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world of warcraft Gold
Early on in the history of Warcraft II it was easy to setup at other towns when the mine ran out. Good players then began to be very aggressive in stopping enemy expansion which forced players to be more careful in their time and location of expansion towns.
When?
First consider the Gold mine size. Plains of Snow has a lot smaller mines, 40k as compared to a more "normal" map such as Garden of War which starts with 60k mines. You will find that 40k mines run out about midway into the Stronghold/Keep stage or just into the Fortress stage which will leaving you looking for more Gold much earlier in game play. On maps such as Plains of Snow getting an expansion mine is often make it or die. On maps with smaller Gold mines you will have to expand earlier.
Going for a second Gold mine too early can be very dangerous if done too early. A Town Hall is 1200 800 which is a lot of resources to spend. Resources spent on a Town Hall gives you no added offense which puts you at quite a disadvantage in the offensive race. The other player may spend their resources on Grunts and using them to attack in which case the resources spent on second Town Hall will do nothing for you. However if you are able to set up that second Town Hall and get Peons mining Gold and harvesting Lumber you will be able to train two Peons at once (one from each Town Hall) which will allow you to mine Gold and Harvest Lumber at a much quicker rate than someone with only one Town Hall and Gold Mine. The problem however is getting that second Town Hall set up, going, and defended while still defending the main town against the enemy who may be using one mine and devoting all resources to attack units (Grunts). Things that can help here are wall-ins and Towers . Another strategy that sometimes works is to build up a group of Grunts or Ogres then use them to escort a group of Peons to protect them while they head from the main town to the new town, build, and begin mining. This can sometimes leave the main town open to attack but wall-ins and Towers can protect the main town until the new town is up and running. Another strategy commonly used is to just send a few Peons to build a new Town, using 1 to build the Town Hall while the others build Towers or begin to wall the Town Hall in using Farms and buildings. Yet another strategy is to just send 1 or 2 peons over then hope the enemy doesn't find them. This is very risky and should not be used unless you are forced to.
Where?
Sometimes setting up a new town, goes deep into the realms of psychology. There are so many options.
Build in a dropped/eliminated players town. Sometimes people forget about the mine and town after a player drops or is eliminated. They often check out all the mines except the mine of a player who has dropped. So when a player drops or is eliminated, go set up in their town. Often your buildings blend in with the other buildings that were already there, especially if they are the same race of buildings. So the enemy may fly over and think all the buildings belong to the player that left. This quite often works.
Once your town or expansion town is destroyed, go back and rebuild it in the same place. Usually people expect you to go find another mine, because that is what most people do. They won't expect you to go back to the same place because they know you know they know about it. But since you know that they know that you know that they know...... they possibly won't go back to check in a town they have already attacked and cleared.
Sometimes the last place the enemy checks is the resource spots right next to them. Often they assume you would never be as so bold to build in "their" territory. Sometimes the safest place to build is right next to the enemy but you run the risk of the enemy finding it when trying to expand themselves.
There are trade offs for building close or away from the main town. If you build at the closest resource spot to your main town you can more quickly send reinforcements from your main base to protect it because you most likely have more Barracks at your main town. On the other hand people often expect you to build at the closest expansion so they will most likely be checking and ready to attack it. Building further away sometimes gives you a better chance of hiding until your new expansion is defended and under full production but you run the risk of the enemy finding it early on by mistake or design.
Hide the Peasants or Peons
If you've reached the Gold Mine at which you want to build your next expansion town but are not quite ready to built yet (normally due to lack of Lumber), hide the Peons behind the mine. When players check mines, they often don't check all the way around them and will often not see units behind mines.
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