Random question for you all - how do you determine if you came out ahead in a fight?
I mean, sometimes it's pretty easy - I spent 10 gold on PD who managed to kill 30 gold worth of an attacking army => that was a worthwhile investment in PD.
Similarly, in battles which involve only regular troops, a simple tally of gold/resource costs can give a good measure.
But what do you do when you start bringing in summoned troops into the mix?
For instance (and this isn't going to be perfectly accurate, since I don't have the battle open in front of me): I lost roughly 50 wolves, killing a demon knight and something like half a dozen 20 gold, high resource troops.
The wolves were either part of a werewolf's entourage as part of a 15 gem spell, or summoned up by bored werewolves for free.
The demon knight only costs 5 slaves, but required at least one turn to hunt down those slaves, then another turn to summon.
The troops took at least one turn to build (possibly more, depending on resources required vs how resource-rich my opponent's castles are) plus gold costs.
Did I come out ahead? Personally, I'm feeling like I did, since I see those wolves as a basically 'free' resource - even the ones that came out of a spell are basically just a plus for getting a werewolf, and the ones summoned by werewolves are also free, since werewolves aren't mages, so I'm not losing research/site searching/whatever opportunity costs - whatever carnage those wolves manage to inflict before dying a horrible death is a plus.
Thoughts?