[quote=""36drew""]Well. I'm a noob. I have to ask you a question Kaiser -- if uhlans, hussars, and cossacks are indeed heavy cav -- what on earth is classified as light cav?
I always thought it went like this:
-Any melee cav available in age ii was considered light cav (the above)
-Any melee cav available in age iii is heavy cav -> lancers, opris, curs, etc.[/quote]
i think i got the answer to this... the counter system purely works through the Classification "Tag" a unit possesses
i read from a post in agesanctuary that there is more to the counter system what most people don't know, let me show it through this example:
Yumi counter Ruyters, but since Ruyters are classified as Cavalry AND Light Cavalry, Yumi 2x modificator is decreased a little bit, so abus, yumis, xbows etc. are not what they crack to be considering this.
This applies, i guess, to Mahouts too, teh got a multiplicator to
Infantry, which a musket and a an xbow is, but since xbows are ranged infantry and muskets heavy infantry (+ infantry with range), mahouts got a penalty vs muskets, but this penalty is not as "hard" as a hussar has got his penalty vs a musket.
Conclusion:
the classifications: ranged cavalry and ranged infantry are not used to measure counters, they are purely made of accuracys sake
what you pointed out drew

, is more a tip for beginners, by using the words "high" and "light" they really mean "strong" and "weak", like the hussar is "light" cavalry and the cuirrassier is "heavy" cavalry, where in terms of aoe3 unit classification both are Heavy Cavalry
its just so that beginners know which units are stronger and which are weaker