micheljq
Posts: 791
Joined: 3/31/2008 From: Quebec Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Maximeba Well, my buddy (playing the Axis) just defeated France. I'm thinking I have time with Russia, as it will take him some time to move his entire army from France to the Eastern Front or it will be very expensive paying for those smp's. Wrong, all he has to do is make sure the Axis army is in Vichy France at the time of surrender. The computer will knock all those German and Italian units into the deployment box. All he has to do is deploy those units in cities on the Eastern Front at no expense to either Germany or Italy. Hello, I am just a gamer like you. I agree this is too easy. One suggestion I think would be that upon Vichy creation, the Axis troops in Vichy France can only redeploy in occupied France (not Vichy) or that the program automatically deploy them somewhere in occupied France (not Vichy). But is it doable in the game I do not know. This way if germans, if they want to attack USSR, they first have to move to the east themselves and using SMPs, it will take many turns this way. quote:
Another thing I noticed, the Italians can send supplies from Italy to Africa (Tripoli) using convoys and those supplies can be interdicted if the Allies have a naval presence in the sea zone (Central Med). Yet troops will be sent from Italian Ports to the port of Tripoli and no interdiction will be made. Are troops easier to get across than supplies? Not sure how these can be addresssed or even need to be addressed but they sure seem to be wrong to me? Allies for Ever Wes I did play a game as the british where I did attack Vichy France in 1940, and the Axis sent a lot or armored corps in Syria to attack me. I did send a strong fleet in eastern mediterraean, and on few occasions I was able to fire at Axis transports and sunk them, but rarely. I must say there was also a strong italian cover fleet, I don't know more.
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Michel Desjardins, "Patriotism is a virtue of the vicious" - Oscar Wilde "History is a set of lies agreed upon" - Napoleon Bonaparte after the battle of Waterloo, june 18th, 1815
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