This article is about the unit in Age of Empires III: The WarChiefs. For similar units in other games of the series, see Ram (disambiguation). |
Template:Infobox UnitThe Ram is a slow-moving infantry unit of the Iroquois featured in Age of Empires III: The WarChiefs.
Overview
A Ram is an infantry unit that is usually used to counter enemy buildings. The Ram is a siege unit for the Iroquois and can be created from their Siege Workshop, which is the native equivalent of the Artillery Foundry. It is slow compared to other artillery, but effective against buildings. It is not considered as true artillery, and is not vulnerable to Culverins, however it can be easily killed by any unit with multipliers against infantry (such as most artillery, Lancers, and Jat Lancers).
It has a high siege attack which able it to turn enemy base to dust in mere minutes. Four or five can do considerable damage to an enemy base.
But despite of this high siege damage it has no melee or ranged attack making very vulnerable against enemy attacks. Without any support the ram cannot stand long in a protected enemy base. If you are actually trying to wreck the enemy's hometown without any support units, do it in discreet. You could sneak 20 of these, 5 at a time through the edges of the map without being seen. Then, draw the attention of the enemy with Forest Prowlers and use the Rams to destroy enemy's important buildings such as military buildings, factories, and even town centers. Then simply put the Forest Prowlers back to stealth mode and watch how the Rams demolish buildings.
Trivia
- It is, together with the Flail Elephant, the only melee siege weapon of the game.
History
“ | The most direct way to attack a stone wall or other stone fortification was to knock it down with a battering ram. A typical ram was a stout log mounted on wheels or suspended from a frame so it could swing forward and backward. The frame was brought up to the wall or gate to be battered; men heaving in unison then repeatedly slammed the ram into the target. Given enough time, any obstruction could be knocked down, opening a breach for assault. | ” |