herwin
Matrix Legion of Merit

Posts: 6059
Joined: 5/28/2004 From: Sunderland, UK Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: rockmedic109 Not only do I use the recommended CHS house rules, I add a few of my own. I personally do not transfer units outside their command area without paying the PP, but I play the AI. Playing the AI, I don't think I have to worry about Pearl Harbor/Karachi being invaded and I know I don't have to worry about Panama or Aden. The new CHS version that has the SouthPac units arriving as under CentPac command is going to give me a headache trying to switch everything over after SouthPac shows up. I'm running CHS 2.0.7 159 against the AI on hard and have reached late January. My main area commands are SEA controlling Ceylon and Sabang with the southern Malaya evacuees currently seconded to ABDA in Java to stiffen the defense. India Command in Delhi is responsible for Burma and Port Blair. SWPac is in Darwin, with assets holding Timor, Amboina, and northern Australia. Australia command is holding New Guinea and Rabaul with rear bases around Townsville. CenPac is in Hawaii controlling the sea lines of communication to Australia. NorPac is in Anchorage. I'll switch the CenPac assets south of Baker to SouPac when it arrives. All four US carriers are in the Solomons area, while the two RN carriers are supporting Port Blair against massive Japanese air raids. Three surface TFs are operating against the Japanese advance, one based near Batavia, a second on Kendari, and the third on the Shortlands. The Japanese have an intact KB which is currently in the Southern Philippines and a mini-KB built around CVLs supporting the Manado landing. The Japanese have taken Rangoon and Malaya with a small landing on Sumatra and another at Kuching on Borneo. Hong Kong is holding out, as are Clark Field, Manila, Bataan, and Cagayan in the PI. The Japanese have landed at Manado in the Celebes. There was a landing attempted in the Solomons, but the USN has five TFs operating out of Tulagi and the Shortlands and a major USMC presence at Rabaul, so that went absolutely nowhere. Wake fell on 8 December, and the Japanese have advanced in the Marshalls, but the sea lines of communication to Australia are intact. The reduced experience levels of the Allied air units show--although there have been perhaps 100 airstrikes on Japanese vessels in 50 days, I think there have been a total of 10 Japanese ships hit. The Allied submarine force has been more effective than the air forces. My usual strategic approach of creating a strait-jacket for the Japanese isn't as effective as usual, but the Japanese advance is slower than in stock or CHS 1.0, so there hasn't been a major naval battle yet.
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Harry Erwin "For a number to make sense in the game, someone has to calibrate it and program code. There are too many significant numbers that behave non-linearly to expect that. It's just a game. Enjoy it." herwin@btinternet.com
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