
"The angle" - "I'm used to the old angle" also often means "Mah hexes!" "Balancing" - well, thruth here, but what they often mean is "Having too many "clearly better options" when developing cities kinda made also having fewer units per city available not feel like an improvement" In a way folks didn't like, too - your basic Heroes III fan thinks having his archers sit in an unreachable / untouchable position and massacre the other guys is great (Why do I only get to do that while fighting in a castle? I should be able to always have my ranged troops untouchable by the enemy!). They had the right idea - make sieges less random and revolve less about who has the catapult skill (old sieges were pretty silly), but the way it ended up being implemented was very meh. "Sieges" - "Upgrading castles didn't get you anywhere, there was no catapults and it was too different", although, again, the Heroes IV sieges really aren't the best. "Horribly implemented and balanced heroes" - "There are hero units on the battlefiled, and there used to not be any." Although there's thruth to this argument because the combat capabilities of particular types of hero were wildly different. It's not like that in IV, and this bothers me." "Combat is a clusterfuck" - "Old combat was a simple, clear affair, where the most important thing was counting hexes so that you can strike the other guy first. From my experience talking with a bunch of Heroes III fans these are the translations: You have to translate it for it to make sense.

They did formally convert at one point and their national flag reflects this, but it sadly never went beyond mere formality. The Scandinavian tribes that converted to Christianity were launched into a golden age while the finns continued to bugger one another in their saunas. And maybe you'd almost think that he has a point, but I would argue that this is their punishment for rejecting the Lord. He points to the ramshackle huts built as a bad facsimile of modern housing which his community lives in. 'There can be no God, at least a benevolent God, and the reason is this!', the finno-mongolian points to himself, his flabby and unattractive shape, his bad teeth and his massive gut, his awful haircut. Their hatred of God stems from both this history and the terrible conditions they endure which are a result of their cursed nature. Not even their collective dyslexia was ever cured. There were attempts to do so by Swedes and Russians, both failed to uplift them from their squalid and barbarous existence. The squat pseudo-asian hobgoblins called finns who inhabit the damp forests filled with puddles have never been properly civilized.
