Conquest/Strategies

These are potential strategies to use in Conquest. Note that not every possible strategy is listed here.

Archer+1 foot soldiers -2

 * Units: 1 champion, 2 halberdiers, 2 archers, 2 scouts, 1 mage, and 1 knight.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Charge, and Chastise.

This setup uses the default setup and swaps out both foot soldiers for 1 extra archer. The setup's purpose is to snipe down 100 HP units like scouts, other archers and mages using your archers. If you let a mage follow your archer, you can kill halberdiers without the use of commands unless your opponent uses them. After you have killed as many units with your archers and mage as you can, they will probably die and you'll have your melee units left, who are most likely outnumbering your opponent's units. Now it's a piece of cake to finish your opponent off. The biggest counter to this is if your opponent uses Charge on a scout or archer to kill your archers. Using Chastise could help you escape from this, but not always.

Recommended commands are Battle Cry, to make archers able to kill any unit but the champion in one shot; Charge, to kill other archers very easily; and Chastise, to kill halberdiers in 2 shots.

Halberd+more range variant
This setup uses at least 2-4 archers or mages, followed by about 2 halberdiers (a knight could also work, but halberdiers are cheaper). With the extra funds you could buy a champion and perhaps a few scouts for suicide missions. Keep the distance attackers out of harm's way but within striking distance. Your objective is to lure the opponent's troop to your side of the board where you can overwhelm it with rangers and halberds from a safe distance. The opponent will get wise to the tactic soon, but by then you will have a good defence and a slight advantage because you have likely taken out one of their pieces. This technique is particularly useful against Championeers.
 * Units: 2-4 archers or mages, 2 halberdiers, 1 champion, and 1-3 scouts.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Vigilance, and Chastise.

Recommended commands are: Battle Cry for taking out knights and other halberdiers (but if you have a mage following your archer(s) you can use them to kill the halberdiers); Vigilance for a defence against other archers (this can be countered by Battle Cry); and Chastise, for binding pieces and allowing halberdiers and distance attackers to safe spot.

Extra Knight variant.
This setup works well against champion groups as well if you know what you're doing. Preferably the other team should go first. Use your archers to pick off the enemy long range units for as long as possible and then use them to lure people towards your group. Once people get close enough you have a wide variety of units to kill them with. If they boost the person that is close just use chastise and wait for the effects to wear off. you should be able to kill almost any unit with someone in your squad if you do this well. That way when they use chastise you have multiple other options. The setup should look something like this:
 * Units: 2 archers, 2 knights, 2 scouts, 1 mage, and 1 champion
 * Commands: charge, battle cry, chastise, vigilance

Champion/Mage

 * Units: 2 champions, 2 mages, and another optional unit, such as a knight.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Vigilance, and Regenerate.

This setup uses only two champions, two mages and another optional unit, preferably a knight. In this offensive strategy, use the two mages to kill off approaching enemy units. Now use one of your champions and clear away the remaining units. You can even dispose of the enemy champion in one turn by using Battle Cry on your champion. You can use the other champion as backup, in case the other dies.

Championeer

 * Units: 3 champions, and 2 or more scouts.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Charge, Regenerate, and Shield Wall. Note that this depends on personal preference and the number of scouts placed.

One of the most common setups in Conquest, the Championeer build uses scouts with Charge in order to take down units with low HP like archers and mages. Three champions deal with the rest of the units, making the most of commands. Note that this build isn't well liked, and there have been calls by players to limit the number of champions in a setup down to 1 or 2 (sometimes they simply say no champ noobs or they simply resign).

Please note: Due to the update on 12 October when champion's health was reduced by 100, this method is much less effective.

Championeer Killer

 * Units: 1 champion, 4 halberdiers, 1 archer, 1 mage, and 2 scouts.
 * Commands: Charge, Battle Cry, Shield Wall, and Chastise.

This setup is designed to be a counter to the Championeer setup. Your opponent will most likely Charge with a scout to kill either your archer or your mage, which is sacrificed. Then, if they use Stoicism, use Chastise. If not, move an archer or a halberdier up and kill the scout. Next turn, move your halberdier or archer up depending on which one you already sent. If they killed your archer, move up a second halberdier. Note that the mage is there to take out halberdiers, in case they don't use their champions, but they can also be used to help take out champions and scouts. They already have used Charge so you can advance freely with your halberdiers. Move one halberdier one space outside their champion's range so if he moves his maximum amount of spaces, he won't hit you. Keep your archer or second halberdier far enough that he can't run past your halberdier. By now you should have enough for Shield Wall and Battle Cry so move 4 spaces to your opponent's champion. Attack from two spaces away to avoid a counter-attack, and use Shield Wall. If he attacks you, you can kill him on the next turn and save Battle Cry. If he uses Shield Wall, move up your other halberdier and attack a different champion. Your opponent now has 2 champs down to 300 HP, has used up Shield Wall and doesn't have enough points for Battle Cry and Regenerate, so he can only try to save one of his champions. Now use Battle Cry and kill off whichever one he didn't protect. From there, it should be pretty easy to win. Just remember to play it safe, and make sure that your opponent doesn't use Charge and Battle Cry to kill your champion. If your opponent moves up one champion at a time, you can Chastise it and then kill it.

Champion Trap

 * Units: 1 champion, 1 mage, 1 knight, 1 archer, and 6 scouts.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Regeneration, Charge, and either Chastise or Vigilance.

This setup uses a sneaky tactic in order to ensure victory. If you are faced with certain setups like Fast and Brutal, this setup will take their champions out. Note that this setup requires a lot of patience to use correctly. The army should be aligned like so:



At the beginning of the game, start by sneaking with the scout not in the pyramid to the far right. Try to take out a mage, archer, or an enemy scout. Do not use Battle Cry yet. When your scout is killed, go to the pyramid formation, which is the trap. If not, move the scout back to the trap to help defend. This tactic is related to a leaf trap with 2 baits - either the archer or the mage. The scouts and the knight are the leaves. The champion is the spikes, the real trap.

Be patient. Wait until a champion or other foe comes. The archer and mage can attack through the scouts. If any of the attacking units are a mage, archer, or scout, kill it with the archer. Halberdiers can be killed by the mage. If a champion comes, make sure you have Battle Cry available when one of the baits or the leaves are killed. If one of the baits are killed, move the champion to that spot, unless the attacker is a Halberdier or other long-range foe. Use the other bait to kill it, if that is the case. If the enemy champion is the attacker, cast Battle Cry on your champion and kill the opposing one.

Should the enemy use Stoicism, Battle Cry, or Chastise on their champion, simply wait till the effect wears off and let the champion kill some of the other troops. If your champion is wounded by a mage, kill it normally with the champion.

This tactic can take a long time and you may get a message saying that "If you don't take another action in the next turn, you will automatically forfeit." Move one of the scouts forward and back to where it was. End turns early to speed this tactic up.

Devastation

 * Units: 2 champions, 1 archer, 1 mage, 1 knight, and 1 scout.
 * Commands: Charge, Shield Wall, Battle Cry, and Stoicism.

This setup sacrifices a beserker champion for several other enemy pieces, successfully killing one/two champions and other strong pieces, leaving them with a tattered squad and you with another champion, a knight and at least a mage/archer/scout. Whether you start first or not doesn't matter. The army should be aligned like so:



First, move your archer 3 squares forward. Depending on which unit the opponent moves, follow the directions below.

Archer
Move either champion out four spaces. As the enemy's archer advances, send forward your scout as the enemy will no longer advance, and kill your scout. It's okay, the scout is only for fodder. Make sure the scout is in range of the archer, so that when the archer attacks he is 8/9 squares away from the champion. By now it should be your third turn.

Mage
Move your archer just beyond the mage's range (so there are eight spaces between your archer and her). If the mage retreats, try to lure them back out a little, but not too close so that they can attack. If the mage doesn't retreat, you are able to kill her, because an archer's range is farther than a mage's. Make this last until your third turn.

Scout
Move your scout six spaces ahead. The enemy scout will either retreat, do nothing, or move forward. If the latter happens, send out your archer to either push him back or kill him. If he retreats or does nothing, skip your turn. If your opponent puts forward a different piece, follow the instructions for that soldier. By now you should be reaching your third turn.

Other
Do nothing and skip your turn. If the unit put forward is melee, move your archer in range to attack to either kill or weaken him. This, at least, will hold back the enemy's attacks.

By your third turn, continue holding back the enemy while putting either champion forward 4 spaces, if you haven't already. Make sure an enemy soldier with the command value of at least 75 is within the champion's range as you are able to use Charge. Do so, and attack the mage, archer or whatever it may be. By killing it, you have gained 100 or so command points. Do not use any other commands until your next turn.

The opponent may attack you, but if they do it doesn't matter. shrug off that blow and move into the opponent's strongest piece, most likely a champion. Use Battle Cry and kill the champion. If Chastise has been used on your champion, use Stoicism and kill another medium-strength soldier on your next turn. If not, you will survive another turn. If your opponent has a knight or another champion, use Shield Wall. If they attack, you have taken out another one of their soldiers. Play the next turns freely, trying to keep your champion alive and killing for as long as possible.

At the very best, this setup can kill the entire enemy team with one champion. If minimal soldiers were killed, especially if your opponent has Chastise, it's fine because you still have enough high-powered and varied soldiers left to win the game. This doesn't necessarily work against Championeers, so you can just resign as soon as you see them, because there is no penalty for resigning at the very beginning.

Elitist

 * Units: 2 champions, 1 archer, and 1 scout.
 * Commands: Regenerate, Shield Wall, Bombard, and Charge.

This setup uses two champions, an archer and a scout. In the game, one unit moves at a time, so having massive armies is not necessarily helpful as you can only move one per turn. So it is better to have a few elitist units. Here the player has the archer for sniping at the start as well as the scout, so they are able to take out other mages or rangers. If your opponent is hiding from you you can always use Bombard to snipe the other pests, mainly archers or mages. The champions with their big damage and high HP will then be able to decimate the rest of the melee units, using Shield Wall when HP falls to 200, or an attack would otherwise kill. Use Regenerate at 100 HP to bring them back to full HP. Charge allows your scout to deal with an archer that is hiding from you. It can also be used on the other units to out-maneuver your enemy.

However, this setup is not recommended. First of all, Bombard is expensive to use (200 command points per use), and kills granted with these kills will not give you any command points back. Secondly, the lack of battle cry and stoicism make any champ that you send forward easy to kill, especially with chastise. Thirdly, now that champs are 500 HP, regenerate has very limited use. Any squad that is built like this is easy to overcome.

Fast and Brutal

 * Units: 2 champions, and 8 scouts.
 * Commands: Charge, Battle Cry, Regenerate, and one more of personal preference.

This setup has two champions in the middle, with four scouts on each side of them. With all those scouts and Charge, you can easily kill off the mages and archers from nearly anywhere in a single hit. Battle Cry can be used to increase the damage of scouts to 300 HP, making it possible to take out stronger units such as halberdiers or knights from anywhere as well. Alternatively, Battle Cry can be used to take out the enemy's champion by using your own. The scouts make up your "sweep" team to take out the annoying archers and mages, while the champions make up the brute force of your attack.

Health over Damage

 * Units: 2 champions, 2 mages, 1 knight, and 1 foot soldier.
 * Commands: Stoicism, Charge, Shield Wall, and Vigilance.

This setup makes the most of low HP, long ranged units, and then finishing off with champions. Without Battle Cry or Chastise this tactic may seem weak against Championeers, but it works very well against them if you know what you're doing. The army can be aligned like so, but it is personal preference:



If your opponent uses scouts, you should start with your knight. Otherwise, start with either mage. Go near enemy units with your knight/mage and eliminate any of them, preferably long ranged ones, which you can kill in one hit. By now you should have more than 100 command points from killing units. If you used your knight, cast Shield Wall on it. If you used your Mage, cast Vigilance. End your turn now. If your opponent attacks your unit, it will most likely die, and you'll get points. Next turn, use Stoicism if needed, if, for example, your opponent uses Vigilance on a unit you want to kill, and kill one more unit. If you can use Vigilance, Stoicism, or Shield Wall for your knight, use it. Your unit is not likely to die in your opponent's next turn, so you will be able to eliminate one more unit in your turn. Using this strategy, you can kill up to 5 enemy units, giving up one of your own. After your berserker dies, use either another mage, your champion, or your knight, if still alive, to try to finish off your opponent. There are no specific tactics after your berserker is dead, but you should use the commands to maximize your health, thus letting one of your units to stay on the field for much longer, even if it normally has low health.

It's a Trap!

 * Units: 1 champion, 1 knight, 1 archer, 2 mages, and 5 scouts.
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Stoicism, Charge, and Shield Wall.

This strategy consists of more defensive, hit-and-run style attacks. The army should be aligned like so:



The object is to use your scouts to lure the opponent into using Charge to get to one of your scouts. You can then use another one of your scouts to get to the unit that just used Charge (without using your Charge). The opponent will likely not be able to reach you during their next turn - if they can, just reset the trap. You've got 5 scouts to use as bait - so long as you have one left over to actually do the dirty work. Once you have your scout into position, you should be able to charge to your opponent's champion if they have one. If not, go for the units with 300 HP, preferably knights. What you'll do is Charge to the unit you're attacking, then use Battle Cry and Shield Wall. This will allow you to attack (and potentially kill) the unit you're targeting. If the unit is not killed (a champion), it will recoil back 100 damage (because of Shield Wall). On your opponent's next turn, they will likely Chastise you if they have it.

Sometimes, people will attack the Chastised scout, thinking that it cannot do recoil damage. The scout has 200 HP remaining, and can take a maximum of only 100 because of Shield Wall. If they do not Chastise you, use Stoicism on the scout and proceed to attack any unit with 100 HP, preferably a mage. If they did Chastise you, just use Stoicism and end your turn. They will still be unable to kill you with anything, unless they use their Battle Cry, which is a drain on their points and leaves them having to cool down for 5 turns - a major setback. If they don't decide to kill the Scout, you're free to attack the champion again, bringing it to 200 HP - within killing range for your mages. After this point, most of the "bait" units (e.g. archers and scouts) will have been removed from the opponent's team. Their champion should be severely weakened, if not dead. Now, you are free to use the exact same tactics with your remaining scouts, then the mages - rinse and repeat. Use the knight for defence, and the champion to clean up any leftover messes.

The archer can be switched - possibly for another scout and a halberdier, or just another mage if you are worried about your opponent ignoring your bait and taking out your mages first.

If you encounter a team with 2 or more champions, you will not have a very good chance at winning. Resignation is penalty-free, as always at the beginning of the game.

One less Champion for Bombard
This setup replaces one of the usual two champions in a team for bombard, which can be very useful for taking out 100 life point units like scouts. Not very useful against championeers, but very good against all other teams. Depending whether you go first or second, follow instructions below:
 * Units: 1 champion, 2 halberdiers, 2 mage (1 mage can be replaced with an archer), and 2 scouts.
 * Commands: bombard, vigilance, charge, and battle cry.

If you go first
Move your mage out, the opponent will most likely respond by moving a scout or archer forward, if they move a scout, move your mage forward just out of the scouts range, next turn, move a halberd out and cast vigilance on the mage, use your mage and halberd to take out other enemy units, when they are dead, use another mage/halberd combo, and use bombard to take out scouts or archers, clean up with your champion.

If they send out an archer, do not move your mage, instead move a halberd up to your mage, if your mage dies, kill the archer with halberd and move a scout up next to the halberd, begin to fight with you other mage, clean up with champion, halberdier and your last scout.

If they go first
Your opponent will most likely move a scout or an archer forward, respond with a scout, if they have a scout or archer out, wait until your charge is ready and charge opponents scout, next turn, your scout will most likely be killed, leave it there, and move halberds up and fight with them, once they are killed send out your champion and mages to clean up.

The Two/Two/Two
Units: Two of each of the following: Archer, Champion, and Scout. Note that the Archers may be replaced with Mages for more damage versus teams with Champions.

Commands: Chastise, Battle Cry, Stoicism, Regenerate. Note that Chastise may be replaced with Charge if it is so preferred.

This strategy focuses on using the Archers or Mages combined with Chastise, Battle Cry, and Stoicism to both be lethal weapons at range and also to protect them from attacks by pieces close up; however this strategy also focuses on Scouts being used as suicidal attackers in the early stages of the game. If everything has gone your way this battle, you should end up with a somewhat weakened enemy lacking in long-ranged pieces. This is exactly what you desire, for your next stage of the attack: Formation should be as follows:
 * If you are using Chastise: await your opponents to come within range of either your Archers or Scouts, then unleash your attack.
 * If you are using Charge: attack your opponent head-on at the beginning of the game, using your Scouts to attack longer-range targets of your enemy's.
 * 1) Remember that when an opponent's troop is defeated, you gain Command Points. Use these to increase the lifespan of your suicidal Scouts by using Stoicism and Battle Cry to live through anything and everything that your opponent can throw at you. Literally! A Champion using Battle Cry can only hit 600, while your Scout with Stoicism and Battle Cry has 700 Hitpoints!
 * Use your Archers or Mages, whichever you chose, to snipe off your enemy's melee pieces one by one. The Archers or Mages may be used as suicidal pieces, however it is nice to spare them when possible so that you can use your longer ranged pieces to assist your Champions in the "Cleanup" stage, attempting to use your Champions to clear the board of your opponent's pieces.
 * 1) Remember that the only real reason to use Regenerate here is for your Champions; all of your other pieces have too little health for it to be wasted on.
 * 2) Also remember that your Champions are vulnerable to Knights, Mages, and Halberdiers of the enemy team: even with only 100 hitpoints gone, they can be killed by these pieces if they use Battle Cry!



Note that this is the row closest to the enemy squad, the "front" row if you will.

Glass Cannon
This setup is built for the sole purpose of killing of any enemy before they can possibly get into range to kill you back. The drawback to it is that the majority of units here have only 100 health so a single mistake could cost you your entire formation.
 * Units: 1 champion, 2 archers, 2 mages and 5 scouts.
 * Commands: Charge, battle cry, stoicism and chastise.

The first step is to move your scouts forward, within 12 paces of your opponent's archers or mages. If their archer moves forward to support, move your own one within range so you can take it out if they take out your scout. Up to 3 scouts can be deployed in this ready position. Count your opponent's Command points carefully to make sure their scouts never have the chance to use charge. If their scouts move forward within striking distance, let them kill your scout, and use the chance to bring another scout forward into the 12-square range, unless they are able to charge, in which case you should sacrifice your scouts to kill them off.

THE TOP PRIORITY IS TO KEEP AT LEAST ONE ARCHER AND ONE MAGE ALIVE.

Once you can, charge with your scout and kill one of their archers or mages, and immediately use stoicism on your scout, so that nothing can kill you back without using battle cry. If your scout survives, kill another archer or mage if you can, or another scout, or if you have enough Command points to use battle cry, do so and kill off a knight. If your scout is chastised, move one of the reserve scouts forward 6 paces so that regardless of what they do, they cannot possibly guard against both of them. At this point, your opponent still will not have enough Command points to use Bombard for the first time.

If your opponent uses chastise or battle cry, their Command points will be very low at this point, so they cannot eliminate your second scout since they won't have enough to use charge.

Once all your opponent's scouts are down, move your archers and mages forward. Kill all halberdiers with the mage, and against knights, foot soldiers or champions, attack using the archer first and kill the unit with your mage once it moves forward to attack. If anything uses stoicism, chastise it and bring another mage/archer forward to provide fire support. If the champion moves forward, dock its health using the archer and kill it on the next turn with a battle-cry enabled mage.

Because your archer is attacking first and dealing 100 health, players will generally not use Regenerate against you, so you should almost always be able to kill off their champion in the next turn.

Optimally, nothing will be able to advance without first being attacked once by your archer, and having 2 mages to support means that even if one is chastised, the other can still provide the kill.

Vigilance is meaningless against this strategy as you should be able to outrange easily anything that attempts to attack.

Should the opposing champion ever manage to come within 8 paces of your champion, charge to kill it off. It can be useful to position your archer such that when the other champion charges to attack it (because it should never be reachable without using charge), it will exactly come into the 8 pace charge range of your champion.

The only setup that will be able to prevail consistently against the Glass Cannon strategy is one with at least 4 scouts and 3 halberdiers, as halberdiers are the only unit available that can effectively outrange an archer. Most other setups include too many knights or champions, which are especially weak against this setup. Thankfully, almost nobody ever uses the scout-halberdier formation so you should be able to win against virtually everyone you play against.

Always be mindful of the recharge rates of your opponent's Commands, their Command Points and their units' charge ranges. Winds of Fate and Bombard may make it difficult to guard against an opponent's attacks, but again, almost nobody uses either of them.

Wrath of Bombard
This setup is built to devastate your opponent through aggressive commands. The only downside is that the number of command points needed to do this is high, as bombard does not reward you when you kill enemy troops. For this reason, when possible always '''finish the enemy off with a troop and not bombard. '''Bombard should be used for initial damage only, unless you plan on killing something from far away. It is well advised to only use bombard when needed and not just simply using it when you have 200 command points available. Wrongly using bombard could cost you the game.
 * Units: 1 champion, 6 scouts, 3 halberdiers ( One may be swapped out for any 100 troop if using chastise )
 * Commands: Battle Cry, Charge, Stoicism ( Or chastise if wanted ), Bombard

The Bombard Difference
Champions: People only think of killing a champion with battle cry as the only way. But this is where bombard has ultimate use, the decrease of 100 hp. To take advantage of this, we use the elitist troops ( The champion and the 3 halbierders ) to surprise opponents completely. With your lone champion, it is possible to kill the other champion 2 ways; with use of either battle cry or bombard. The cost of each are 75 and 200 respectively, or 150 and 275 with charge. With halbierders, there is a completely new way to kill champions. With battle cry and bombard, champions fall victim to halbierders, due to the fact that halbierders have extra range. This tactic costs 275 points but since charge will most likely be used, the total cost is 350, without counting the 200 you get from killing a champion.

Knights & Foot soldiers: It is recommended not to use bombard on these as just a simple battle cry/champion attack can kill them. But if you absolutely must, bombard and a single hit from a halbierder can finish these deadly 300 hp troops off.

Archers & Mages: People tend to kill this with bombard. It would seem like a great strategy, but the 200 command points down could be your downfall. Do not to kill these if they are not playing a part in the game, as the command points are wasted. The only 2 times where killing these is efficient is when either they pose a threat in the game, or you have enough command points to not risk the game to it ( 300-400+ )

Scouts: Do not kill these with bombard. Since scouts are a meager 25 points, 95% of the time they will not be your target. There are 3 times when you can kill these; when they are the only troop your opponent has left, when you have 1000+ command points and you have nothing better to use it on ( Archers, Mages ) or the scout is blocking your way to a caged champion. ( Gaining time through not killing the scout with the champion and using it to kill the other champion instead, it may win the game sometimes ).

Halberdiers: As these have only 200 hp, it is able to knock them down to 100, allowing anything to knock them out. The scout can have the most advantage out of this since the other troops can already kill it in one hit anyway.

What to do with your troops
Scouts: These are the main attackers. With 6 of them, it is rare an opponent can defeat them all, and can be deadly in the end when 1 or 2 survive, with the added power of bombard. What these do in the beginning is move forward out of an archer's range ( 9 squares ). If the opponent offers to give up a scout for one of yours, do so, but after killing it use stoicism if you have it, or chastise if only one troop can kill your scout. Unless your opponent has chastise, you get more out of the trade. With battle cry and bombard these deal 400 damage, a good amount, but not enough to kill a champion.

Champion: What you do with this tough guy is simple. Kill all in your path! With Bombard these guys can kill 2 champions alone, leaving your hallies with a good game ahead of them. Use stoicism or defend yourself with chastise if you are chastised or are without defence, because you only have one of these!

Halberdiers: As stated above, these are good for killing enemy champions, using battle cry, charge and bombard. Weak as they seem, the offensive capabilities of these things are amazing and not to be underestimated.

This strategy can counter regeneration by mostly killing in one move, and can destroy unsuspecting champions. It is also a smart plan to economise command points, for bombard is a very costly strategy!

Tips

 * Always remember that Battle Cry gives not only does 200 extra damage, but also adds 200 health to that turn.
 * Remember to use boost commands before engagement as the damage taken off by your opponent will go against the boost first so when it wears off, you often end up with FULL health.
 * An important thing to know is that Chastise does not work on the opponent's last unit. If you Chastise a unit and kill the second-to-last one, then the effect of Chastise goes away as well.
 * Archers and mages have much better odds when going up against a champion one-on-one. They can pick them off from a distance while moving away, forcing the champions to retreat or follow. Use this to lure them onto your side of the battlefield where it will be cut off from support from its allies. However, bear in mind that with mages, if you are within the 4 square attacking range, your opponent's champion can attack you on the next turn too. Archers are most effective at this, but they can be caught up eventually as archers only move 3 squares while champions move 4 squares.
 * A common technique for archer versus archer fighting is for one to use Vigilance, which discourages the opponent from attacking. A way to get around this is to use Battle Cry to raise the unit's HP by 200, allowing it to take the hit from Vigilance and still take out the archer. The only negative side is that Battle Cry has a 5 round cooldown.
 * A knight with Battle Cry can take out an unsuspecting opposing champion. Charge is useful to pull this off, as is using your own champion for bait.
 * Each turn you gain 25 command points. However, the person who goes first does not gain the 25 points on their first turn.
 * If the foe uses Vigilance, do not attack that unit this turn. Attacking it will cause it to counter attack before you hit your attack, thus giving that unit the potential to kill you easily. Instead, use a unit that is out of that unit's potential range, chastise it, or boost hitpoints before attacking.
 * If a Chastised unit survives an attack and is within range to counterstrike, it will do so, ignoring the fact it has been Chastised.
 * Regenerate is extremely helpful for those who sacrifice lower level pieces for champions, because it fully heals it. This can be quite annoying to those who focus on archers/mages.
 * Scouts can be used as cheap one-time suicide attacks by equipping them with battle cry and charge, which allows them to reach virtually any part of the map.
 * Try to keep tabs on the abilities that your opponent uses, so he/she doesn't surprise you with one. It also helps to try and predict how many Command points they have left, or when the cooldown period for their abilities are done.
 * Unless their health is boosted, do not use Shield Wall on an mage, archer or scout as they only have 100 health.
 * Use barriers on the battlefield to your advantages. Melee units (barring the halberdier) cannot attack over them, and walking around them is slow, while affording protection to your archers and mages.
 * You can resign at the start with no penalty to either player. However, once both players have made a total of 11 moves together, then the game counts for Commendation points and ranking (this is commonly used against more than 1 champion setups because they're very disliked).