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June 25th, 2008, 05:22 PM
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BANNED USER
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Join Date: Dec 2007
Location: Illinois
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Titan pretenders
I'm wondering about how people use Titans, and when people use Titans. What are some good Titan builds? What roles, strategies, and situations are Titans used to fill?
I've never used these guys myself. I look at them, but always seem to find something better suited for what I want to do. Their qualities, as far as I can tell, are the following:
1. strong base dominion (typically 3)
2. two magic paths (typically with 1 pick in each, or 2 in one and 1 in the other.)
3. expensive additional magic picks
4. all slots
5. SC worthy chassis, but requires some buffing/equipment
and occasionally some special abilities like increased fortune or growth or something in the province in which the titan is positioned.
These guys seem like basic all-rounders to me, with a little capability in any area. Most nations have enough choices of Titans that there is one for them with the magic paths they want; they can add a touch of diversity, or a little extra power in already possessed paths. There high base dominion is good for bless strategies, or strategies where you need your scales everywhere. Ones with base 2 picks in a magic path can probably stretch for a strong bless in that path without completely breaking the bank. They have HP's enough and the slots and magic to be SC's; even if not right out of the box.
But for this wide base capability, I can't ever seem to find these guys worth the opportunity cost of picking them over another pretender. OK now given, my experience in the game is limited, and it is most likely I simply havn't used one of these guys when I could/should have, or just don't know how to use them. Can someone give me good examples of when a Titan pretender should be used; especially in light of the fact that they must be picked over another pretender (ie. the opportunity cost). Are there some basic/popular titan builds out there that a person should be familiar with?
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June 25th, 2008, 05:29 PM
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Lieutenant General
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Join Date: Dec 2003
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Re: Titan pretenders
Some people call the Cyclops/Prince of Death/Moloch titans, but I would disagree. None of those are in the same thematic style as simply giant humans. Of the actual titans, I think there are few good uses outside of imprisoned blessers.
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June 25th, 2008, 05:39 PM
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First Lieutenant
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Join Date: Feb 2007
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Re: Titan pretenders
I find that they fall into three categories:
1. Imprisoned Blessers. Sometimes the points just add up.
2. Weird Ability user. For exanple: The Mother of Rivers gets Water gems which can kickstart a Water economy for non-Water magic nation. I also like the god with a Forge bonus(which stacks with a Hammer), the gods with four arms(for holding more forge bonus items), and the Lady of Love(reduces unrest so makes a great turn 1 blood hunter).
3. Battle mage: When you have a natural Astral 10 caster, you really don't want a single arrow to kill them in battle.
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June 25th, 2008, 05:52 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Join Date: Oct 2003
Location: Helsinki, Finland
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Re: Titan pretenders
There are very few viable titan chassises. This is because most of the time they are too expensive with too little magic and are just poor cousins for some of the others. Thus they never get used.
The worst ones are the old Dom2 pretenders, the two Sons of the Sun, Lord of the Gates, Mother of Lions and of the new ones Lord of War.
The Celestial General loses out to the male titan in a bad way because 25 points more for the titan gets you 100% shockres and one more level of Air magic.
In general, most of the titan chassis pretenders are simply completely outclassed by a certain few builds or are too cost inefficient compared to monster type builds or even rainbow mages (if you're not going for a high dominion SC with awe).
Similarly, rainbow mages have practically only a couple of viable options, with the Great Enchantress being the best one overall.
All of the pretenders would benefit from a rigorous analysis and tweaking. Some builds are very likely to get tweaks in the next patch. Thanks for resurrecting this particular topic, doing a general writeup of this has been on my to-do list for a good while.
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June 26th, 2008, 04:55 PM
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Lieutenant Colonel
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Join Date: May 2007
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Re: Titan pretenders
Quote:
Edi said:
The Celestial General loses out to the male titan in a bad way because 25 points more for the titan gets you 100% shockres and one more level of Air magic.
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Hm, I disagree.
General doesn't have SR, that's true, but he can easily cast it as he is an air mage.
He, OTOH, has better stats (defense and attack 14 compared to Titan's 12 and 100 hp compared to Titan's 90), map movement 3 and comes equipped. At Air levels beyond 6 they have almost same price and at levels beyond 4 General is cheaper.
So, I'm pretty sure that if you don't want a huge air bless or something, Celestial General is better in almost every aspect. If your nation allows to choose, of course.
In general I think that many titan pretenders are quite viable. Everything depends on what you ant to get from them)
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June 25th, 2008, 05:53 PM
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Colonel
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Join Date: Oct 2007
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Re: Titan pretenders
I have found them useful only when they have exactly the paths I am looking for, usually for a bless combined with the need to patch a hole in my nation's magic. So for example the Zeus guy for the Earth bless and access to Air magic or the Athena lady for Astral access and a Nature bless.
I usually skip Titans though and generally go for the Cyclops - for the always useful Earth bless - or the Enchantress for a rainbow with some astral pearls to help non-astral nations get going. Not sure if that is conventional wisdom or not but has worked ok for me.
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June 25th, 2008, 06:16 PM
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Lieutenant General
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Re: Titan pretenders
I would agree that Cyclops and PoD should technically fall in the "monster" category.
So in general for me, within the "titan" category, they are usually only selected based upon a particular bless, and wanting mediocre dominion in that build for low cost. Going from Dom3 to Dom6 is 42 points for example, and if Dom5 can work for you that's only 21 points. So generally if you only want a single x9 bless, with moderate dominion and decent scales, an Imprisoned titan can often be the best pick. Unfortunately, this seems to be their most viable niche, with other chassis beating them easily for all other applications. (With the exception of the Father of Winters, and a couple others who are very nation limited, he makes an excellent early game SC.)
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June 25th, 2008, 06:37 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Join Date: Oct 2003
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Re: Titan pretenders
Personally I love pretender assassins (for most you have to give them a Black Herat). A couple of titans work there.
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June 25th, 2008, 06:45 PM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: Titan pretenders
Cyclops is a form of titan. Moloch, PoD, Dagon, Gorgon and Virtue are all classed as titans in the DB due to having full slots, fairly high new pathcost, high dominion and decent hitpoints.
The monster chassis category in the DB includes units that have less than full horseman slots or which are otherwise unusual and which do not fit the rainbow category or something else. Common monster characteristics are variable starting dominion, high pathcost and usually fair to good combat abilities, which are hindered by the aforementioned lack of slots.
Rainbow category includes everything with a low pathcost (30 or less) unless immobile. This is why Old Man of the Sea is in Rainbow category instead of monster like Lord of the Waves, low pathcost and two starting paths, plus not being immobile.
Immortals are in the Lich category and immobiles are, well immobile (mapmove 0).
Just to clear up any confusion on why some things are in what category as laid out in the DB (assuming we are using the categories listed in the Pretender Summary section of the DB).
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June 25th, 2008, 07:09 PM
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Second Lieutenant
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Join Date: May 2006
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Re: Titan pretenders
I'll note that one of the major reasons I play almost exclusively CBM is because of the increased choices re: Pretenders.
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