Enter Troop Details
Example Data Table
| March Plan | Infantry | Ranged | Cavalry | Siege | Use Case |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Balanced Rally | 120,000 | 120,000 | 120,000 | 15,000 | General attack testing |
| Infantry Push | 260,000 | 55,000 | 45,000 | 15,000 | Anti ranged setup |
| Cavalry Strike | 40,000 | 55,000 | 265,000 | 15,000 | Fast attack setup |
Formula Used
Total troops equal the sum of all entered units. Total might equals troop count multiplied by tier might. Base power equals troop count multiplied by tier strength. Siege receives a lower field multiplier.
Effective power = base power × boost factor. Boost factor = 1 + ((attack × 0.55) + (HP × 0.30) + (defense × 0.15)) ÷ 100.
Wounded troops = total troops × wounded rate. Lost troops = total troops × loss rate. Survivors equal total troops minus wounded and lost troops.
Adjusted training time = base training time ÷ (1 + training speed bonus ÷ 100). Resource estimates use tier level cost assumptions.
How To Use This Calculator
Enter each troop count by type and tier. Use zero for empty groups.
Add attack, HP, defense, training speed, and loss assumptions.
Enter enemy power if you want a rough comparison score.
Press calculate. The result appears above the form and below the header.
Use CSV or PDF buttons to save your result for later planning.
Advanced Lords Mobile Troop Planning Guide
Troop Mix Matters
Lords Mobile battles depend on troop quality, counter choice, boosts, and march purpose. A strong march is not only a large march. It also needs the correct troop shape. Infantry, ranged, cavalry, and siege all serve different roles. This calculator helps compare those roles in one simple page. You can enter all five tiers for each troop type. The tool then estimates total might, practical strength, training time, resources, losses, and survivor count.
Understanding Strength
Higher tier troops add more might and more battle value. T4 and T5 units usually drive serious rally strength. Lower tiers still matter for filling, trapping, baiting, or rebuilding. The calculator uses weighted values to estimate a power score. It also applies attack, health, and defense boosts. Attack has the largest share because it directly improves damage pressure. Army health follows because it helps troops survive longer. Defense receives a smaller share because its effect is often less decisive.
Planning Losses
A good plan considers the cost of failure. Enter wounded and loss rates before testing a march. The result shows estimated wounded troops, dead troops, and survivors. This is useful before rallies, darknest runs, guild events, or solo hits. You can also compare how much training time is needed after rebuilding. Training boosts reduce the adjusted time estimate. Resource totals help you prepare food, stone, timber, ore, and gold.
Better March Decisions
Use the composition totals to check balance. A march with one dominant troop type can be powerful. It can also be risky if the enemy counters it. Balanced setups reduce obvious weakness. Focused setups create stronger pressure against known targets. The success chance is only an estimate. Real battles also include heroes, familiars, gear, talents, research, wall status, reinforcements, and random battle flow. Treat this calculator as a planning aid. Always scout, compare reports, and adjust your lineup before sending important troops.
FAQs
What does this troop calculator estimate?
It estimates troop count, might, weighted power, resources, training time, wounded units, losses, survivors, and march capacity usage.
Can this predict exact battle results?
No. It gives planning estimates only. Actual results depend on heroes, gear, talents, research, familiars, counters, reinforcements, and enemy setup.
Why are attack boosts weighted higher?
Attack usually affects damage pressure most directly. HP and defense still matter, but this calculator gives attack the largest influence.
Why is siege weighted lower?
Siege has special use against walls. In many troop fights, it has less direct value, so the calculator lowers its field score.
Should I use T5 only?
T5 troops are strong but costly. Many players mix tiers to balance power, recovery cost, event goals, and risk.
What is march capacity usage?
It compares entered troops against your march capacity. Values above 100 percent mean the selected troops exceed your march limit.
Can I save the result?
Yes. Use the CSV button for spreadsheet records. Use the PDF button for a simple printable summary.
Which troop type should I send?
Choose based on the enemy frontline and expected counters. Infantry counters ranged, ranged counters cavalry, and cavalry counters infantry.