Welcome to the TWC Wiki! You are not logged in. Please log in to the Wiki to vote in polls, change skin preferences, or edit pages. See HERE for details of how to LOG IN.

Difference between revisions of "Green Jackets (ETW Unit)"

From TWC Wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
{{Unit|image=[[Image:Green_Jackets.jpg]]|Class=Light Infantry|Men=80|Guns=N/A|Recruitable From=Army Board, Army Staff College|Recruitment Cost=680|Upkeep Cost=170|Technology Needed=Machined Rifling}}
+
{{Unit|image=[[Image:Green_Jackets.jpg]]|Class=Light Infantry|Men=80|Guns=N/A|Recruitable From=Army Board, Army Staff College|Region=England, Scotland, Ireland|Recruitment Cost=680|Upkeep Cost=170|Technology Needed=Machined Rifling}}
  
 
==Overview==
 
==Overview==

Revision as of 16:35, 7 November 2009

Green Jackets (ETW Unit)
Green Jackets.jpg
Class Light Infantry
Unit Size
Weaponry
Morale
Melee Attack
Ranged Attack
Defence
Charge Bonus
Accuracy
Range
Ammunition
Region England, Scotland, Ireland
Recruitment Cost 680
Upkeep Cost 170
Turns to Build
Unit Limit
Building Requirements
Technology Requirements
Attributes


Overview

Organized and equipped as light infantry with rifles, not smooth-bore muskets, riflemen have every right to see themselves as an elite. Chosen for initiative and intelligence, they fight without close supervision from their officers. Their uniforms set them apart in an age when soldiers dress like peacocks: they deliberately blend into the landscape so that they can stalk their prey.

Historically, the most famous riflemen, the British Green Jackets, carried infantry rifles designed by Ezekiel Baker. This muzzle-loading flintlock used a small ball from a tightly rifled barrel to give superb accuracy. There are accounts of riflemen holding targets for each other at hundreds of paces! It was a slow business to load the piece properly, as high-quality powder was carefully measured out and the bullet wrapped in a leather patch then tapped down the barrel to engage with the grooves. All of this could take a minute or more to do properly, but the resulting shot was deadly over astonishing ranges. Baker even carefully supplied a long “sword bayonet” so that the overall length of his rifle plus bayonet matched that of a line infantryman’s bayonet-tipped musket.

Factions