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Introduction

Air Combat

Civilian

Land Combat

Archer

Artillery

AT Crew

Barbarian Horse Archer

Barbarian Horseman

Berserker

Bombard

Catapult

Cavalry

Conquistador

Cossack

Crossbowman

Crouching Tiger

Digger

Domrey

Eagle Warrior

Field Cannon

Gaesatae

Garde Impériale

Heavy Chariot

Helicopter

Hetairoi

Highlander

Hoplite

Horseman

Hul'che

Hwacha

Hypaspist

Immortal

Impi

Infantry

Keshig

Khevsur

Knight

Legion

Line Infantry

Llanero

Machine Gun

Malón Raider

Mamluk

Man-At-Arms

Maryannu Chariot Archer

Mechanized Infantry

Modern Armor

Modern AT

Musketman

Ngao Mbeba

Nihang

Okihtcitaw

Oromo Cavalry

Pike and Shot

Pikeman

Pítati Archer

Questing Knight

Ranger

Redcoat

Rocket Artillery

Rough Rider

Sabum Kibittum

Saka Horse Archer

Samurai

Scout

Slinger

Spearman

Spec Ops

Swordsman

Tagma

Tank

Trebuchet

Vampire

Varu

Voi Chiến

War-Cart

Warrior

Warrior Monk

Winged Hussar

Zombie

Naval Combat

Support

Heroes

Musketman
Description
Renaissance era melee unit.
Historical Context
If an arrow or quarrel could stop an armored man, just think what a small, fast-moving ball of lead could do when it passed through the metal into the squishy bits below. Replacing the unwieldy arquebus as the preferred firearm in the early 1700s AD, the musket was a smoothbore, muzzle-loaded weapon triggered by a match- or cap-lock mechanism – the archetype being the British “Brown Bess,” which served the Redcoats so well from 1722 through 1838. Sure, frontier settlers also used them around the world for hunting, protection and killing the natives, but it was in the wars of Europe that military tactics evolved to make use of the musket en masse. In China the hand cannon had evolved into the musket, and the Ming and Qing dynasties made extensive use of them. But it was the Europeans and Ottomans who used them to best effect against each other, with elite units armed with muskets.
PortraitSquare
icon_unit_musketman

Traits

Upgrades To
icon_civilization_unknown
Line Infantry
icon_unit_french_garde_imperiale
Garde Impériale
icon_unit_english_redcoat
Redcoat
Upgrade From
icon_civilization_unknown
Man-At-Arms
icon_unit_japanese_samurai
Samurai
icon_unit_norwegian_berserker
Berserker
icon_unit_georgian_khevsureti
Khevsur
Promotion Class: Melee
icon_moves
2
Movement Points
icon_strength
55
Melee Strength

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_gunpowder
Gunpowder
Production Cost
Base Cost: 240 Production
Purchase Cost
Base Cost: 960 Gold
Maintenance Cost
Base Cost: 4 Gold
PortraitSquare
icon_unit_musketman
Description
Renaissance era melee unit.
Historical Context
If an arrow or quarrel could stop an armored man, just think what a small, fast-moving ball of lead could do when it passed through the metal into the squishy bits below. Replacing the unwieldy arquebus as the preferred firearm in the early 1700s AD, the musket was a smoothbore, muzzle-loaded weapon triggered by a match- or cap-lock mechanism – the archetype being the British “Brown Bess,” which served the Redcoats so well from 1722 through 1838. Sure, frontier settlers also used them around the world for hunting, protection and killing the natives, but it was in the wars of Europe that military tactics evolved to make use of the musket en masse. In China the hand cannon had evolved into the musket, and the Ming and Qing dynasties made extensive use of them. But it was the Europeans and Ottomans who used them to best effect against each other, with elite units armed with muskets.

Traits

Upgrades To
icon_civilization_unknown
Line Infantry
icon_unit_french_garde_imperiale
Garde Impériale
icon_unit_english_redcoat
Redcoat
Upgrade From
icon_civilization_unknown
Man-At-Arms
icon_unit_japanese_samurai
Samurai
icon_unit_norwegian_berserker
Berserker
icon_unit_georgian_khevsureti
Khevsur
Promotion Class: Melee
icon_moves
2
Movement Points
icon_strength
55
Melee Strength

Requirements

Technology
icon_tech_gunpowder
Gunpowder
Production Cost
Base Cost: 240 Production
Purchase Cost
Base Cost: 960 Gold
Maintenance Cost
Base Cost: 4 Gold
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