witpqs
Posts: 26087
Joined: 10/4/2004 From: Argleton Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: el cid again 2) The Coronado - the range has been increased but is still less than the Catalina. A few versions ago you had made it longer-ranged than the Catalina (I forget the exact range), then that change got lost due to technical problems. I am only mentioning it is still shorter-ranged than the Catalina just in case that is an error - I realize you might have found a new source and re-set the range. That problem should not be present any more. I used USN official data. But I can check it. I want to make sure I am being clear and not sending you on a wild goose chase - the range did get increased from the very minimal range it had in recent releases. The thing I noticed is that it is currently less than the Catalina's range, and before when you had fixed it (before it got re-broken) the Coronado's range was greater than the Catalina's range. quote:
ORIGINAL: el cid again 3) In Malaysia, all of the supplies flow out of Singapore and go to Kuala Lampur and Georgetown. In fact, they are quite smartly 'hoovered' out of Singapore. Within just a handful of turns there are too few supplies in Singapore to provide replacement airplanes (less than 20K). If this is the effect you were trying to achieve, it works! Otherwise, it's a problem. It isn't in my games. I have a different problem: AI refuses to attack Singapore - - even if I manually assign the units - and they are planned for it - and in stock slots. Everything sits next to Singapore - for years!!! In human games not an issue. Two comments: a) I haven't gotten far enough to see Singapore assaulted quite yet, so I can't comment. Although, in an older (very old) version of CVO I noticed that behavor with Palembang. The AI Japanese could have practically walked right in but didn't right through the end of '42. b) Regarding the supplies, this is the first version I've played in a while. For all I know recent versions didn't behave that way. As far as history goes, the supplies being pulled out of Singapore might well reflect the water supply problem they had. This is good. On the other hand, once the Japanese have Sinapore, or if/when the Allies recapture it later, keeping adequate supplies in there to sustain operations, shipyard, etc, might be a problem.
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