Diplomacy: Difference between revisions
(Creature Gathering/Surrender) |
(Game description.) |
||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Secondary skills}} | {{Secondary skills}} | ||
{{Secondary skill | {{Secondary skill | ||
| B_effect = | | B_effect = allows you to negotiate with monsters who are weaker than your group, and reduces the cost of surrendering by 20%. | ||
| A_effect = | | A_effect = allows you to negotiate with monsters who are weaker than your group, and reduces the cost of surrendering by 40%. | ||
| E_effect = | | E_effect = allows you to negotiate with monsters who are weaker than your group, and reduces the cost of surrendering by 60%. | ||
}} | }} | ||
Revision as of 05:15, 1 August 2014
Description
Diplomacy reduces the cost of surrendering, and increases the chance of wandering monsters joining you, be it 'for greater glory' or at a price. Also, whereas heroes may normally enter a Library of Enlightenment only when having reached level 10, basic diplomacy enables heroes to enter at level 8, advanced diplomacy at level 6, and expert diplomacy at level 4.
On many maps, the Diplomacy skill is regarded as overpowered by tournament players, and therefore frequently banned from competitive play.
Recommended for: At least one hero, typically a support, on maps with wandering monsters that are not set to 'savage', but preferably to 'aggressive' (i.e., the default setting).
Although a main hero's attack and defense skill help in convincing wandering monsters to join, it typically works well to let a support hero learn this skill instead. This support hero can then borrow troops from your main hero to convince wandering monsters to join and return the troops immediately after. This saves your main hero a skill slot and potentially a lot of movement points.
Wandering Monsters
Whether wandering monsters will join you for greater glory, at a price, or not at all depends not only on a hero's mastery of Diplomacy, but also on several other factors (see also External Links below).
First, the primary skills of a hero and the strength of the army that this hero leads are combined and then compared with the strength of the wandering monsters. The greater the relative strength of the hero’s army, the more likely it is that the monsters will join.
Second, the chance that wandering monsters join is increased when the hero’s army contains at least one upgraded or non-upgraded creature of the same type as the wandering monsters. The chance of joining is further increased when more than half of the creatures in a hero’s army are of the same type as the wandering monsters. Note that fire and energy elementals, water and ice elementals, and earth and magma elementals are considered different creature types, even though the latter of each pair is an upgrade of the former.
Third, when playing at easy difficulty, heroes receive a diplomacy bonus, even when they have not learned the skill. This does not affect heroes with expert diplomacy, but basic diplomacy acts as advanced diplomacy, and advanced diplomacy as expert diplomacy.
Fourth, these three factors together are compared to the aggressiveness of the wandering monsters. A group of wandering monsters that the mapmaker has set to ‘compliant’ will always join, whereas a group of ‘savage’ wandering monsters will never join. The default setting is ‘aggressive’, meaning that at the beginning of the game the aggressiveness of each group of wandering monsters is pseudo-randomly determined to range from as high as those of ‘savage’ monsters, to so low that creatures may join even when neither diplomacy, nor any creatures of the same type are present. ‘Hostile’ monsters have a higher aggressiveness than ‘aggressive’ monsters but might still join, whereas ‘friendly’ monsters have a lower aggressiveness than ‘aggressive’ monsters but still often fight or flee.
Comments
Works very well with Visions, and can easily be the skill that wins the game for you.
It goes without saying, but Diplomacy is especially useful to players who like racking up wandering monsters that match their armies. Cunning Necropolis heroes that somehow learned Diplomacy can also exploit it for free Skeletons (which is more efficient than fighting for them).
Heroes
Heroes that start with Diplomacy: Adela, Cyra, and Ryland.
External links
- Thread on HeroesCommunity, started by AlexSpl: Diplomacy internals
- Tribute to strategists: Heroes of Might and Magic III Manual by Rainalkar, pp. 22-25.