I just pray that my scouts find the green place, from what I assume is most likely the north forest or southeast forest by the haven biome.
<Snipped quote by rezay>
Humans are good at killing each other, not necessarily good at doing war though. You have to remember, we think some things as obvious because we have hindsight and a wealth of knowledge available to us. Line formations was once considered revolutionary and pulling off maneuvers like hit and run, bait and switch or even flanking can be surprisingly difficult. Part of modern military training is specifically designed to teach soldiers how to do battle beyond "shoot that dude".
Also books can start to look like shit after one year of mishandling. Books being mistreated for a hundred years well... unless you have some very dedicated librarians and book keepers, you probably are going to be missing a lot of pages.
<Snipped quote by rezay>
modern warfare is extremely complex. Command and control, logistics, military formations, etc, are all apart of conducting large-scale military operations. But at this stage, warfare is nothing more than raiding and extremely small skirmishes.
<Snipped quote by Dog>
I know, that's self-evident. Look, you're all forgetting that there's a shit-ton of distance between all of us. By the time we come into contact (and are in a position to attack one another), we're going to have the infrastructure and know-how to move supplies and personnel over substantial distance, as well as the population to field armies of thousands, maybe some tens of thousands. It's the application of that to warfare that will be difficult.
*And it might not even be that difficult. We'll likely have made our way there by defeating NPC factions that were in our way.
<Snipped quote by rezay>
I think this statement is incorrect, as the ogres are smoof brain gang.
<Snipped quote by ClocktowerEchos>
Yes, but the point is that once warfare was going on, many things would be quick to learn. Humans are good at problem-solving. Sure, such maneuvers can be difficult in execution, but they're still fairly obvious (all of them have been used since pre-history, we can't really say how hard it was for humans to learn them). It all is really dependent on other factors— like the efficiency of the command structures used.
Line formations were considered useful because of the limitations of technology at the time they were developed. When technology advanced and made them obsolete, they were abandoned in short order.
The US constitution has survived for 230 years. The dead sea scrolls for over 2,000 years. Not saying there are a ton of them laying around, but they'd be sorta like fossils. If by chance a room with some books in them was sealed off sufficiently from the elements, it's possible something survived. Again, should ask the GM about it.
<Snipped quote by rezay>
I'd like to ask, for all of those 200 or 2000 years those documents have survived, how many more papers and books do you think we've lost to time? How many of them do we not eve realize we lost? Those documents are the exception, not the norm and if there's just going to be a magical fix that some how everything the players need is magically preserved in good condition in someone's basement, that kind of takes the fun out of things. Its fun to have to adapt and not have everything given to you on a platter in advance.
Regarding the Wastes: There are villages and traders out there who can help you transport your goods for you and help you turn a profit, like with the Silk Road. These will have to be discovered using actions.
Gotta admit, you guys are asking lots of questions about stuff I had never thought of. Starting to think I may have overestimated my capabilities.