Quote:
Originally Posted by Tarrax
That's cool. So if I understand this right, when my opponent has a scout in my province and in the same turn: he attacks that province with the scout and I move the 100-man army that's in the same province to another province. After this fix, the vast majority of the time, he won't be able to block my army: my army will move on and he will attack my empty province. Is this correct?
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Incorrect.
As of the game right now, attacking the province your army is in with a hidden scout in that province will NOT affect your movement. In fact, your army will move out of that province before the scout attacks. There is no such thing as a "one-hidden-scout-holding-up-a-1000-man army" problem.
This very thread explains that a hidden attacker in the same province will
not stop an army from moving. It's the OP's 3rd question.
What people are talking about when they refer to 'scout blocking' is using the pushback rules to attack with a scout from the adjacent province your army is ordered to move to. By doing this, it is possible that the scout will be the one allowed to move and the army will be "blocked" by the opposing move of a single scout. (not guaranteed: it's random chance)
A scout is used because it's the cheapest commander in the game. Any commander or even small armies will work however.
This is the A->B and B->A situation ONLY.