Nar I wasn't sure if the patch was meant to address that or where troops abandon cover and run towards the enemy, the latter of which seems to have been fixed.
The running away when under artillery was supposed to have been fixed in the previous patch. Then that introduced the suicide charge bug which was fixed in the latest patchNar I wasn't sure if the patch was meant to address that or where troops abandon cover and run towards the enemy, the latter of which seems to have been fixed.
It's the larger magazine capacity (10 vs 5). Weapons that can fire more rounds between reloads tend to have higher average RoF in the game, especially at shorter distances.Is there any historical reason for the Lee Enfield to fire quite a lot faster than the Kar98? I thought both were bolt action rifles working much the same way.
Is there any historical reason for the Lee Enfield to fire quite a lot faster than the Kar98? I thought both were bolt action rifles working much the same way.
Its action is somewhat faster than the kar98.
watch from the timestamp or from earlier since there the data from the lee enfield and kar98k are shown aswell.I was asking about the Lee Enfield though, not the Garand.
watch from the timestamp or from earlier since there the data from the lee enfield and kar98k are shown aswell.
But if you want to see them individually:
The speed is impressive, but here we have an expert firing at a cardboard target under ideal conditions - not a scared soldier shooting at an enemy he can barely see!Ah, thanks. I thought the video was only about the Garand.
Interesting just how fast these rifles can be fired. Compared to the sleepwalker-like pace of Combat Mission.
The tests taught me to respect the little carbine (but my data ends at 192m! At 240m they wouldn't fire at targets in foxholes). I don't know about buildings, but their disadvantage can be that they run out of ammunition relatively fast. The standard allocation is 75 rounds compared to 108 for the Garand.Another interesting thing is that the M1 Carbine is so much more effective than both the bolt action rifles, even at 240m. But maybe it might be that it lacks punch against targets in buildings?
The speed is impressive, but here we have an expert firing at a cardboard target under ideal conditions - not a scared soldier shooting at an enemy he can barely see!
AFAIK crack troops fire their rifles quite a bit faster? Perhaps not as fast as in the video, but that's a different ballpark.Sure, I understand combat conditions are different from a firing range. But not all troops in Combat Mission are scared greenhorns. Some are crack troops with good morale and high motivation. They should be able to fire these rifles way faster.
AFAIK crack troops fire their rifles quite a bit faster? Perhaps not as fast as in the video, but that's a different ballpark.
Why is it a different ballpark though? The game tracks all parameters. Experience, motivation, mental state. If your elite paratrooper is completely unsuppressed and highly motivated etc. Why would he shoot significantly slower or less accurately than the guy in the video?
For a regular level trooper who lost half his buddies and being under fire, yes sure, he should be way slower and less accurate. I just think it should depend more on the actual circumstances.
As it is in this game, the elite soldier fires his Kar98 / Lee Enfield only 25.7 percent faster than a conscript (see test by @Kraut, first post in this thread). That's a tiny speed increase.
25,7% overall isn't a small increase in my book. It's an average, and measures everything from reloading the stripper clip, target acquisition, aiming, cycling of the bolt, etc. Plus even green troops get basic training and should be decent enough to operate their rifle.
True, but we're comparing conscript to elite here. Conscripts never had any training.. apart from maybe wathcing a group demonstration how to do stuff. Surely an elite special forces guy would be at least twice as fast to reload, aim and fire than a guy who picks up a rifle for the first time?
It just seems to me the difference should be bigger between no training and very high levels of training.
I too would like to see exactly how it works. It's the single most incomprehensible part of CM in my opinion.
Recently I had a sniper that got spotted by a Tiger. He didn't spot the Tiger.
A couple of times in my life, a doorpost spotted me but I didn't spot the doorpost ;-)Everybody has at least one example like that. Incomprehensible sometimes how spotting works