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Messages - MrNarsus

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1

Playing heavy cav vs hussars in CavGF it's completely different than a real match. Facing an enemy faster than you, in a giant map, can turn frustrating. Chasing 1-2 mounted hussars with heavy swords than are only runing away and making rounds last for 25 mins it's not funny either when you are riding a really slow horse.


just like hitting a heavy 4 times, him not dying, then getting hit once and being instantly dismounted as a hussar. it works both ways traeeeeeee

ooooor

a circle of everlasting heavies forever following each other on top of a hill, is not funny either. play well win well

2
"All the past editions we picked Curassiers, and Hussars are stronger than them"  ~ SirAlecks

Disagree. One example would be on CavGF fighting against MrAnnoying, he's probably the best heavy (at least who i find the most diffifuclt to beat) who still plays the game semi-regularly and he could kick my arse 9 times out of 10, as well as most other "good" hussars.

What you have to remember, Spain, is that a lot of your players aren't usually heavies (in previous years), and often before CNC you would have hussars training as heavies to get ready for the match. That inexperience I'd say is why you lost in the other editions, not that hussars are stronger than them, because that is definitely not true

Lancers are OP, everyone knows it, so stop the salt. But GG to Spain for using the class, it was allowed and therefore your victory is valid.

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Poland|8-6| France

Wow, nice result Poland. I have to admit that I'm surprised, especially after hearing about the 5-1 score partway through. Wish I saw that match. Zahari, I will try and approach you in the near future with a barrage of interview questions if you don't mind, but once again GG to both teams. Sad to see France leave the competition at the group stages this year, but this will definitely make this year's Semi-final stage more interesting.

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6:4 Melee 4vs3 (the rounds end was an melee on foot)

This round, for me, was the decider of the entire match. As Skittles said we threw away a lot of rounds, which I agree with, but this round was very tense. We lost a lot of horses (and most of the riders) early on which meant it was a few mounted with a few dismounted, against a whole load of mounted players. I reckon if we won that round, which we could have if we played more patiently, then the outcome would of been significantly different. But as one of the dismounted I can say that this part definitely challenged not only me, but the teamwork of UK the most out of any match so far this year. A huge congratulations to Germany, I hope to face you again later in the competition, if UK get through the group-stage.

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The lancers are no longer allowed and Spain is disqualified from the competition for using them.

what about this?

it was a joke

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Genuinely lolling at harf's interview, nice one rasti xo

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- Interview -

Erik, French Captain
Organizer of the 2017 Cavalry Nations Cup


Q. First of all, as an experienced player of the community, and organiser of every CNC, how do you feel this year’s cup has been so far in terms of activity, matches and drama, in comparison to the years before this?

Erik: In terms of activity, I would say this year’s Cup has been very good. As we all know, the community is slowly becoming less active and the number of people joining regiments and communities is dwindling, but, many veteran and active players showed interest and requested that this tournament run one last time in 2017, and so, my hesitation faded, and I began preparation. Because of this willingness of players, everyone is already very motivated to do their best in every match, and I honestly think that is why the matches have been so good so far. On FSE the thread had already exceeded 40 pages in the first 3 weeks of the tournament, and yet I think last year’s thread stopped just below 40. I think this proves how much the community wanted this tournament and their willingness to participate. About drama, there is drama every year. Maybe there is a little more drama this year, it seems that way, but shit happened, and I dealt with it as efficiently as I thought to do so. I’ve always tried my best to keep these events drama-free, I very much like being in control of what happens and therefore unnecessary drama is simply unwanted to me, and the rest of the team of helpers. As you all know, this year I tried to make some changes to the tournament such as the introduction of Lancers. This obviously caused an uproar with some people, but you can never make everyone happy, so I just aim to make the majority happy. No one is forced to play for their nation, and therefore if they feel so strongly about those changes then they are free to leave as they please. But overall, we’ve seen some really good matches this year, so I honestly think the Cup can be in anyone’s hands.

Q. France’s team this year is obviously home to some of the best players in this year’s cup, as Cpt, how do you balance training as a team and letting your players do their own thing, seeing as so many of them are already so experienced?

Erik: I’m pretty blessed with some of the best cavalry players this game has to offer in the French team, and I appreciate that. It’s a big pleasure to lead them, no one is here to troll and their mentality was good from the beginning, so the mood of the team is very good. In all honesty, we didn’t do much preparation before the CNC, we did a couple of practice matches against Germany and the United Kingdom, which are 2 of the big contender for this competition, and managed to win both matches, but it was very close. Overall, the team had a rather short but difficult preparation. I actually think this was the right thing to do as I didn’t want the team to be overconfident by beating every team there was before we even started for real, or losing lots of matches and dropping the morale before we started. I believe this short but sweet preparation helped to hone some rusty skills for some of the members but allow them to adopt the right mentality. The team is a mix of 9e, 4e and 7e with a few more guys from other diverse regiments. Getting everyone to know each other and start playing as a team is difficult, but we are getting there, and because of this I am starting to see some good team spirit. On the field, I do speak a lot and give lots of advice to the team, I know they are all seasoned veterans, but I think keeping that communication up is the key to success. They all have their own ways of doing things, their own ways of getting out of certain situations, and as long as it works, they are allowed to do it. It is only when they ignore commands and then get killed because of this that I get bossy. The rule of thumb is: if it works, then keep doing it. I’m very much looking forward to our future matches to see how well we can all work together, I believe we can improve much more.

Q. In the FRA v ESP match, ESP had changed their class from the usual Cuirassiers to Lancers. How did you and your team think to oppose this change, and how was this strategy implemented into your real match?

Erik: In the end we only had two trainings against lancers before our match with Spain. I asked friendly communities to play as lancer against us, but I do not think this was all that efficient. The people we asked to help us train were not originally lancers, and therefore they were not playing against us with the ferocity that Spain brought to the table. The people we trained against were mainly Hussars and Infantry, so this was to be expected. In the real match, what we tried to do was exploit their weaknesses and avoid their strengths. We had some rounds where we only lose a few men, and the rounds we won were generally by a large margin, but as soon as we gave them the chance to make use of their strengths, they punished us for it. Because of this, it was a very close match.

Q. The first two rounds of your match against Spain were quite smooth sailing for France, giving you a 2-0 advantage. Would you say the cause of Spain’s eventual win was because something changed in the way that your team played, or was it simply Spain adapting and improving as the game continued?

Erik: I’d say it was probably a bit of both. The match was a continual change of tactics, on both sides I would say. We started off really nicely as you said, but we let them come back. That evidently cost us a lot. It was a series of change, whoever adapted faster won the rounds. It was mostly a 1 round margin between the two teams, but at one point we were losing 5-3. We did manage to pull it back though to 5-5 to get us back in the game, as we knew if they had a big advantage then it was game over for us. Throughout the match I think there was a lot of thinking involved, so from a spectator point of view I think it would have been interesting to see how both France & Spain changed as the match progressed.

Q. Your match with ESP was undoubtedly one of the closest ever to happen across the last 4 years of this tournament, how did it feel to play in that match and how did you keep your men motivated when morale was dropping?

Erik: Honestly, I think our match against Spain was one of the best matches any CNC has ever had to offer. 15 rounds were played in the end, totalling a playtime of 1.5hours. Were I a spectator in this match, I’m sure I would have enjoyed watching it a lot, however, from a player’s point of view, it was very stressful. I did like the challenge the match had to offer, but I often found myself getting frustrated with my own performance in this match as I genuinely believe I was one of the worst contributors to the match that day. In a team sense, I don’t think we ever once lost morale. We never doubted that we could come back and win this game, so we just tried our best throughout and never gave up on victory. Even when we were two rounds down, as I said before, we managed to pull back through by keeping spirits high. In matches I do tend to listen to what my players have to say and what their opinions are on different situations (even if I do sometimes ignore it), but as I said before I will always advise what I believe to be best, and to be honest, I didn’t have to say anything to them to keep the spirit up. Overall, as a cavalry player that game was very intense but also extremely enjoyable.

Q. Last week's match against Spain was the first time France lost a group stage match in CNC history. How do you feel about that?

Erik: I do consider our defeat against the Spaniards a failure, but not as a critical one. It sucks a lot to be losing a group stage match, but we do have the benefit of not being out of the competition entirely. I know we have what we need to go far into the tournament, so yes, this defeat is a failure, but it will not kill us. We have to make sure we win all the rest of the matches to qualify for the Semi-Finals, and once we get there, it can become anyone’s match. It doesn’t change anything that we lost, we have exactly the same aims and mentality as at the start of the competition, and I’m sure we will get back on our feet as soon as the next match comes. It’s not as if the defeat was a humiliation, we lost 8-7. If there were two more rounds than we may have won it, we just happened to lose at the 8 round mark. I don’t think it has made anything harder for us as I was expecting tough Semi’s no matter if we came first or second in the group stage. I’m sure all teams once in the Semi-Finals will have a hard time winning. Just to note as well, last year UK lost badly to France in the group stage, it was 8-2, but they ended up beating France in the final with an 8-5 finish. This just proves that a group stage defeat is not a defeat for the whole CNC.

Q. Out of all the teams participating, are there any which you are really looking forward to playing, and why?

Erik: After our defeat against Spain, I’d say the match we are most looking forward to is against Poland. Poland has always been a tough opposition, and they are playing as Cuirassiers this year again, so we will need to adapt to that class as well. I also have a slight personal thing about beating Poland, because the last time I faced them was in the FRA v POL 2014 final, which we lost under my lead, so I’m really looking forward to a good, challenging revenge match. Beating Poland is probably our ticket to the Semi-Final, so there’s a lot riding on it. We can’t fail again.

Q. Similarly, were there any teams that at the very beginning of the tournament you were a bit apprehensive about fighting, and why?

Erik: No, none at all. For a simple reason, which is I gave myself and my team a clear aim in the CNC. We are participating to win and so there is no aim below that. Since we all agreed on that mentality, we can’t allow ourselves to be doubtful or pressured about a match. We have to win against every opponent we face eventually to get there anyway, so there’s no point doubting ourselves. If we play the right way, I truly believe we have this, and that’s the only way we can think if we want to win this CNC. Winning this is my last big aim as a member of the community. I had the honour of winning every tournament group-wise there is with the 4e, but I tripped on the last step as Captain of France in 2014. I will not allow that mistake to happen again this year. Sukesa and I both have this Cup as our last goal in this game, seeing as it’s the only title we haven’t won for ourselves, and so I wish for us to win it to finish off my career of Mount & Blade. CNC is probably the hardest thing to win Cavalry-wise, there’s been no finals that are completely one-sided, and we’ve had a different winner every year: Poland, France and UK, and so the thought of winning in such a difficult tournament makes me want it so much more.




























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Application for the Media Team,

Your Name: Narsus

Your Steam Name (please give a link): Narsus //  https://steamcommunity.com/id/confirmedweeb/

What would you like to do in the Media Team? (Videos / Videos & Commentaries / Interviews...): Interviews if you need the help

9
So much petty arguing.

Why can't the Irish team just be happy they got their lancers? Lancers have been banned for the last 3 years of this tournament, now we give them a sweetie and they want the whole bag instead.

You've got your long pointy sticks, you could've said thank you to all the voting captains, but instead you choose to argue about it because you haven't got EXACTLY what you want.

P.S: Lancers are overpowered in NW (and any module for that matter), and yes I am experienced as a lancer so you can't play the "YOU DONT KNOW WHAT UR ON ABOUT" card, so just get on with what you've been given like good little boys and girls and stop crying about everything xoxo


Funny bloke thinks that lancers are op xD, what i learned from this game is that the ~OP~ things are just things some players don`t know how to fight against it. Therefor it is more personal than proven, if lancers are so op why can i still jumpshot a lancer? he has the range but i still win ;).

jumpshotting a lancer on cavgf where no one really gives enough of a fuqq to play well all the time is really the greatest achievement you could ever get on this game, can i have all your bank details to send you money so you can buy yourself a nice little medal? sorry i dont wanna pay for postage and packaging xxxx

10
Oh Dear! Pardon me Narsus, I should thank President Erik Lincoln for freeing us from our bonds, I guess it was greedy of us for wanting us to play the class as the developers intended!

But this tournament has nothing to do with what the developers intended. For the last 3 years Lancers have not been allowed for pretty obvious reasons (if you can't see this, you must be in denial), so why on earth should you now suddenly be entitled to play a class that no one other than your team wants, bar a few **cough tom cough**.

The devs intended you to play lancer yes, but where is it written "In CNC 2017, Lancers must be allowed to be played as a viable class with no restrictions."

I for one actually agree that Lancers should be able to be played if couching is taken away, so don't mistake me for some Anti-Lancer person because I'm not, I just think you shouldn't feel so self-entitled to something which will obviously upset the balance of what will probably be the last CNC.

11
So much petty arguing.

Why can't the Irish team just be happy they got their lancers? Lancers have been banned for the last 3 years of this tournament, now we give them a sweetie and they want the whole bag instead.

You've got your long pointy sticks, you could've said thank you to all the voting captains, but instead you choose to argue about it because you haven't got EXACTLY what you want.

P.S: Lancers are overpowered in NW (and any module for that matter), and yes I am experienced as a lancer so you can't play the "YOU DONT KNOW WHAT UR ON ABOUT" card, so just get on with what you've been given like good little boys and girls and stop crying about everything xoxo

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cant remember who but someone said about how people are only crying about this because they dont know how to play against it
 
+9999

literally just learn to deal with it and it's fine, I remember playing in some NA league where every bloody team is lancer and me with 150 ping got top score lmao. they're slower than most of you (assuming most teams are huss this year) so for the most part getting into 2v1s either side of a lancer should be pretty easy, then the huss who hasnt got a big pointy stick in his face can just jump him from whatever side he's on, simplez

as long as you dont run into their couches you're fine. for cui it might be a different story which i dont know bc im not a cui so

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Application for Team Player

Your Name: Narsus
Your Steam Name (please give a link): https://steamcommunity.com/id/confirmedweeb/
Your Nation: UK

**If most matches are played on weekends like last year I probably won't be there to play 9/10 times, but feel free to add me to the team for that 1/10 chance.

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Servers / Re: ♞Cavalry Groupfight Server - EU
« on: June 24, 2017, 11:57:14 am »
I'm a little confused about your resignation Nelson. Those screenshots you showed were from the Cavalry_Groupfighting forums, and yet you have resigned from admin in another server entirely?

As Sernis said, we on CavGF, just like the Senior team here on CavGFEU, will take any criticism from our staff in our stride, try to reach a mutual understanding, and continue to work together for the sake of the community.

If what you were trying to do was to resign from both -  then fair enough, however if you only want to resign from the position on the server which you have evidence of 'admin abuse', then please explain so. I think it would be a waste for you as an individual to leave in such a way though ;)

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Nickname: Narsus

Steamname: Narsus // https://steamcommunity.com/id/confirmedweeb/

GUID: 1203787

How active can you be: I come on the server everyday and play for a while.

Current Regiment/Clan: 10th "Prince of Wales' Own" Hussars

Admin experience: Several events, regimental servers, Trench_Battle_Official (2 years ago), Killbox, Sword_Groupfighting, Senior-admin on Cavalry Groupfighting.

Why do you want this role: I think I would be a good person for the job, I know better than most how to deal with rule-breakers effectively and have been doing this for a long time.

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