Castle Scheduler
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Why use this castle scheduler?
Castle fights go wrong when alliances treat timing like a loose discussion instead of a fixed schedule. A proper scheduler should show who owns each block, where overlap exists, and when a lane is uncovered.
This planner is built for that operational view. It gives you a shareable schedule instead of a pile of screenshots and half-confirmed chat messages.
How the schedule is built
- Creates UTC-based slots for castle and turret lanes across the active battle window.
- Applies labeled blocks to each lane so gaps and overlap are visible immediately.
- Exports a readable plan you can reuse or paste into alliance coordination channels.
Tested planning scenarios
- Coverage planning for alliances with one strong opening block and weaker late rotation.
- Turret ownership rotations where support and attack assignments must alternate cleanly.
- Last-minute rescheduling when one lane loses coverage and another must absorb the shift.
Choose slot length
Use shorter slots for tight battle plans and longer slots when you want a faster rough draft.
Add lane blocks
Assign attack, hold, support, or flex blocks to the castle and turret lanes that matter to your alliance.
Check gaps and overlap
Look for empty windows or overloaded lanes before the battle starts.
Export the final schedule
Share the finished timeline with the alliance so everyone works from the same plan.
Opening pressure plan
- Stack stronger lanes early.
- Use if your alliance wins through the first hour.
- Keep support blocks ready for fast swaps.
Balanced coverage plan
- Spread reliable players across the whole window.
- Best for alliances that value consistency over spikes.
- Good when attendance is stable but not elite.
Recovery plan
- Use flex blocks to patch weak periods.
- Focus on keeping lanes covered, not on ideal perfection.
- This is the realistic choice for alliances with uneven attendance.
Q: Why plan in UTC?
A: Because a single reference timezone removes conversion mistakes when your alliance spans multiple regions.
Q: Should I use 15-minute or 60-minute blocks?
A: Use 15-minute blocks for high-pressure coordination and 60-minute blocks for broad staffing plans.
Q: Can this replace alliance chat?
A: No. It replaces confusion, not communication. Chat still matters, but the schedule becomes the source of truth.
Q: What does flex mean in the schedule?
A: Flex blocks are reserve assignments that can shift to attack, hold, or support depending on how the fight develops.