Hello,
Pretty sure I read the rules clearly enough and I understand it perfectly well..but it still seems odd to me. I am referring to the affect of a battle on a supporting army. As far as I understand an army/unit may support a battle for either side (attacker or defender) and even after the battle, the same army/unit can support a battle in the same area within the same turn (since the support token stays even after the battle). No matter the outcome of the battle, nothing happens to the supporting army/unit. This just seems odd to me.
Shouldn't the supporting army have some sort of risk? If the side they are supporting loses, shouldn't they suffer some kind of consequence. One thing I've read on this board a lot is "think if this was real life...what would make sense" and this method works almost every time (game is very well designed
). However, from reading the rules, it doesn't seem like if (example) Lannister supports Baratheon in a battle against Greyjoy. Even if Baratheon loses, Lannister isn't routed nor suffers casualties. If you think about this in real life...if one side loses, both the main army and the supporting army would be routed/suffer casualties.
What do you guys think..have I read the rules wrong and a supporting army DOES IN FACT suffer some sort of consequence? If I am right, do any of you have any gripes with this? Seems like it takes away any risk from the supporting army. I guess the risk is in the attacker/defender counting on support.
Thanks