u/DateNecessary8716

▲ 3 r/warno

Newer player - Is there a way to get units to adhere to treelines on right click drag akin to Red Dragon?

At this point, I feel like it MUST be a setting I'm missing.

In Red Dragon, you'd right click drag a formation and they'd semi-logically adhere themselves to the edges of treelines. I've found in WARNO this SOMETIMES happens, but also sometimes a tank formation of 4 will have 3 perfectly concealed then one just sticking out in the open willing the enemy to give it a go.

BONUS QUESTION:

Another setting I am confused by and can't find an answer through the tooltips, is there a "Don't fire unless fired upon" command? Because I see in rules of engagement we have things like defensive/passive and hold fire, but none of these address the concept of "you're a fucking recon unit, don't fire unless you're spotted, know your place". I understand I can turn the weapons off and I do, but upon the random motostrelki bumbling into bush number 364, I'd like my recon to not sit and wait till they die if I don't notice.

Thanks all (P.S. S.A.S are S.A.Best)

reddit.com
u/DateNecessary8716 — 16 hours ago
▲ 18 r/warno

After a full Army General long campaign, where I won, I still can't really figure out the mechanics of who joins a battle and understand it intuitively, can anyone explain?

Questions:

Googling said if E was attacked, "adjacent allied troops" can join in a radius. Great, but what is the radius? Is it literally adjacent, or a set distance, and how do I see that? Would A or even C be able to help?

It says they need an available amount of action points, sometimes up to 4. Does it "cost" these, or just need to be available, and upon use the usual AP cost is applied based on win/defeat?

I love Army General but I wont lie, I don't fully understand the strategy map.

i.redd.it
u/DateNecessary8716 — 3 days ago
▲ 8 r/warno

After a full Army General long campaign, where I won, I still can't really figure out the mechanics of who joins a battle and understand it intuitively, can anyone explain?

Questions:

Googling said if E was attacked, "adjacent allied troops" can join in a radius. Great, but what is the radius? Is it literally adjacent, or a set distance, and how do I see that? Would A or even C be able to help?

It says they need an available amount of action points, sometimes up to 4. Does it "cost" these, or just need to be available, and upon use the usual AP cost is applied based on win/defeat?

I love Army General but I wont lie, I don't fully understand the strategy map.

u/DateNecessary8716 — 3 days ago
▲ 3 r/warno

My VKK were directly adjacent to enemy artillery with no enemy forces in sight, 0/8 fatigue, 12/12 action points, but they couldn't attack, why? (Army General)

Is it because they're auxilary so can't be a main force?

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u/DateNecessary8716 — 4 days ago
▲ 0 r/FIREUK

Currently throwing in 3.5k USD a month into ETFs. (Working abroad) Every year I'll earn roughly 200 USD a month more, although will obviously be hit more by taxes. Currently have about £50k in savings and potentially £100-200k upcoming, but not counting those chickens till they hatch.

With my expected growth from the ETF set at nominal 7%.

I have my sights set on $1m in todays dollars, so inflation adjusted at 2.5%. I think that sets me at 15 years to $1m today, then just drawing down at 4% or less monthly?

Realistic or fantasy?

reddit.com
u/DateNecessary8716 — 7 days ago