Matchlock Samurai

Samurai_Inf_Matchlock_Samurai Image

Basic Unit Statistics (can be modified by difficulty level, arts, skills, traits and retainers)

Recruitment Cost 700
Upkeep Cost 150
Melee Attack 6 17%
Charge Bonus 6 12%
Bonus vs Cavalry 0 0%
Range 100 15%
Accuracy 50 50%
Reloading Skill 20 20%
Ammunition 15 18%
Melee Defence 2 5%
Armour 4 26%
Morale 8 16%

Strengths & Weaknesses

  • Good range but shorter than bow units.
  • Devastating damage.
  • Average accuracy, reload rate and morale.
  • Vulnerable to cavalry but fairly good in melee against infantry.

Abilities

  • Bamboo Wall - A large wall that can be erected during the deployment phase. It blocks the movement of enemies and protects against cavalry charges.
  • Fire by Rank - Will fire by rank from front to rear, each rank kneeling to reload and allowing those behind a clear field of fire.
  • Rapid Volley - Temporarily increases a unit's rate of fire.
(Click here to learn more about unit abilities)

Requires

  • Buildings:

Description

These samurai are armed with matchlock guns and harass the enemy with long range, massed volleys of fire.

Matchlock samurai fire volleys into enemy ranks to disorientate and weaken them enough so a charge cannot be effectively resisted, as it can be devastating to see comrades falling in a hail of bullets. The matchlock samurai fight in a similar way to the ashigaru, but are much more accurate in their fire. Once fired, reloading guns is a slow business, and it can leave the unit vulnerable to cavalry attacks. The matchlock samurai should retreat behind friendly melee troops once the real fighting begins. Historically, the majority of arquebuses were used by ashigaru troops. The guns were reasonably simple to use and arming the ashigaru with them was quicker and cheaper than training archers. It also freed up the samurai to participate in combat using weapons that required more skill, such as the katana or bow. The samurai who did use arquebuses were expected to use their better skills to take out single, important enemies rather than completely rely on volleys like the ashigaru. This distinction between fighting styles for the same weapon could also be seen with the bow and the spear, where the emphasis for the samurai was to pick targets and engage them in matched single combat.