other tier no matter how you cut it. Never denied this, or that the dragons are stronger. I agree that the dragons are much stronger. As for the arch magi, yep I agree arch magi can neutralize the furies. That frees up your own tier 3 however. Since furies are tier 2, not 3, and no level 2 (well maybe marksmen but that wouldn't be academy) should take on the minos that just suddenly freed up because the magi are worring about the furies. See again that proves my point. If you target them, you HAVE to target them with a higher tier, or a spell (until and if you get the right skills/spells that can do it without targetting them). Targeting them with same level or lower tier creatures (with only a VERY few exceptions) is suicide. Now lets assume for a minute that if you have dragons your enemy has tier 7 also, but no tier 2 (because of the lack of furies lets even the playing field). Your enemy is going to target your tier 7 with his, and be free to do whatever to weaken the rest of dungeons army (or help his creatures defeat those dragons faster). So the dragons don't force the enemy to do anything really. Since they are magic resistant (or immune) no need targeting them with spells (so that means implosions, ect on the rest of your creatures, or mass haste/bless/ect, or well you get the idea). Also the dragons can cause your own troops harm (dragon breath), block key points for your troops (if not careful), and since they can not be enhanced by spells or healed they remain the same regardless. Not a bad thing, but lets look at the flip side.
Going on the premise that both sides have similar stacks (not neccessarily numbers, but if one has 6 the other has 6). So your enemy does not have tier 7, you don't have tier 7. Ok so you split whatever way you want, the matriarchs, the furies, whatever. Now they split their way, and the battle begins. Ok they know matching up their tier 2 (Only havens tier 2 would be an option) against your furies is suicide. So they are faced with a choice. Target them (with higher tier and free up the tier that would have been faced off by that tier or spells) or ignore them. Both are bad choices. If you are targeting the furies with your spells, that means the Warlock can ignore that and target your higher tiers with their spells. If your enemy ignores them then they get FREE damage. Uncontested, high initiative, free damage. Either way the hero is good. Do you target the furies to stop that free (uncontested) damage, or do you not and just take the losses. This is why furies are dangerous (and can be situational killers).
Warning, may cause confusion, blindness, raising of eybrows, and insanity.