Jim D Burns
Posts: 4013
Joined: 2/25/2002 From: Salida, CA. Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund That means you think the only reason for the production system to be included in the game is so that the allies can have a target in the later stages of the war. Or in other words, its only there to punish the japanese player. No it’s there because a fixed pool system for Japan would have been easier to implement than the current system. But Japan’s economy needed to be vulnerable to the advancing allies and short of hard coding reductions into the fixed pools system the only other option was to put the production on map. That way if Japan was doing better than history the economy wouldn’t crash on some arbitrary date. Had they done it for purely gamplay reasons then the allies would have the same kind of economy, but it does not. The reason it doesn’t is because it is a lot harder to implement, so they took the easy way out with the allies and gave them fixed pools which have been drastically reduced as each new mod comes out. Were Japan’s economy easy to fiddle with like the allied one is, I have no doubt we’d have seen it corrected by now. But because it is a lot harder to tweak we are still stuck with the same fantasy scenario today as when the game was released. quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund And again your beef seems to be with the ratio between japanese and allied production, not the japanese proction system in itself. and I agree, the allies should always produce more than the japs, but I dont want to see some hardcoded arbitrary cap on Jap production. Ive asked you already, but you never answered, why should the Japs not be able to reach 1943 production levels in 1942, if they capture all the resources undamaged and manage to get them all home? Why would it be physically impossible for the Jap industry to produce 1000 aircraft per month in 1943, when they managed to do just that in 44? I dont get the logic behind those arguments. For the same reason the allies don’t have a lot of production early in the war, because it isn’t historical and it took a long time to ramp up production. The US was exporting excess resources throughout the entire war, yet it took until 1943 for their production system to ramp up to high levels of production. Compared to the US the Japanese industry was archaic, it took them 4 or 5 times as long to retool factories than it took the US. And ramping up production was way harder for them as well because they were not very efficient. Simply capturing some more raw resources should not translate to increased production capacity. They are two separate issues and should be addressed as such. quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund No, because in history they didnt have the resources, manpower and infrastructure for it. But we are not doing a reenactment of history here, we are doing a simulation of it. And if the japs manage to bring home more resources in the simulation than they did in real life...what should happen then? Nothing? See above, it wasn’t lack of resources that kept them from building more stuff, it was the time needed to ramp up production. If you look at Japanese resource stockpiles throughout the war, they declined from day one. Japan never got more resources than they started with, yet slowly they became more efficient at producing stuff. But it took a long time to ramp up. Japan could have never produced 1943 levels of air frames in 1942, it was not possible. They could have probably achieved 10%-20% more efficiency perhaps, but even that would have been after tremendous effort. quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund What do you mean "never worry about fuel"? Japan made some very hard choices in the war due to fuel shortages. They even started using the fuel stocks aboard the Yamato as an emergency tanker for their smaller ships running the slot because fuel was so short. They also chose not to rebase the Yamato because the fuel cost would be too costly just for rebasing the ship. My memory is very vague on the details here, so perhaps someone else can give better specific info. But I do know the Yamato was used as a tanker and a large capital ship was not rebased due to fuel shortages. I just can’t remember/find the source I read this in right now. quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund See "simulation, not reenactment" above. What would have happened to Jap units and their TO&E if the allies had done a sir Robin until 1943? You can’t call it a simulation if you don’t start from an point that the historical participants did. Japanese production is far too large in game pure and simple. quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund Again, this argument is about relative production, not Jap production. No it is not. It is about the fact the Japanese industry is too big in game, thus historical allied figures are dwarfed by Japanese over-production. Jim
< Message edited by Jim D Burns -- 1/8/2008 7:17:52 PM >
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