Froonp
Posts: 7995
Joined: 10/21/2003 From: Marseilles, France Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: sajbalk For a Japan hold the line in China, I would expect only Chang Chow (sp.) to fall --- 1 or .4 chits With the additional cities, the same line means that Japan has to take : - Chengchow. No more cities. quote:
For a Japan moderate offensive in China, I would expect the above plus Si-An (the E. Commie city) and the E. most nationalist factory --- 3 or 1.2 chits With the additional cities, the same line (E. most nationalist factory is Changsha) means that Japan has to take : - Sian. - Tungkwan. - Chengchow. - Nanyang (to secure flank). - Changsha. - Maybe Hengyang (to clear the way to Canton). That's 6 cities instead of 3. quote:
For a Japan serious offensive, I would expect the above plus 2 more cities in S. China plus Chungking --- 6 cities or 2.4 With the additional cities, the same line (the 2 more cities in S. China are Kweiyang and Nanning) means that Japan has to take : - Same as above (6 cities), plus - Kweiyang - Nanning - Kweilin - Chihkiang (to allow supply to Kweiyang). If the Japanese go as far as Chungking, that's an extra city. This makes 11 cities (instead of 6). quote:
To conquer China, you would need all of the above plus 3 more factory cities --- 9 or 3.6. With the additional cities, the same objective (conquer China) means that Japan has to take : - 3 additional factory cities as well (Lanchow, Chengtu & Kunming), plus perhaps : - Tianshui (on the road to Lanchow) - Ankang (to protect the Sian - Lanchow supply route) - Yennan (to protect the Sian - Lanchow supply route) Thats 6 extra cities to conquer, which comes to a total of 17 if I count correctly. So, as a rule of thumb, it looks like that if Japan want's to achieve the same advance in China, it has to conquer twice the number of cities that are necessary in WiF FE. So maybe simply halving the US Entry cost (to 2) would even the US Entry cost of the operation. This said, I think that keeping the US Entry cost quite high (say 3) should be considered because it is a quite realistic way to achieve a realisitic China War. The reality of the War in China was that neither the Japanese nor the Chinese really tried to take ground to the enemy. This is achieved in WiF for the Chinese side by the Chinese attack weakness, and for the Japanese side by US Entry and Partisans (Partisans that become a really bigger threat in MWiF than in WiF for the Japanese). quote:
Perhaps the best way is to assume that Japan is going to conquer China. On MWiF, how many cites would Japan need to take the factories assuming it cleared the rear of its supply lines? Divide 9 by that and make calculations accordingly. 9 x .4 = cities needed to conquer x new die roll
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