(→Strategy: Added Tamar to list of examples and removed Jadwiga.) Tag: Visual edit |
(adjusted faith cost) Tag: Visual edit |
||
Line 5: | Line 5: | ||
|era = Medieval |
|era = Medieval |
||
|reqtech = Temple |
|reqtech = Temple |
||
− | |faith = |
+ | |faith = 200 |
|strength = 35 |
|strength = 35 |
||
|moves = 3 |
|moves = 3 |
Revision as of 10:39, 8 April 2018
The Warrior Monk is a Medieval Era unit introduced to Civilization VI in the Fall 2017 Update. It can only be purchased with Faith in a city that has a majority religion and a Holy Site with a Temple (or one of its replacements).
- Attributes:
- Must have the Warrior Monks Follower Belief to purchase.
- Follows a unique promotion table.
Strategy
The Warrior Monk is a military unit with its own special set of promotions: Cobra Strike, Dancing Crane, Disciples, Exploding Palms, Shadow Strike, Sweeping Wind, and Twilight Veil. A fully promoted Warrior Monk will have 60 Combat Strength and 4 Movement Movement, be able to attack twice per turn with double flanking bonuses, be invisible to non-adjacent enemy units, and spread its civilization's religion to nearby cities each time it defeats an enemy unit. Moreover, it's rather cheap to purchase with Faith, making it easy to field an army of Warrior Monks in short order. They're particularly useful to leaders of civs that have a combination of religious and military bonuses, such as Chandragupta, Philip II, and Tamar.
Like other military units, Warrior Monks can be combined to form Corps and Armies once the appropriate civics have been discovered.
Civilopedia entry
The myths of wall-running, magic-palmed warrior monks endure because of how outlandish they are. Unfortunately, we simply have to live with the actual feats of history's priests with astounding fighting skills.
Consider the Shaolin Monastery in China, founded by the Indian Buddhist monk Batuo in 495 CE. While the history of martial training at Shaolin is tangled with legends and pop culture, it's said that Batuo and his first Chinese disciples, potentially soldiers before joining the monastery, already came equipped with martial arts skills, passing them down to their students.
By 581, monks at Shaolin would have their own fighting style, even siding with would-be second Tang Emperor Li Shimin during the dynastic wars of the period.
By contrast, Japan's Buddhist sohei would engage in the less glamourous inter-temple turf wars, picking up arms and using their fighting skills in order to gain political, not spiritual, dominance.
Gallery
Related achievements
Try To Snatch the Pebble From My Hand
Have a Warrior Monk with 4 Promotions
|