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Wildman with coins battle brother
Wildman with coins battle brother











wildman with coins battle brother wildman with coins battle brother

He can also double brotate people and shuffle the front line as need be. Polearm build and brotate, that way I can rotate in if someone is in trouble, and either take the hits for him. I build him fat, with bags and belts, he has nets, and plenty of bandages should someone need it. He has lots to do, he keeps people from breaking, and the passive buff pushes them up to +10% to all attack/def skills quite often. Most of my campaigns have not survived the loss of a bannerman. Not usually against goblins, brigands, or big beasts without hexxen. Usually if there is an orc warlord, undead priest. The banner also increases resistance to sleep and charm for everybody in range.Ī fight where I expect to get surrounded or the enemy attacks resolve in any way generally means they get fielded. Their main purpose is really to have everybody else confident if things are going well, and steady or wavering if a lot of resolve issues are going on. Melee attack matters but not as much as a regular back-liner. They get max resolve and I favor fatigue even more than usual. They are especially useful against alps and hexxen in their own right. The banner itself is pretty mediocre when compared to other polearms or a range unit and so I find myself benching the banner in everything except zombies, beasts, and "unknown" forts to use more useful units.ĭo you guys think the passive resolve buff is worth fielding him in other battles anyway? How often do you field him, and what is your build like? Originally posted by turtle225:I'm fairly comfortable with most of my builds except for the bannerman.













Wildman with coins battle brother