flameberge wrote:NAV wrote:I've read through the rules but haven't played yet, so I can't speak from game experience. As I was looking at the rules and army lists, I got the general impression that Field of Glory had downgraded asian composite bows to somewhere below the much overrated English longbow, which it has a long history of outshooting in distance and penetration ability. I'm getting the impression by comments here that horse archer armies are good in these rules in spite of this? Did I miss something?

I don't know much about the differences between the Asian composite bows and the English longbows but are you sure the approximately 1m long shortbow that could be fired from horseback had more penetration power than the 1.8m longbow? This is not a challenge because I have no idea, it just seems counter intuitive and wondered if you were talking about some kind of Asian bow that was fired from foot?
Anyway, as far as the rules are concerned they pretty much make all bows the same except they give the longbow a little better penetration power but the power of bows in FOG is less about their killing power and more about the number of hits you inflict, which causes the target unit to loose cohesion. Horse archers in this game can basically keep firing into you till you loose cohesion and then charge into you when your weak. If the enemy tries to fight back the horse archers can basically just run away (evade) and generally make it difficult for you to catch them and fight back. An utterly cowardly way to fight and should be looked down on with complete derision.

It is true that a composite recurved bow enables you to shoot the same arrow with the same velocity using a shorter bow than the equivalent simple wooden bow. Whether one that was short enough for handy use from horseback with an arrow designed for shooting other unarmoured horse archers would be able to beat a longbow optimised for use on foot with an arrow designed to kill an armoured target is a different matter.
Accounts of the Crusades mention crusader foot with many Turkish arrows stuck in their (mail) armour without suffering any injury, so it would appear that the Asian composite bow/arrow system did not have good penetration, at least at that time.
THe performance of both types of bow is affected by the weather - wooden bows are not so good in hot weather, composite bows don't like damp weather. So a direct shoot-off comparison in Wales might not give the same results as one in the Syrian desert.
Regardless of technical differences, bow performance is limited by the strength of the archer.
THis sort of detail is beyond the scope of the game.
And yes, horse archers are very effective in FOG even with their lower power bows.