Editing User talk:The All-knowing Sith'ari
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{{Welcome}}-<b>[[User:ED|<font color="black">E</font>]][[User talk:ED|<font color="black">D</font>]] | {{Welcome}}-<b>[[User:ED|<font color="black">E</font>]][[User talk:ED|<font color="black">D</font>]][[Image:ArmyROTC.gif|15px]]</b> 17:28, 29 September 2007 (UTC) | ||
== Removing Categories == | == Removing Categories == | ||
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But I will agree that the Elites' tactics due to their code of honour "getting in the way" could be improved. --CookieMonstersayshello 14:38, 7 July 2011 | But I will agree that the Elites' tactics due to their code of honour "getting in the way" could be improved. --CookieMonstersayshello 14:38, 7 July 2011 | ||
:Maybe they're not bad soldiers, but they could be so much better. In ''The Flood'', they try to ambush the UNSC Marines as they leave from their raid on the ''Pillar of Autumn''. They get that the best tactic is to funnel the Marines through a narrow mountain pass, but their honour code means that they keep their troops in full view and send their Banshees charging into the Warthog's anti-aircraft guns. Furthermore, they keep their Wraiths perched in full sight on a hilltop, and they're later destroyed by a pair of Scorpions. A much better plan would have been to thoroughly fill the pass with anti-tank mines, but even we in the real world view the use of minefields as somewhat cowardly and disproportionate. They also remove the need for a soldier to see his enemy to kill him, so it's a big no-no for the Sangheili. They could also have pre-sighted the pass for fire from the Wraiths and kept them out of sight on the reverse slope, since the Wraith's [[plasma mortar]] is an indirect fire weapon that can send shells arcing over obstacles, but like the mines, this removes the need for a soldier to see his enemy, so the Sangheili ain't gonna do it. In short, they don't use bad tactics considering that they're hampered by their honour code and need to let the enemy see them as the fight, but it prevents them from using their weapons and troops to best effect as Humans do.--[[User talk:The All-knowing Sith'ari|The All-knowing Sith'ari]] 12:06, 8 July 2011 (EDT) | :Maybe they're not bad soldiers, but they could be so much better. In ''The Flood'', they try to ambush the UNSC Marines as they leave from their raid on the ''Pillar of Autumn''. They get that the best tactic is to funnel the Marines through a narrow mountain pass, but their honour code means that they keep their troops in full view and send their Banshees charging into the Warthog's anti-aircraft guns. Furthermore, they keep their Wraiths perched in full sight on a hilltop, and they're later destroyed by a pair of Scorpions. A much better plan would have been to thoroughly fill the pass with anti-tank mines, but even we in the real world view the use of minefields as somewhat cowardly and disproportionate. They also remove the need for a soldier to see his enemy to kill him, so it's a big no-no for the Sangheili. They could also have pre-sighted the pass for fire from the Wraiths and kept them out of sight on the reverse slope, since the Wraith's [[plasma mortar]] is an indirect fire weapon that can send shells arcing over obstacles, but like the mines, this removes the need for a soldier to see his enemy, so the Sangheili ain't gonna do it. In short, they don't use bad tactics considering that they're hampered by their honour code and need to let the enemy see them as the fight, but it prevents them from using their weapons and troops to best effect as Humans do.--[[User talk:The All-knowing Sith'ari|The All-knowing Sith'ari]] 12:06, 8 July 2011 (EDT) | ||