Warband What To Do With Prisoners

  1. Mount And Blade Warband What To Do With Count Prisoners
  2. Mount And Blade How To Sell Prisoners

I post this in this forum because I can't seem to find it anywhere.Is there a mod that gives more options to your prisoners? Like for example, say you have a king, I would love to exchange him for a peace treaty, but alas I can't. Or simply have the possibility of executing or freeing prisoners. And being able to ask them to join you or die.I would love a mod like this, because I have a prison full of enemy counts and Boyars(I even have a king locked up in there), but the only thing I can do is sell them back for an insulting low amount of gold.sent by the almighty Hershan from tapatalk. I have like 20 mods on the game and I haven't seen anything regarding trading prisoners of war or some such.There is a mod, Prophesy of Pendor that has a unique instance where you release prisoners of a certain faction, and it helps boost your relations. You would talk to an individual prisoner, have them promise not to take up arms again for the sake of their life, and they are on their merry way with +1 relation to that faction.But I don't recall seeing a mod or gameplay of exchanging prisoners or bribery (aside from a pop up asking that you hand over a prisoner general/lord in exchange for a sum of gold obviously).

In Mount and Blade: Warband it is up to you to assemble your warband and decide the fate of Calradia by destroying armies, looting villages, sacking castles and capturing cities. You can join one of the distinct factions inspired by real world cultures, like the Mongols and Vikings, or build your own faction from scratch. (Similar to the feature in M&B: Warband where recruited prisoners would. On a slightly unrelated note, what options do you get for taking a. I am stuck in this quest in warband where you have to rescue an. If you have good enough staff prof, you can attack fast enough so that the.

If that's what you're asking of course.Aside from that, diplomacy has the most, in MY opinion, realistic settings on it. If you're interested in even more hardcore gameplay or realistic game play, the Floris mod can help with that. Though for me, Diplomacy is enough for me.I'm also working on modding the game, but so far I can only mess around with banners and retexturing them and such. It's pretty fun, if you are the artistic sort. Have to download a few things though to do so, which is a bit annoying.EDIT: By the way what is P.D? I don't think I've heard/read that online before. Unless you mean public domain then.

Ah, we write PS: at the end of something over here. Good to know that though.I think I read somewhere that in order to mod Warband you need the original editor from Mount & Blade (original game). I don't know why but I think it has something to do with Warband based on the original coding and script from said game (I mean, obviously ) and so they just didn't add an editor exclusively for Warband.Soooo I honestly have no idea in regards to mod making. As in, making campaign maps, map scripts, etc. Whereas with making new weapons and armor I don't think you need that.

You can get by without it. Aaaand I found a link that talks about it:There are other topics I'm sure that talk about it. That guy just CAN'T be the only one that talked/asked about it.Hope I helped in some shape or form, if not then. At least I tried.

Mount And Blade Warband What To Do With Count Prisoners

So, today while I was doing my grocery shopping at the local Super Target, I saw that they had Mount and Blade Complete (consisting of Mount and Blade, Mount and Blade Warband, and Mount and Blade: With Fire and Sword), for ten bucks. So I bought it.Now, I'm trying to figure out the best way to really get started.

Anybody have any suggestions on what I should be doing at the outset? In other words, I'm kinda lost as I try to figure things out (I don't think Paradox is allowed to publish a game unless it confuses newbies!). So.any tips from the vets out there? Make character.2a.

There's usually like, a tutorial quest line thing. I forget, I haven't done a fresh character in so long. But you should probably do that.2b. Or go to the training grounds (there should be one near your starting location) to get a hang of the gameplay.3.

Mount And Blade How To Sell Prisoners

Hire some schlubs from the Tavern.4a. Go killificate things!

Bandits are usually easy prey; be careful of Mercenary groups when you're starting out, then can be pretty hard as a newbie.4b. Or join a faction (go to a major town and go to the castle, talk to whoever's in charge). You might need to have some prestige ('Valor', I think?) before you'll get accepted, though.4c. Do random quests for random citizens!It's pretty open-ended.- Griffinhart.

Pretty much what Final Warrior said.Warband has a very short quest line at the beginning to get you used to how the game works, and is worth doing. After that, find your nearest training grounds and spar until you finish the training thing (will get you used to how melee combat works, and you should hit level 3 by the end of it). You can also spar with your soldiers at a training grounds to give them XP and train them up past their 'useless unarmored farmer' stage.From there, hunt bandits. Looters are always easy prey. Forest, Taiga, and Mountain bandits aren't to bad, though they have bows (which can be tricky - bring a decent shield). Sea Raiders are nasty. Steppe raiders and whatever the desert area bandits are are all mounted, so avoid them until you've got some cavalry of your own.I don't actually recommend hiring mercenaries from the tavern. Download idm 6.08 full crack free.

They give you some higher-tier soldiers right away, but they're more expensive than soldiers you've trained yourself.Between bouts of killing bandits, stop in at towns and villages and always talk to village elders (in villages), guildmasters (in cities), and nobles (in cities, castles, or around the world map) and ask them if they have any jobs. As a general rule, delivery jobs suck (low pay for a long trip), anything to do with cows sucks, caravan escorts aren't bad, bandit hunting is very profitable. If a noble asks you to track down a bandit hideout, that's BIG money, but make sure to bring enough forces to do the job - if you fail to win the battle, the hideout is gone, and no reward for you. In fact, if you're wandering around and happen to stumble on a hideout, don't attack it right away - trawl around in the local castles and cities until you find a local lord who asks you to take care of it.

Mount and blade how to get prisoners

That way you get the loot AND the gold reward.As far as character build thoughts: starting as the child of a noble is the easy route - will let you join a faction right away as a male character. Female characters get the short end of the stick - have a much harder time joining factions and getting nobles to take them seriously.

Play around a bit with weapon styles to decide what you like best (that's what the tutorial and training grounds are for). For skills, leadership is very important, and Tactics, inventory management, and Prisoner Management are all useful, and it's good to have someone (yourself or a recruited NPC) with skills like Surgeon, Wound Treatment, Pathfinding, and such.For warband development, make sure you don't grow your band beyond what you can pay for. Also, keep in mind what different troop types are best at. Cavalry completely dominates open field warfare, but kinda sucks in sieges. Archers or crossbowmen are good in sieges (on either side), but can be taken out pretty fast in the open field.

Infantry are general use troops - better than archers in the field but not as good as cavalry, good in sieges (but won't have much to do until the attackers breach the walls), and generally decent. Infantry also tends to be better at attacking bandit hideouts than cavalry (since you can't bring horses).If you defeat an enemy band that has prisoners, you can recruit those prisoners into your band for free. This is the only practical way to get certain unit types - women, for example, are not recruitable any other way (usually), and while they start out extremely weak, they can be trained up into the VERY powerful Sword Sister cavalry unit.

So, today while I was doing my grocery shopping at the local Super Target, I saw that they had Mount and Blade Complete (consisting of Mount and Blade, Mount and Blade Warband, and Mount and Blade: With Fire and Sword), for ten bucks. So I bought it.Now, I'm trying to figure out the best way to really get started.

Anybody have any suggestions on what I should be doing at the outset? In other words, I'm kinda lost as I try to figure things out (I don't think Paradox is allowed to publish a game unless it confuses newbies!). So.any tips from the vets out there?

Get a horse, bow and arrows and sword. Hire like 14 guys from villages. Looters are the trash-mob of the game so you can practice your horse archery on them. Use the backspace key to bring up the command interface, which gives you a little map so you can see where the enemy has spawned and tell your guys to form a line instead of rushing in. Avoid bandits and so on until you level your troops up and get yourself better equipment, as bandits have weapons that can actually hurt you.It's been a while since I played but IIRC a good early trade route is to buy Iron under 150 at Curaw or Dhirim and then sell it in Reyvadin, or buy Oil under 320 in Suno and then sell it in Praven. I've only ever cheated to get the samurai arms.

Hasn't held me back at all, mostly you just have to learn not to pick fights with bigger and better armies (it's actually quite easy to win against less experienced troops, even when massively outnumbered, once you learn how to use your troops and exploit the terrain).Also, once you get a hang of the basics, try some mods! Many of them are pretty awesome.My favorite at the moment is the Floris Expanded pack.