Difference between revisions of "Sceptre of Fire"

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(Campaign Strategy)
(Caverns of Flame is a very different scenario these days than what it used to be, so rewriting this section)
 
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==Campaign Strategy==
 
==Campaign Strategy==
  
You fight this campaign almost entirely with the four classic dwarven units: fighter, thunderer, scout and guardsman. Healers are entirely missing, and villages become a key resource for army regeneration. Given the circumstances, your levelling strategy should lean strongly to the offensive.
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You fight this campaign almost entirely with the four classic Dwarven units: Fighter, Thunderer, Scout and Guardsman (and their leveled versions). ''Healers are entirely missing'', and villages become a key resource for army regeneration. Given the circumstances, your leveling strategy should lean strongly to the offensive.
  
In the many scenarios, the village distribution is strongly biased against you, and conquering a village cluster is the key to victory. Your main opponents are trolls, other dwarves and elves, and you are mostly fighting in caverns and mountains.  
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In the many scenarios, the village distribution is strongly biased against you, and conquering a village cluster is the key to victory. Your main opponents are Trolls, other Dwarves and Elves, and you are mostly fighting in caverns and mountains.  
  
In this campaign, Dwarvish Fighters can advance to Runesmiths as well as Steelclads. Runemasters are useful overall and absolutely essential for forcing the caves of the Shorbear clan, and you should consider training at least one or two of them in addition to the two that join you. Dwarvish Lords are critical for the rearguard action against Berserkers in "The Dragon", and it is wise to have at least three of them in your army.
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In this campaign, Dwarvish Fighters can advance to Runesmiths as well as Steelclads. Runemasters are useful overall and absolutely essential for forcing the caves of the Shorbear clan, and you should consider training at least one or two of them in addition to the two that join you. However - don't level Rugnur (your first leader, starting as an L1 Fighter) into a Runesmith - as their HP is much lower than their corresponding plain-fighter (Runesmith vs Steelclad, Runemaster vs Lord). Dwarvish Lords are critical for the rearguard action against Berserkers in [[#The Dragon]], and it is wise to have at least three of them in your army.
  
The guardsman line is only useful early on, since their pierce attack is useless against trolls and too weak for storming the Shorbear caves or discouraging berserkers in "The Dragon". However, having a few of them on your recall list will be useful for the final scenario. Thunderers do their share as your ranged unit, and scouts as screening forces, but make sure to keep a strong emphasis on the fighter line. Once Thursagan joins you, make it a priority to level him up all the way up to a Dwarvish Arcanister; he's the only unit able to do it, and by doing so he will become a truly frightening unit for your enemies.
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The Guardsman line is only useful early on, since their pierce attack is useless against trolls and too weak for storming the Shorbear caves or discouraging Berserkers in "The Dragon". However, having a few of them on your recall list will be useful for the final scenario. Thunderers do their share as your ranged unit, and Scouts as screening forces - but make sure to keep a strong emphasis on the fighter line. Once Thursagan joins you, make it a priority to level him up all the way up to a Dwarvish Arcanister (L4); he's the only unit able to do it, and by doing so he will become a truly frightening unit for your enemies.
  
[AS: I would agree that the fighter line is very useful for this campaign, but I would personally found steelclads more useful than runesmiths. You get Thursagan and two loyal runesmiths before you fight the Shorbear scenario; in my experience those three were enough. Steelclads are tougher and usually deal more damage than runesmiths—this is just as useful for the Shorbear scenario and more useful for the rest of the campaign.]
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[AS: I would agree that the Fighter line is very useful for this campaign, but I personally found Steelclads more useful than Runesmiths. You get Thursagan and two loyal Runesmiths before you fight the Shorbear scenario; in my experience those three were enough. Steelclads are tougher and usually deal more damage than Runesmiths; their attacks are just as useful for the Shorbear scenario and more useful for the rest of the campaign.]
  
 
==Scenarios==
 
==Scenarios==
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* Other: It is probably easier and quicker to defeat the elvish leader.
 
* Other: It is probably easier and quicker to defeat the elvish leader.
  
After a short dialogue, you have to get four caravans (five on ''hard'') to your keep in the north. This is a straightforward mission. Merely move the caravans towards your keep. Recruit two or three units for Rugnur and send them south at all speed (scouts work well here, provided you are playing on 1.7.x). Use Alanin to guard the caravans as well as you can, until they get out of reach of the elves. Normally, your human allies wipe out the elven attack before your troops can get stuck in, but if you can get some experience, all the better for the next mission. However, unless you want to try a very unusual strategy, you probably won't have the chance to provide much experience to many units. As mentioned, two or three recruits is probably enough, so you can focus your experience on Rugnur and Alanin.
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On this map, a road from a grassland area on the South-Western part winds North-East, through hills and mountains  towards a Dwarvish keep at the other edge. On the South-West edge, near the road, is the keep controlled by your ally, king Haldric II; you as Rugnur control the Dwarvish keep, and a Alanin, a Dragoon (Level 2).
  
Because the humans are so effective against the elves, you may be able to simply ignore the caravans and go kill the elvish leader. Remember elves are tough to hit in forest, so concentrate on picking off the ones who venture into the grassland and let the humans take their licks against the dug-in elves.
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You need to move 4 Caravans carrying silver (5 on Hard) from near Haldric's keep to Rugnur's Dwarvish keep, and use Alanin to protect them - against Elvish units coming from the South-East of the level.
  
[Thrash: In 1.8.4 on hard the above seems to be terribly out of date. The elves kick the human's butt and the objective becomes for the dwarves to kill the elven leader before the elves cause a loss.]
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The Elves are hostile to the Humans and the Dwarves alike and will attack on sight; they're also quite mobile, as the Elven Lord may well recruit a couple of Elvish Scouts. On the other hand, they're rather opportunistic and not focused on the caravans, and they're all L1 units. As for the Humans - Haldric will recruit a full keep's worth of L2 Swordsmen and Longbowmen (on Medium), and even dispatch one of his Royal Guard units, to fight the elves.
  
Don't waste time moving your dwarves to the elvish keep. Glildur receives a significant amout of gold around turn 10, allowing him to recruit wave after wave of new elves to fight you, and it can get unmanageable if you let him recruit with impunity by then.
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The Human-Elf confrontation plays out in one of two ways - both leading to the same strategy:
  
[WvA: On medium it is quite possible to beat the elves. Recruit maximally, I recruited two thunderers and the rest scouts, but fighters can probably also make it in time. Use Alanin to get the unclaimed villages and move the wagons mostly north. The humans should engage the elves, but if an opportunity arises to get a free kill or if an elf moves north: take the kill. When the dwarven army arrives the elven resistance should be broken. Help mop up the elves and get some experience, but the most important is to get to the elven castle. By turn 10 you need to have all 6 squares occupied to prevent the elf leader recruiting. Then kill him. I scored one thunderer hit and then hacked away at him. I didn't get a lot of XP out of it, but still have 5 units >10 and Alanin has 27 XP due to stealing some kills from the humans, and most importantly I start the second scenario with 285 gold, almost 100 more than what I got from running the caravans]
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* If the Humans have the advantage, you can take it slow with the Caravans, keeping them out of harm's way, and consider an assassination attempt against the Elven Lord, with several Dwarf Scouts (for the extra speed). Alanin will be able to do more fighting and village-grabbing as the Caravans are safe.
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* If the Elves have an advantage, then - when they wipe out the Humans, your Caravans will be in big trouble, since around Turn 10 the Elvish Lord gets a gold boost and will recruit heavily. In this case it is again best to opt for an assassination so that the Elvish troops don't have the time to attack the Caravans.
  
[Mal Shubertal: On hard, I was able to kill the elf leader on turn 10 by recruiting only scouts. Unlike thunderers or fighters, they were able to reach the battle while most of the human units were still alive, and make the elves fight on two fronts. Then the remaining humans helped finish off the leader.
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On Medium (and probably on Easy) [v1.13.10], it's the former case: Your Human allies wipe out the Elvish forces attack before your Dwarf troops can get in on the action. Assassinating the Elf Lord will not be difficult, so 2-3 recruits and Rugnur should be enough. You may have to face an odd Elvish unit which is sent Northwards to scout or as a perimeter guard. On Hard, it's the second case; and you may want more recruits to overcome any interruptions. It's possible to achieve this with Scouts only.
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Alternatively, you could focus on the Caravans' safety Use Alanin to guard the Caravans as best possible - mostly restricting the movement of units, de-motivating an attack; actually engage only if it's  necessary, or if you're certain Alanin stays healthy enough and other attackers will not outflank you next turn. Your Dwarvish recruits should move South-West as fast as possible (again, Scouts might be relevant), and when they reach the Caravans you're basically safe for the rest of the way.
  
 
=== Closing The Gates ===
 
=== Closing The Gates ===
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[Comment: Killing all the Elves outside will also successfully end the scenario. It is quite possible to do so (v.1.11.6 - medium difficulty).
 
[Comment: Killing all the Elves outside will also successfully end the scenario. It is quite possible to do so (v.1.11.6 - medium difficulty).
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=== Reaching the Runecrafter ===
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* '''Objective''': Reach the other end of the cave map with Alanin, Rugnur and Baglur.
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* '''Lose if''': Rugnur, Alanin, or Baglur die or time runs out.
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* '''Turns''': 16 (on Medium difficulty).
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* '''Starting units''': Rugnur, Baglur, Alanin.
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This is a small cave map which you must cross, South to North. You are beset by two enemy forces, led by an L1 Goblin and an L2 Orcish Warrior. All castles are small in this scenario: You have three hexes to recruit in, the L2 Orc has three, and the Goblin has a mere two. The cave path splits: One side reaches the Orc, through mushrooms and a small lake; the other side goes North all the way to the target hex, but through the Goblin.
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The number of villages is quite small, so don't expect much beyond your initial recalls and recruits.
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The interesting feature of this map is the steel rail through running on the path North, with two carts along the way: A Dwarf can get in such a cart (using the context menu when on its hex), then travel quite a distance on the rails beyond its movement points for the turn - spending them either reaching the cart, or after disembarking, or both. Be careful - you may be surrounded by Goblins with Orcish units not far away if you take a single unit on a joyride too far from the rest of your force.
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Remember the Goblins are rather weak, so consider making it a priority to either get the Goblin leader out of its keep, or filling up his two castle hexes - which also provide good defense for your units. Moving in on  _both_ the Goblins and the Orcs at once is a risky affair, probably only relevant if you started the level with a lot of bonus gold; the safer bet may be to focus on the Goblins, and utilize defense bonuses against the incoming Orcs, while letting Rugnur, Alanin and Baglur move up ahead.
  
 
=== Searching for the Runecrafter ===
 
=== Searching for the Runecrafter ===
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* Starting units: Alanin.
 
* Starting units: Alanin.
  
Your mission is to run south as quickly as possible. The elvish outriders would easily catch up with you and defeat you, if it were not for the huge help you receive from villagers. Every time you capture a village, two (or three for the first village you capture) new loyalists will come out to help you against the elves. You will have them just for this scenario, so you don't have to worry too much about saving them or leveling them up. If you level a Spearman, the best choice is probably Javelineer. Pikeman and Javelineer have pierce attacks (which are best against the Outriders) but the Javelineer has the ranged attack too.
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Your mission is to run south as quickly as possible. The Elvish Outriders will easily catch up with Alanin and defeat him, all things being equal - Alanin has 9 MP, while the Outriders have 10 MP and 11 MP for the quick ones. Plus, there are six of them (on Medium difficult) and one of you... in fact, if four or five of the Outriders reach Alanin at once, he's likely to be killed even starting out with full HP. An encounter with just one or two Outriders is survivable - but you'll have to make sure to shake them the next turn.
  
The main goal is to slow the elves down (which you can of course do by killing them). If a unit has 2 or 3 HP, don't attack with it. Make one of the Outriders waste his turn by killing it. Try and use your units ZOC and the terrain to slow the elves down. The Outriders are slow on ice, hills and mountains. If you have the option of falling back (or moving up) and combining two villages worth of defenders, that's probably a good idea.  
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Luckily, the stout Wesnothi Yeoman rises to the occasion, equipping L1 loyalist units and sending them out from every village you flag. 2-3 units will come out - Spearmen and Bowmen - to help you against the elves. They will, unfortunately, be mostly cannon fodder, so don't worry about keeping them for later in the campaign, or leveling them etc. They will have exactly one function: Slowing down the Elves.
  
There are two villages you can reach with your first move. Go to the southernmost one. This sums up the whole ''modus operandi'' for Alanin: move as far south as you can every turn. Deviate slightly to capture villages, but not too much. You will need most of every turn's moves to get to the outpost in time.
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To prevent the Elves from catching Alanin, the trick is to maneuver your village-supplied units so that their ZOC intersects' the Outriders' direct routes, requiring them to take longer ones and/or to pass unfavorable terrain (Frozen, Hills) to get around the ZOC. If you manage this consistently (which you should be able to - that's what the level is designed for after all) - Alanin should have no more than a brush or two with the Outriders.
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Use Ctrl+V to see where the Outriders can reach, and be careful not to ignore alternative routes you might have missed. Also, never attack with the villager units unless they've somehow gotten behind the riders; even then - better not to attack, try and flank them, and hope they attack you, rather than waste your unit's life to reduce an Outrider's HP. Only if you're pretty sure you can kill one can you consider an attack (and that's not very likely to happen).
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Note that the Outriders seem to be quite fascinated with killing villagers, and their presence is distracting; they're likely to take their time and kill any villagers one of them encounters rather than splitting up and having some riders go forward to catch you.
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On the first turn, you can reach one of two villages. If you're gotten the message so far, you know which one you want to flag: The farther one to the South.
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Alanin can and should reach the Southern Output by turn 10. You only have 12 turns, so don't get any funny ideas about taking detours or backtracking.
  
 
=== The Dragon ===
 
=== The Dragon ===
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* Starting units: Rugnur, Thursagan, Krawg, and Baglur.
 
* Starting units: Rugnur, Thursagan, Krawg, and Baglur.
  
Strong dwarves and elves will come from the west in great numbers. As the dialogue suggests, trying to make a stand in your initial keep would be practically impossible, and your only choice is to recruit as much as you can in the first turn, and flee by going east and then south as quickly as possible, through the zigzag path.
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The scenario name is quite the misnomer. While there is a Dragon here - you're not going to fight it and it has basically no impact on anything except by recruiting some annoying Bats.
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What you will face in this scenario is a swarm of L2 and L3 Dwarves and Elves hot on your heels which will come in from the South-West of your initial keep in great numbers, attacking relentlessly and mercilessly. As the dialog suggests, trying to make a stand in your initial keep would be practically impossible, and your obvious choice is to recruit/recall as much as you can in the first turn - preferring quick units perhaps, then flee by going East,  then South, and onwards through the tunnel as quickly as the zigzag path allows.  
  
You have to cover a lot of terrain, but the path is easy to follow, and at its end you will reach a small section where you will find the forge where the Sceptre can be built. That is a good place to finally make your stand. Until then, your job is to move quickly, dealing with bats coming from the cave, and dealing with the dwarves from behind. The elves move much more slowly so you'll probably deal with them later on.
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You have to cover a lot of terrain, but the path is easy to follow, and at its end you will reach a small cavern where you will find a forge where the Sceptre can be built. That is a good place to finally make your stand, as the entrance to the cavern is 2-unit wide with a fortification (castle hexes). Until then, your job is to move quickly, dealing with bats coming from the cave, and with the Dwarves approaching from behind. The elves move slower than some of the Dwarves, but will not be far behind - since they have Outriders (10 MP), and some of the tunnel has flat terrain in the middle on which they could make up for their slow Cave-terrain movement.
  
Regarding the bats, they would normally be just a small annoyance, except that in this case there are lots of them, so they are challenging in their own right. The best way to kill them is with Scouts' ranged attack or Runesmiths' magical attack. They are level 0 (unless you're playing on ''hard'', where you'll find some level ones) and so don't exert a zone of control. Khrakrahs the dragon might come out but there is no special advantage in killing it. Just move past it and let the elvish army deal with it.
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Regarding the Bats, these are typically be a minor annoyance, except that in this case there are quite lots of them, and they might block your path, slowing you down and bringing the Dwarvish enemies closer. They are, of course, susceptible to the Runesmiths' magical attack; don't worry too much about getting hit by them - just make sure you get the kill, or they'll hinder you for yet another turn. They are mostly L0 Vampire Bats - which don't exert a ZOC and can be bypassed; but you do get the occasional L1 Blood Bat (probably more of these on Hard), which you'll need to attend to quickly. Khrakrahs the dragon might come out onto his lava lake - but there is no use in killing it; just move past it and let the elvish army deal with it later. That also means you shouldn't get close to the edge of the lava lake, unless you miss the smell of roast Dwarf.
  
As for the dwarves coming from behind, the biggest challenge is that there are many berserkers among them, and there's a good chance a few of them are quick, so they'll catch up with you in no time. Try to leave Dwarvish Lords and Runemasters with good HP on the rear of your army to deal with them.
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The biggest challenge from the Dwarves behind you are actually not the powerful L3 Lords, but rather - the squad of L2 Berserkers. Individually, your L3 units and probably even your Steelclads could handle them fine; but once one of them has softened you up, the second one will move in for the kill, and his chances are quite good; not to mention what happens if a Berserker catches one of your Thunderer units (never mind which level), or an L2 of any kind. You won't outrun them all the way: Some, or most, of them are quick (5 MP), while some of your units are 4 MP. Plus, once they do catch up to you, they will slow down even the units they haven't killed. This is where a few good and health Dwarvish Lords are useful, to soak up that damage and not let them get to the rest of your force. Runemasters may also be relevant.
  
Once you finally reach the forge, you may choose to move Thursagan into it quickly, in which case he disappears and the rest of your mission is to survive for 9 more turns, or you can play it patiently and milk as much as experience as you can. In this case, don't move Thursagan into the forge yet, and make sure to advance him up to level 4 if you haven't done so already.
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After the Berserkers go out, the next dangerous chasers will likely be Dwarvish Dragonguards - which will be quite dangerous for the very units you had as a read-guard against the Berserkers. But - you're more likely to outrun them.
  
''Note'': Apparently this scenario played very differently in versions previous to 1.10.x, and the suggestions given by this walkthrough mentioned that the elves don't follow you. This no longer applies, and the following comments left here in the past by other players reflect that.
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Once you finally reach the forge, you may choose to move Thursagan into it quickly, in which case he disappears and the rest of your mission is to survive for 9 more turns, or you can play it patiently and milk as much as experience as you can (if you can manage without him for 9. In this case, don't move Thursagan into the forge yet, and make sure to advance him up to level 4 if you haven't done so already.
  
[Thash: Contrary to what this says, the elves and the dwarves did come after me in a big way after a few turns, but I was able to pick a good spot in the tunnel and hold them off by just plugging the tunnel - not attacking - and rotating wounded units through. Also be care of which units you send SW from starting point, beserkers can come running out of darkness and kill Krawg easily.]
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Notes:
  
[Sojourner: With WN 10.0 the elves and dwarves attacked immediately and relentlessly with level 2 and 3 units. I suggest running flat out until you're past the wide spot where you first see the dragon and then start delaying tactics while you race Thursagan to the forge. The best place to delay are the narrow two-hex choke points on the final SW run towards the forge. Make your main stand there. Expect to lose/sacrifice a fair number of units.]
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* Don't bother trying to send units South-West from your initial keep. They'll just get slaughtered (or have to escape but with their enemies closer by).
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* Sometimes, your enemies pause to attack a bat. Don't assume they'll always do that.
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'''Alternative Strategies'''
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* Some players recruit/recall several Dwarvish Guardsman, Stalwarts or Sentinels, which may kill a few of the Berserkers and hold the initial keep for a couple of turns before being run over, while other units escape further.
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* Some players pick a decent, though non-ideal, spot in the tunnel and just make a stand there, rotating wounded units.
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* Some players suggest - running until you're past the wide spot where you first see the dragon, and then instead of making a stand or continuing your run, starting delay tactics with some damage-soakers/sacrificials, while you race Thursagan to the forge.
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Expect to lose/sacrifice some number of units, regardless of your choice of strategy.
  
 
=== Caverns of Flame ===
 
=== Caverns of Flame ===
* Objectives: Move onto the glyph that makes the volcano erupt; then kill all the elves
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* Objectives: Locate the runic tablet of the guardian trolls, and destroy them
 
* Lose if: Rugnur, Thursagan or Krawg die.
 
* Lose if: Rugnur, Thursagan or Krawg die.
 
* Turns: Unlimited.
 
* Turns: Unlimited.
* Starting units: All of your available units, including your entire recall list.
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* Starting Gold: ???/160/??? (Easy/Medium/Hard)
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* Starting units: Rugnur, Thursagan, Krawg, Baglur and 3 other units
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(The extra starting units may be two Runesmiths and an Explorer; but this may change depending on what your army has; strangely, you may well have additional recallable loyal units but without all units in the starting being loyal.)
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This is the final scenario, but - you cannot really win it; or rather, you complete it by drowning all enemies, and yourself, in lava: You face three strong enemy forces - Elves, Orcs and Trolls (plus some monsters, see below), and even if you did manage to withstand all of those you are still stuck with nowhere to go.
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This is a cave level, but with some areas actually being polished stone. There are some side-caverns and a few 2-to-3-hex-wide choke points, which you might need to hold at different points. There are not many villages, and they are mostly far from each other - and far from most of the choke points. Interestingly, there are more than 7 different castles with keeps on this level - not counting Orcs'!
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To the right, on the North-East end of the level, you'll find the Orc encampment, led by a Warlord. Luckily for you, there's a chasm separating you from them, and the bridge crossing it has collapsed. It will take them 8 turns or so to rebuild it. Their leader has a massive base income (27 gold/turn on Medium) - and when they break out they'll be incredibly strong; but... you'll see that will actually be a boon for you.
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There's a castle just South of where your units spawned, with a keep and 3 extra hexes. Ignore it.
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As you explore due West, you'll be met by low-level dragon-like monster units: Wyrmlets (L0), green Cave Wyrms (L1) and Red Wyrms (L1). The greens have more claw attacks; the reds have more breath attacks - and they all have 60% defense on every terrain, with the L1's being marksmen. So despite the low HP of these units, they're quite a nuisance. They also spawn fast. Do _not_ try to stamp them out - that will keep you from advancing; and you _must_ advance South.
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On turn 6, your old frenemies are back to chase you: It's those pesky elves, with their dwarven allies. Glildur, their Marshal leader, will be accompanied by a major force of L3 units - dwarves and elves. On Medium, those will be: 4 Elvish Outriders, 4 Elvish  Champions, 3 Avengers, 4 Dwarven Lords, 3 Thunderguards. And - they will spare no time coming after you. Luckily, Glildur's elves are slowed down by the unfriendly cave terrain; unluckily, the Outriders will catch up with you pretty quick. Hopefully, you've gotten your units past the choke-point, Rugnur is getting to another keep, and you can mount a defense of sorts: If you can hold the Elves and Dwarves for a few turns, the Orcs will smash into their rear.
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... but actually, thing are about to go from bad to worse. On turn 9, the corridor to the left and just below your choke-point will start filling up with Trolls; the first bunch of them will reach your position after your turn 10 - and they will all be Warriors and Rocklobbers, not Whelps. There's a two-hex choke point of two hexes you could try to hold against them as well, but that will already be rather tricky, with not many options to heal your wounded units and few backups to rotate with.
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What this means is, that while all of the above is going down, you have to send forward some units to pursue the scenario goals. These units will explore the surroundings of the main cavern, located to the South-East of the two choke-points. This cavern has a cistern, or lake, of lava, with a hexagonal platform with six connecting bridges to all sides; and at three points surrounding the lave you'll find quick Troll Shaman guardians. These will not move except to attack you when you're within range; and while they're not terrible to overcome, their magical attack is quite effective - especially against Gryphons and their riders, who lack ranged defense.
  
You start with your entire army and won't have any real chance to recruit any new units. What you start with is all you get. The cave is populated by Trolls and a few Orcish Warriors guarding the glyph. Your job is to get onto the glyph and then kill all the elves.
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Note, however, that the island-platform is mostly a distraction. It doesn't help you complete the scenario as well.
  
After a turn or two a bunch of dwarves and elves appear at the mouth of the cave (so get your units moving). Just like in the last scenario the elves move very slowly so you'll fight the dwarves separately from the elves. Keep your force together. You face a lot of strong enemies and will need to rotate all your troops to prevent too much attrition. Take advantage of the fact that you are fighting so many level 2 and 3 units to level any of your troops that still can improve.
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While you send out units to seek out the tablets, you may want to fall back from the two choke points and hole up in the Southwestern cavern. It connect to the Troll forces' castle, but only via a 1-hex bridge; and there's a 2 or3 hex choke-point at the entrance, and a village nearby. That's more reasonably defensible - plus, the three other forces will mostly focus on each other.
  
One way to play this scenario is to move everyone to the westernmost cavern. It has a good bottleneck to hold the dwarves at and plenty of villages to heal. Once you are dug in, send Rugnur, Thursagan (who is an absolute badass now that he has the Sceptre of Fire) and a few other units south to the glyph. Kill the orc guards and step on the glyph. Once you do that you are instructed to kill all the elves before they escape. Luckily for you, stepping on the glyph also unleashes the Troll Warriors '''behind''' the elves. The elves have no chance. The trolls will quickly slaughter them. You can help if you want, but the end is inevitable. Make sure Thursagan and Rugnur don't fall in lava.
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One way to play this scenario is to move everyone to the westernmost cavern. It has a good bottleneck to hold the dwarves at and plenty of villages to heal. Once you are dug in, send Rugnur, Thursagan (who is an absolute badass now that he has the Sceptre of Fire) and a few other units south to the glyph. Kill the orc guards and step on the glyph. Once you do that you are instructed to kill all the elves before they escape. Luckily for you, stepping on the glyph also unleashes the Troll Warriors ''behind'' the elves. The elves have no chance. The trolls will quickly slaughter them. You can help if you want, but the end is inevitable. Make sure Thursagan and Rugnur don't fall in lava.
  
To keep Krawg out of trouble you can move him onto one of the lava squares. There are several which are only accessible/attackable by flying units. There are no flying enemies so Krawg will be safe.
+
'''The runic tablets'''
  
Don't worry about the Troll Warriors. They cannot get out until you step on the glyph. By that time it probably doesn't matter.
+
There are 3 runic tablets to destroy, held by...:
  
'''Alternative Strategy'''
+
# The Orcs, and it should get destroyed as they battle the elves, perhaps with the death of some of their unit. So it's likely you won't need to worry about it.
 +
# An L3 Troll Hero, in a keep on the eastern wall of the large cavern. Kill it, and tablet is found and broken.
 +
# The floor of an isolated hex within a chasm at the South of the level. Only a Gryphon or Gryphon Rider can reach it.
 +
 
 +
'''Other notes:'''
  
A much more direct approach is to simply ignore the trolls coming from the internal caves. Use a few units to slow them down (guardsmen are very effective) and move your heavy hitters south directly into the glyph chamber. Kill the guards as quickly as possible and take defensive positions around the glyph while watching the elves and trolls fight each other. When you're ready, step on the glyph and unleash the Troll Warriors on the elves. Then it's only a matter of surviving until the elves are slaughtered. You might suffer some losses, but as long as the heroes survive it doesn't matter. If the elves don't get entirely wiped out in a few turns, the cave will end up entirely covered in lava, killing everyone. Either way, you win and proceed to the campaign's Epilogue.
+
* There's nothing interesting in the South-Eastern cavern except for a book, which is not critical.
 +
* Keep Krawg out of trouble, as you need him (or another Gryphon) for the last tablet. So, make sure he's out of the reach of the Shamans - perhaps on one of the Lava hexes - until he can make his way to the Southern chasm.
  
-shadowblack
 
  
 
[[Category:Campaigns]]
 
[[Category:Campaigns]]
 
[[Category:Campaigns - Walkthroughs]]
 
[[Category:Campaigns - Walkthroughs]]

Latest revision as of 08:23, 21 August 2022

Campaign Strategy

You fight this campaign almost entirely with the four classic Dwarven units: Fighter, Thunderer, Scout and Guardsman (and their leveled versions). Healers are entirely missing, and villages become a key resource for army regeneration. Given the circumstances, your leveling strategy should lean strongly to the offensive.

In the many scenarios, the village distribution is strongly biased against you, and conquering a village cluster is the key to victory. Your main opponents are Trolls, other Dwarves and Elves, and you are mostly fighting in caverns and mountains.

In this campaign, Dwarvish Fighters can advance to Runesmiths as well as Steelclads. Runemasters are useful overall and absolutely essential for forcing the caves of the Shorbear clan, and you should consider training at least one or two of them in addition to the two that join you. However - don't level Rugnur (your first leader, starting as an L1 Fighter) into a Runesmith - as their HP is much lower than their corresponding plain-fighter (Runesmith vs Steelclad, Runemaster vs Lord). Dwarvish Lords are critical for the rearguard action against Berserkers in #The Dragon, and it is wise to have at least three of them in your army.

The Guardsman line is only useful early on, since their pierce attack is useless against trolls and too weak for storming the Shorbear caves or discouraging Berserkers in "The Dragon". However, having a few of them on your recall list will be useful for the final scenario. Thunderers do their share as your ranged unit, and Scouts as screening forces - but make sure to keep a strong emphasis on the fighter line. Once Thursagan joins you, make it a priority to level him up all the way up to a Dwarvish Arcanister (L4); he's the only unit able to do it, and by doing so he will become a truly frightening unit for your enemies.

[AS: I would agree that the Fighter line is very useful for this campaign, but I personally found Steelclads more useful than Runesmiths. You get Thursagan and two loyal Runesmiths before you fight the Shorbear scenario; in my experience those three were enough. Steelclads are tougher and usually deal more damage than Runesmiths; their attacks are just as useful for the Shorbear scenario and more useful for the rest of the campaign.]

Scenarios

A Bargain Is Struck

  • Objectives:
    • Move the caravans and Alanin to the dwarvish castle, or..
    • Defeat the elvish leader.
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Haldric II, Alanin or one of the caravans die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 24.
  • Starting units: Rugnur and Alanin.
  • Other: It is probably easier and quicker to defeat the elvish leader.

On this map, a road from a grassland area on the South-Western part winds North-East, through hills and mountains towards a Dwarvish keep at the other edge. On the South-West edge, near the road, is the keep controlled by your ally, king Haldric II; you as Rugnur control the Dwarvish keep, and a Alanin, a Dragoon (Level 2).

You need to move 4 Caravans carrying silver (5 on Hard) from near Haldric's keep to Rugnur's Dwarvish keep, and use Alanin to protect them - against Elvish units coming from the South-East of the level.

The Elves are hostile to the Humans and the Dwarves alike and will attack on sight; they're also quite mobile, as the Elven Lord may well recruit a couple of Elvish Scouts. On the other hand, they're rather opportunistic and not focused on the caravans, and they're all L1 units. As for the Humans - Haldric will recruit a full keep's worth of L2 Swordsmen and Longbowmen (on Medium), and even dispatch one of his Royal Guard units, to fight the elves.

The Human-Elf confrontation plays out in one of two ways - both leading to the same strategy:

  • If the Humans have the advantage, you can take it slow with the Caravans, keeping them out of harm's way, and consider an assassination attempt against the Elven Lord, with several Dwarf Scouts (for the extra speed). Alanin will be able to do more fighting and village-grabbing as the Caravans are safe.
  • If the Elves have an advantage, then - when they wipe out the Humans, your Caravans will be in big trouble, since around Turn 10 the Elvish Lord gets a gold boost and will recruit heavily. In this case it is again best to opt for an assassination so that the Elvish troops don't have the time to attack the Caravans.

On Medium (and probably on Easy) [v1.13.10], it's the former case: Your Human allies wipe out the Elvish forces attack before your Dwarf troops can get in on the action. Assassinating the Elf Lord will not be difficult, so 2-3 recruits and Rugnur should be enough. You may have to face an odd Elvish unit which is sent Northwards to scout or as a perimeter guard. On Hard, it's the second case; and you may want more recruits to overcome any interruptions. It's possible to achieve this with Scouts only.

Alternatively, you could focus on the Caravans' safety Use Alanin to guard the Caravans as best possible - mostly restricting the movement of units, de-motivating an attack; actually engage only if it's necessary, or if you're certain Alanin stays healthy enough and other attackers will not outflank you next turn. Your Dwarvish recruits should move South-West as fast as possible (again, Scouts might be relevant), and when they reach the Caravans you're basically safe for the rest of the way.

Closing The Gates

  • Objectives: Close the gates by having units standing on all six glyphs simultaneously.
  • Lose if: Rugnur or Baglur die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 15.
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Baglur, 4 Guardsmen (5 on easy).
  • Other
    • If there are any elves in the caves after you shut the gates, you must kill them.
    • Any units outside the caves when the gates close will die; pull your units back.

This involves hunting down some trolls and stalling the elves. Firstly, recall and recruit a substantial amount of thunderers and fighters. Move all your guardsmen down towards the three towers, those two glyphs can be easily covered near the end. Move a couple of thunderers down that way as well.

You have to activate six glyphs and, as you can notice, two of them are near the main entrance and easy to activate. You will find the other four going through the two main passages inside the cave—one directly south of your keep and one to the west. Send teams composed of about 3 or 4 dwarves (mixing fighters, thunderers and perhaps scouts if you like using them) down each passage, and focus the rest of your force on the entrance, resisting the elves. The terrain will be very advantageous to your army so the challenge should not be too complicated.

Once the trolls are dead, place dwarves on each of those fours glyphs. You will notice that there are a couple of small additional entrances to the cave at the end of each passage. Don't worry, turning "on" the glyphs closest to those openings will seal them. You might even shut one or two trolls outside this way.

Once those four glyphs are done you're ready to finish your mission. However, you might as well defend the gate until turn 14 or so, picking up as much experience as possible (try to get Rugnor at least to level 2). Then, pull all your troops back behind the gate (any left outside will automatically die, and those trapped in the door will be squished) and place soldiers on the two remaining glyphs.

[Comment: Killing all the Elves outside will also successfully end the scenario. It is quite possible to do so (v.1.11.6 - medium difficulty).

Reaching the Runecrafter

  • Objective: Reach the other end of the cave map with Alanin, Rugnur and Baglur.
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Alanin, or Baglur die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 16 (on Medium difficulty).
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Baglur, Alanin.

This is a small cave map which you must cross, South to North. You are beset by two enemy forces, led by an L1 Goblin and an L2 Orcish Warrior. All castles are small in this scenario: You have three hexes to recruit in, the L2 Orc has three, and the Goblin has a mere two. The cave path splits: One side reaches the Orc, through mushrooms and a small lake; the other side goes North all the way to the target hex, but through the Goblin.

The number of villages is quite small, so don't expect much beyond your initial recalls and recruits.

The interesting feature of this map is the steel rail through running on the path North, with two carts along the way: A Dwarf can get in such a cart (using the context menu when on its hex), then travel quite a distance on the rails beyond its movement points for the turn - spending them either reaching the cart, or after disembarking, or both. Be careful - you may be surrounded by Goblins with Orcish units not far away if you take a single unit on a joyride too far from the rest of your force.

Remember the Goblins are rather weak, so consider making it a priority to either get the Goblin leader out of its keep, or filling up his two castle hexes - which also provide good defense for your units. Moving in on _both_ the Goblins and the Orcs at once is a risky affair, probably only relevant if you started the level with a lot of bonus gold; the safer bet may be to focus on the Goblins, and utilize defense bonuses against the incoming Orcs, while letting Rugnur, Alanin and Baglur move up ahead.

Searching for the Runecrafter

  • Objectives:
    1. Reach Thursagan with a non-gryphon unit.
    2. Bring Thursagan back to the caves.
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Alanin, Krawg, Thursagan or Baglur die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 20.
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Baglur, Alanin.

Once you move a unit a little far from the cave, a loyal gryphon named Krawg will show up, along with a friendly Gryphon Rider. Thursagan is hiding in a village placed at random inside the map. You have to go find him and bring him back to the signpost in your keep. He won't follow a Gryphon, so you have to send a dwarf (or Alanin).

The monsters you'll face are Wolves, Ogres, Trolls and Woses. Maintain a defensive position in your mountain stronghold while your Gryphons scout the map to locate Thursagan's village, then send someone else to bring him back.

The Trolls, Woses and Ogres hit hard, so concentrate on killing them quickly when they reach you. Don't let the wolves flank you and get inside your perimeter.

It will be useful to recall/recruit scouts, who are good against woses, along with thunderers and fighters. Try not to over-recruit; this map won't have any other villages other than the ones close to your keep, and Thursagan's home.

Gathering Materials

  • Objective: Mine one gold deposit and two coal deposits (see below).
  • Lose if: Rugnur or Thursagan die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 40/37/34 (easy/medium/hard).
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Baglur, Thursagan and two loyal Runesmiths.
  • Other
    • To mine you must recruit a Dwarvish Miner, move him to the deposit and move him back to the keep.
    • The map is randomized so your map may play slightly differently.

The coal deposits are near the northwest troll and the southeast troll. The gold deposit is towards the middle. (The map layout is randomized, but the minerals are always in these areas). In order to mine, you must recruit a Dwarvish Miner, move him to the deposit and move him back to the keep. The mining can be done with just one Miner, but make it a priority to grab the deposits as quickly as you can. The speed of the miners will be of great help to keep them safe from harm, but still be careful and protect them whenever necessary.

The gold reserve may be the easiest one to snatch first, and maybe the northwest coal could also be grabbed quickly before you kill the enemies up there. A sensible strategy is to recruit about 2 keepfuls of units and get to the crossroad area quickly. The goblins are numerous but weak. The trick here is to hold the northeast against Troll Whelps and Ogres, the southeast against more Whelps and Rocklobbers and still have enough units to kill all the goblins.

The AI tends to avoid attacking your Runesmiths/Thursagan when they are on good defensive ground. You can use this to your advantage when clogging up passageways.

Remember to move your Miner to and from the deposits as quickly as possible. In general, the order of things to do besides that is:

  • Get your troops into the middle clearing and dig in.
  • Kill the goblins and their leader.
  • Kill the last of the wave from the northeast and reinforce the southeast.
  • Move some of your forces to finish the northeast leader and the rest to reinforce the southeast.
  • Push to the southeast (there are villages down here) and get the last leader.

The easiest order to get the deposits is probably gold, northwest coal, southeast coal.

Alternative Strategy

In 1.8.2 on the Steelclad (Challenging) difficulty the ogres and goblins fight each other, so you can let them weaken each other while you go south and slaughter the trolls there. Once you've dealt with the south trolls you can use the villages there to heal your troops before going north to finish the survivors (most likely the ogres, as the goblins are too weak). If you choose this strategy be careful not to spend too much time waiting for the fighting in the north to end.

[Thrash: In my experience the enemies seemed to prefer fighting each other instead of the player's units. If you just hang back a turn or two, they will starting fighting and then you can pick off weak units for XP and wade in after a couple turns when they've weakened each other. Also, recruiting 3 miners makes things much easier in turns of time (I wouldn't be surprised if it was impossible with one miner on hard).]

Hills of the Shorbear Clan

  • Objectives: Defeat the dwarf leader and have all heroes in the cave while no enemies are in it.
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Alanin, Krawg, Thursagan or Durstorn die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 24.
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Alanin, Baglur, Krawg, Thursagan, Durstorn, two new loyal units—a Thunderguard and a Steelclad.

Since Durstorn started a fight, you have to kick the dwarves out of their cave. The problem is that some elves show up and start fighting you too. So you have to take over the cave and kick everyone else out.

You can use Krawg and another Gryphon to go around the map and flag lots of villages. You'll get lots of gold and can use that to recruit a couple of fresh units if you need after you capture the Shorbears' keep.

The scenario is pretty straightforward. When fighting the dwarves use the terrain to your advantage. A dwarf on a mountain tile is only hit 30% of the time... unless you are attacking with a Runesmith/Runemaster. Their magical attacks (70% chance to hit) can make all the difference. Once you are in the cave and fighting off the elves, seal up the exits when you can. Now all you need to do is wipe out any stragglers and you are done.

[Mal Shubertal: There is no early finish bonus in this scenario, but there is a 40% gold carryover. Due to many loyal units (especially if you recall your runesmiths from last scenario) and many villages in the cave, you can accumulate a lot of gold if you delay the ending as long as possible. The scenario ended a few turns early for me because the last elf in the cave accidentally killed himself against my Thunderer; this could have been avoided by leaving Krawg just outside the cave until turn 24.]

Towards the Caves

  • Objectives:
    • Move Rugnur to the north-east cave entrance.
    • Move Alanin to the southern border east of the river.
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Alanin, Krawg or Thursagan die or time runs out.
  • Turns: 12.
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Baglur, Krawg, Thursagan and Alanin.

It is important to realize that the two objectives do not need to be accomplished simultaneously; once Alanin touches the southern border, east of the river, he disappears and his part is done. So, you can just send him straight south from turn 1. Have him go along the western edge of the river and cross over when he is at the bottom. The southeastern elves really don't like Alanin, so be careful not to attract too much attention. (Note that you can use that to your advantage to slow the advance of those elves).

This scenario is an exercise in holding a defensible position. The problem is that position has six entrances and you are up against a bunch of level 2 attackers. Recruit 2 or 3 keeps full of soldiers, sneak Alanin and Rugnur out (maybe with a few units, perhaps Gryphons, for cover and village flagging), and dig in. Rotate your units and try not to lose too many. Since most of the attackers are level 2, you can level some units with a couple of kills. Stay on good defensive ground and don't try anything crazy. It is also possible to win by killing all the leaders, but good luck with that.

[Thrash: I found just running for it worked for me. Alanin is able to make it to the southern edge before any elves can reach him by running down the west bank and crossing over. For Rugnur I recruited 6 sacrificial scouts and used them to screen the northern elves and Rugnur was able to make the cave with the elves on his heels.]

[Sojourner: With WN 10.0, running Alanin south down the west side of the river worked like a charm. I ran Thurgasin into the NW caves to keep him safe. The tricky part was getting Rugnur to the NE cave. Since even a single hex makes the differance, I could only recruit one keep load and then Rugnur had to start running on turn-1. Level 1 scouts as a screen didn't work because the Elvish archers slaughtered them. I used a full keep of Level 1 griffins (all ultimately sacrificed) as a screen, and had Rugnur go through the 5-hex of mountains to the East (32/10). But it was very close because I had to use Krawg at the last to help screen, yet not allow him to get zone-locked and killed. Possible, but tricky.]

Outriding the Outriders

  • Objectives: Reach the outpost in the south.
  • Lose if: Alanin dies or time runs out.
  • Turns: 12.
  • Starting units: Alanin.

Your mission is to run south as quickly as possible. The Elvish Outriders will easily catch up with Alanin and defeat him, all things being equal - Alanin has 9 MP, while the Outriders have 10 MP and 11 MP for the quick ones. Plus, there are six of them (on Medium difficult) and one of you... in fact, if four or five of the Outriders reach Alanin at once, he's likely to be killed even starting out with full HP. An encounter with just one or two Outriders is survivable - but you'll have to make sure to shake them the next turn.

Luckily, the stout Wesnothi Yeoman rises to the occasion, equipping L1 loyalist units and sending them out from every village you flag. 2-3 units will come out - Spearmen and Bowmen - to help you against the elves. They will, unfortunately, be mostly cannon fodder, so don't worry about keeping them for later in the campaign, or leveling them etc. They will have exactly one function: Slowing down the Elves.

To prevent the Elves from catching Alanin, the trick is to maneuver your village-supplied units so that their ZOC intersects' the Outriders' direct routes, requiring them to take longer ones and/or to pass unfavorable terrain (Frozen, Hills) to get around the ZOC. If you manage this consistently (which you should be able to - that's what the level is designed for after all) - Alanin should have no more than a brush or two with the Outriders.

Use Ctrl+V to see where the Outriders can reach, and be careful not to ignore alternative routes you might have missed. Also, never attack with the villager units unless they've somehow gotten behind the riders; even then - better not to attack, try and flank them, and hope they attack you, rather than waste your unit's life to reduce an Outrider's HP. Only if you're pretty sure you can kill one can you consider an attack (and that's not very likely to happen).

Note that the Outriders seem to be quite fascinated with killing villagers, and their presence is distracting; they're likely to take their time and kill any villagers one of them encounters rather than splitting up and having some riders go forward to catch you.

On the first turn, you can reach one of two villages. If you're gotten the message so far, you know which one you want to flag: The farther one to the South.

Alanin can and should reach the Southern Output by turn 10. You only have 12 turns, so don't get any funny ideas about taking detours or backtracking.

The Dragon

  • Objectives: Get Rugnur, Thursagan and Krawg to the end of the tunnel; then move Thursagan to the forge and defend him for 9 turns
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Thursagan or Krawg die
  • Turns: Unlimited.
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Thursagan, Krawg, and Baglur.

The scenario name is quite the misnomer. While there is a Dragon here - you're not going to fight it and it has basically no impact on anything except by recruiting some annoying Bats.

What you will face in this scenario is a swarm of L2 and L3 Dwarves and Elves hot on your heels which will come in from the South-West of your initial keep in great numbers, attacking relentlessly and mercilessly. As the dialog suggests, trying to make a stand in your initial keep would be practically impossible, and your obvious choice is to recruit/recall as much as you can in the first turn - preferring quick units perhaps, then flee by going East, then South, and onwards through the tunnel as quickly as the zigzag path allows.

You have to cover a lot of terrain, but the path is easy to follow, and at its end you will reach a small cavern where you will find a forge where the Sceptre can be built. That is a good place to finally make your stand, as the entrance to the cavern is 2-unit wide with a fortification (castle hexes). Until then, your job is to move quickly, dealing with bats coming from the cave, and with the Dwarves approaching from behind. The elves move slower than some of the Dwarves, but will not be far behind - since they have Outriders (10 MP), and some of the tunnel has flat terrain in the middle on which they could make up for their slow Cave-terrain movement.

Regarding the Bats, these are typically be a minor annoyance, except that in this case there are quite lots of them, and they might block your path, slowing you down and bringing the Dwarvish enemies closer. They are, of course, susceptible to the Runesmiths' magical attack; don't worry too much about getting hit by them - just make sure you get the kill, or they'll hinder you for yet another turn. They are mostly L0 Vampire Bats - which don't exert a ZOC and can be bypassed; but you do get the occasional L1 Blood Bat (probably more of these on Hard), which you'll need to attend to quickly. Khrakrahs the dragon might come out onto his lava lake - but there is no use in killing it; just move past it and let the elvish army deal with it later. That also means you shouldn't get close to the edge of the lava lake, unless you miss the smell of roast Dwarf.

The biggest challenge from the Dwarves behind you are actually not the powerful L3 Lords, but rather - the squad of L2 Berserkers. Individually, your L3 units and probably even your Steelclads could handle them fine; but once one of them has softened you up, the second one will move in for the kill, and his chances are quite good; not to mention what happens if a Berserker catches one of your Thunderer units (never mind which level), or an L2 of any kind. You won't outrun them all the way: Some, or most, of them are quick (5 MP), while some of your units are 4 MP. Plus, once they do catch up to you, they will slow down even the units they haven't killed. This is where a few good and health Dwarvish Lords are useful, to soak up that damage and not let them get to the rest of your force. Runemasters may also be relevant.

After the Berserkers go out, the next dangerous chasers will likely be Dwarvish Dragonguards - which will be quite dangerous for the very units you had as a read-guard against the Berserkers. But - you're more likely to outrun them.

Once you finally reach the forge, you may choose to move Thursagan into it quickly, in which case he disappears and the rest of your mission is to survive for 9 more turns, or you can play it patiently and milk as much as experience as you can (if you can manage without him for 9. In this case, don't move Thursagan into the forge yet, and make sure to advance him up to level 4 if you haven't done so already.

Notes:

  • Don't bother trying to send units South-West from your initial keep. They'll just get slaughtered (or have to escape but with their enemies closer by).
  • Sometimes, your enemies pause to attack a bat. Don't assume they'll always do that.

Alternative Strategies

  • Some players recruit/recall several Dwarvish Guardsman, Stalwarts or Sentinels, which may kill a few of the Berserkers and hold the initial keep for a couple of turns before being run over, while other units escape further.
  • Some players pick a decent, though non-ideal, spot in the tunnel and just make a stand there, rotating wounded units.
  • Some players suggest - running until you're past the wide spot where you first see the dragon, and then instead of making a stand or continuing your run, starting delay tactics with some damage-soakers/sacrificials, while you race Thursagan to the forge.

Expect to lose/sacrifice some number of units, regardless of your choice of strategy.

Caverns of Flame

  • Objectives: Locate the runic tablet of the guardian trolls, and destroy them
  • Lose if: Rugnur, Thursagan or Krawg die.
  • Turns: Unlimited.
  • Starting Gold: ???/160/??? (Easy/Medium/Hard)
  • Starting units: Rugnur, Thursagan, Krawg, Baglur and 3 other units

(The extra starting units may be two Runesmiths and an Explorer; but this may change depending on what your army has; strangely, you may well have additional recallable loyal units but without all units in the starting being loyal.)

This is the final scenario, but - you cannot really win it; or rather, you complete it by drowning all enemies, and yourself, in lava: You face three strong enemy forces - Elves, Orcs and Trolls (plus some monsters, see below), and even if you did manage to withstand all of those you are still stuck with nowhere to go.

This is a cave level, but with some areas actually being polished stone. There are some side-caverns and a few 2-to-3-hex-wide choke points, which you might need to hold at different points. There are not many villages, and they are mostly far from each other - and far from most of the choke points. Interestingly, there are more than 7 different castles with keeps on this level - not counting Orcs'!

To the right, on the North-East end of the level, you'll find the Orc encampment, led by a Warlord. Luckily for you, there's a chasm separating you from them, and the bridge crossing it has collapsed. It will take them 8 turns or so to rebuild it. Their leader has a massive base income (27 gold/turn on Medium) - and when they break out they'll be incredibly strong; but... you'll see that will actually be a boon for you.

There's a castle just South of where your units spawned, with a keep and 3 extra hexes. Ignore it.

As you explore due West, you'll be met by low-level dragon-like monster units: Wyrmlets (L0), green Cave Wyrms (L1) and Red Wyrms (L1). The greens have more claw attacks; the reds have more breath attacks - and they all have 60% defense on every terrain, with the L1's being marksmen. So despite the low HP of these units, they're quite a nuisance. They also spawn fast. Do _not_ try to stamp them out - that will keep you from advancing; and you _must_ advance South.

On turn 6, your old frenemies are back to chase you: It's those pesky elves, with their dwarven allies. Glildur, their Marshal leader, will be accompanied by a major force of L3 units - dwarves and elves. On Medium, those will be: 4 Elvish Outriders, 4 Elvish Champions, 3 Avengers, 4 Dwarven Lords, 3 Thunderguards. And - they will spare no time coming after you. Luckily, Glildur's elves are slowed down by the unfriendly cave terrain; unluckily, the Outriders will catch up with you pretty quick. Hopefully, you've gotten your units past the choke-point, Rugnur is getting to another keep, and you can mount a defense of sorts: If you can hold the Elves and Dwarves for a few turns, the Orcs will smash into their rear.

... but actually, thing are about to go from bad to worse. On turn 9, the corridor to the left and just below your choke-point will start filling up with Trolls; the first bunch of them will reach your position after your turn 10 - and they will all be Warriors and Rocklobbers, not Whelps. There's a two-hex choke point of two hexes you could try to hold against them as well, but that will already be rather tricky, with not many options to heal your wounded units and few backups to rotate with.

What this means is, that while all of the above is going down, you have to send forward some units to pursue the scenario goals. These units will explore the surroundings of the main cavern, located to the South-East of the two choke-points. This cavern has a cistern, or lake, of lava, with a hexagonal platform with six connecting bridges to all sides; and at three points surrounding the lave you'll find quick Troll Shaman guardians. These will not move except to attack you when you're within range; and while they're not terrible to overcome, their magical attack is quite effective - especially against Gryphons and their riders, who lack ranged defense.

Note, however, that the island-platform is mostly a distraction. It doesn't help you complete the scenario as well.

While you send out units to seek out the tablets, you may want to fall back from the two choke points and hole up in the Southwestern cavern. It connect to the Troll forces' castle, but only via a 1-hex bridge; and there's a 2 or3 hex choke-point at the entrance, and a village nearby. That's more reasonably defensible - plus, the three other forces will mostly focus on each other.

One way to play this scenario is to move everyone to the westernmost cavern. It has a good bottleneck to hold the dwarves at and plenty of villages to heal. Once you are dug in, send Rugnur, Thursagan (who is an absolute badass now that he has the Sceptre of Fire) and a few other units south to the glyph. Kill the orc guards and step on the glyph. Once you do that you are instructed to kill all the elves before they escape. Luckily for you, stepping on the glyph also unleashes the Troll Warriors behind the elves. The elves have no chance. The trolls will quickly slaughter them. You can help if you want, but the end is inevitable. Make sure Thursagan and Rugnur don't fall in lava.

The runic tablets

There are 3 runic tablets to destroy, held by...:

  1. The Orcs, and it should get destroyed as they battle the elves, perhaps with the death of some of their unit. So it's likely you won't need to worry about it.
  2. An L3 Troll Hero, in a keep on the eastern wall of the large cavern. Kill it, and tablet is found and broken.
  3. The floor of an isolated hex within a chasm at the South of the level. Only a Gryphon or Gryphon Rider can reach it.

Other notes:

  • There's nothing interesting in the South-Eastern cavern except for a book, which is not critical.
  • Keep Krawg out of trouble, as you need him (or another Gryphon) for the last tablet. So, make sure he's out of the reach of the Shamans - perhaps on one of the Lava hexes - until he can make his way to the Southern chasm.
This page was last edited on 21 August 2022, at 08:23.