A Guide to Legion and Governor

 

The Legion & Governor feature is the key tool for you to get the upper hand in battles and dominate the world! Today, I will be talking about how this feature works.

1.   Legion Lineup:

The Governor of a castle can assemble up to 5 units to build a Legion. The Movement Speed of a Legion equals the unit with the lowest Movement Speed in that Legion. Every time a Legion takes action, it takes away 20 Stamina from each unit in that Legion.

Hint:

You may only access the Legion & Governor feature and assemble units after you capture a Capital and become its Governor. Also, not every castle has this feature available for you to use. Note that before you build a Legion, you must coordinate with the Governor and determine if the Legion is for sieging Cities or fighting on the battlefield so that you can use your units in a more specific way that unleashes their full potential.

2. How Does the Legion Feature Work:

- When any unit in the Legion becomes Tired or Injured, the Legion must wait for that unit to fully recover from the negative status before the Legion can take another action. Alternatively, you can ask the unit(s) with a negative status to leave the Legion so that Legion is no longer disabled.

- When the Commander of any unit in the Legion has 0 Forces left, the Legion may no longer take another action.

- When the Legion captures a tile, the tile goes to the unit owner that first captures the tile.

- The units in the Legion take turns to engage enemies based on their number in the Legion. If it’s a draw after a unit engages the enemy, the next unit picks up where they left off in the next round. If all units in the Legion become Injured, the Legion starts retreating.

Hint:

When the Legion is capturing a tile, only one unit in that Legion can start capturing the tile while all other units remain Idle. Note that this process takes away Stamina from every unit in the Legion. Also, all units in the Legion will take turns to engage the Garrison based on their sequence number until a unit starts capturing the tile.

So I would suggest you put the units in proper order to lose too many of their Forces.

And of course, there are situations where you cannot capture tiles (e.g. When you are attacking Farms, Bandits, Mountain Bandits). Also, the units in a Legion will not engage the Wooden Oxen that belong to an ally.

3. How Does the Governor Feature Work:

It is only after you capture a Capital can you appoint a Governor for that Capital. After appointing the Governor, tap the Capital to bring up the Assemble button. Each Capital can only have one Governor at a time. And each Capital can assemble up to 50 units. Any Alliance member can be appointed as the Governor (but that player must have at least 1000 Power). Also, the Governor can play another role in their Alliance. If a Governor is removed or captured by enemies, all units of the associated Legion are disbanded.

Hint:

The Governor may not assemble Protected units such as units under New Player Protection, sealed Cities, or captured units. When the Legion is marching or in combat, players may not access the Capital menu and edit that Legion. When the Legion is out in the wild and marching, if you find that a unit is unfit for the current battle, you can access the Legion menu and ask that unit to leave the Legion. The Governor can view the information of all units in the Legion via their Reports. And the owners of Legion units can view the Reports belonging to their Legion and themselves via their Reports! As you can expect, the Reports aren’t just available for the associated player to view. Everyone in the same Alliance can view the Reports of their Legion via Alliance Reports.

Alright! That’s about it for this guide to the Legion & Governor feature. Thank you for reading. And stay tuned for more exciting content!