Forum Discussion
6 years ago
Scenario of attacking a grid formation of multiple bases where heavy support comes in starting 4th attack (which you would avoid).
Would the suggested strategy of attacking be something like this :
- lets assume you attack weakest base at N (north ) of formation - let's call this N1 base
- attack N1 3 times
- assume N1 is still alive
- then attack a base on South (S1) 3 times - distanced so calibration takes time.
If I come back to N1 after S1 attacks, all calibration from close by bases (that would have been active at the 4th round) are still still active, is that correct ?
Base alerted state ends up w/ defense being 100% repaired. So unless you made it to the buildings with your 3 attacks , you have gained nothing, can you confirm this pls ?
In an example like this, where you could not kill OR get to the buildings with 3 attacks, is there a smarter strategy to get the kill of N1 ?
Let's say that you attack S1 and S2 both at south ... w/ some time difference, say 10 seconds apart (S1 first , and then S2). I assume all nearby bases start calibration on S1. What happens for S2 ? Let's say that you never attacked S2 again, would the nearby bases start calibrating to S2 after S1 calibration is finished ?
More extreme case : let's assume that 10 attack bases start attacking 10 bases at the formation, with 1 second apart. Attacked bases are: S1, S2, ...., S10. Since S1 was attacked first, all bases start calibrating to S1. The attacks taken place during time it takes to calibrate to S1 is an advantage for all other attacked bases ? As S10 is attacked last, calibration to that will have to wait all prior 9 bases to be completed ? So in this case, there is some chance, you would be able to attack more than 3 and kill S10. Is that correct and is that the optimal attack strategy ?
thanks.
Would the suggested strategy of attacking be something like this :
- lets assume you attack weakest base at N (north ) of formation - let's call this N1 base
- attack N1 3 times
- assume N1 is still alive
- then attack a base on South (S1) 3 times - distanced so calibration takes time.
If I come back to N1 after S1 attacks, all calibration from close by bases (that would have been active at the 4th round) are still still active, is that correct ?
Base alerted state ends up w/ defense being 100% repaired. So unless you made it to the buildings with your 3 attacks , you have gained nothing, can you confirm this pls ?
In an example like this, where you could not kill OR get to the buildings with 3 attacks, is there a smarter strategy to get the kill of N1 ?
Let's say that you attack S1 and S2 both at south ... w/ some time difference, say 10 seconds apart (S1 first , and then S2). I assume all nearby bases start calibration on S1. What happens for S2 ? Let's say that you never attacked S2 again, would the nearby bases start calibrating to S2 after S1 calibration is finished ?
More extreme case : let's assume that 10 attack bases start attacking 10 bases at the formation, with 1 second apart. Attacked bases are: S1, S2, ...., S10. Since S1 was attacked first, all bases start calibrating to S1. The attacks taken place during time it takes to calibrate to S1 is an advantage for all other attacked bases ? As S10 is attacked last, calibration to that will have to wait all prior 9 bases to be completed ? So in this case, there is some chance, you would be able to attack more than 3 and kill S10. Is that correct and is that the optimal attack strategy ?
thanks.
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