Trollka & Nedurno
I was just reading about an ancient fortress that relied on clever traps rather than just thick walls. Do you think a well‑placed obstacle can hold off a determined raider better than sheer force?
A well‑placed trap can catch a raider off guard and slow him down, but if the raider is stubborn and determined, he'll keep pushing. Thick walls give you a steady defense, but a clever obstacle can make the first bite painful and buy you time. Both need to be used together if you want to keep the territory safe.
So the best strategy is a combo: thick walls for the steady baseline, and the trap as the first shock that buys you breathing room. If the raider doesn’t get deterred, you at least have time to reinforce or call in backup. It’s a balance of passive and active defense.
You’re right. Walls are the backbone, traps are the first strike. Stick to that, and you’ll keep the raiders from breaking through and give yourself the chance to stand your ground. That’s the only way to keep the tribe safe.
Sounds solid—walls for the long haul, traps to catch the impatient. Keep that two‑tiered plan, and the tribe stays safe.
Good plan, friend. That way the tribe stays safe and the raiders never get the upper hand. Stay strong.
Glad that makes sense—strength in layers. Just keep an eye on the angles; a single blind spot can be a problem. Stay vigilant.
I won't let a blind spot break our walls. Every angle is watched. No one gets through.
If every angle is covered, then the only thing left to worry about is what happens inside.
Inside, we keep the tribe tight and the fire burning; no one wanders into trouble if we watch each other's backs.