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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 7/31/2012 8:41:23 PM   
witpqs


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A good player like Canoe will recognize that Tezpur and Rangpur are both important bases that need to be garrisoned and fortified for the very reason you mentioned. He might not have been expecting an actual paradrop, just being prudently prepared for one.

Of course, NOW he does expect you!

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 391
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/1/2012 8:49:40 AM   
Hortlund


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Yeah, perhaps you are right. Im really glad we managed to take one of those bases though. Would be dreadful to go in against a prepared enemy.

D-6
Tranports about to pass Sabang. Another paradrop secures another base on the railline to Chittagong. I feel pretty confident we have blocked reinforcements now, so tomorrow we will start more recon of the base.

4 CVs are now in place as escorts, together with 6 BBs including the Yamato. I feel pretty secure that I can blast a hole through to the base, but still this is a shoestring operation, where we will operate far from secure bases, and with limited supply and fuel.




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 392
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 11:20:07 AM   
Hortlund


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D -4

Im torn between holding for a day to wait for the CVs or press on. I have a hunch that the USN CVs are somewhere between Ceylon and Port Blair.

I dont think that he will attack right here though, presumably he will want to attack with support of LBA. So we press on.




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 393
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 1:57:41 PM   
Hortlund


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Oh, in other news, Port Moresby is about to fall. Soerebaja has fallen and the two remaining pockets of resistance on Java will be cleared in a week or so. Nome is under siege but will hold out for another week. Skagwayhas been taken, and the 2nd Division will pursuit the defenders up to Whitehorse, after that, the offensive in the nort pacific is over.

In northern China, we are approaching our objectives. We are three hexes away from cutting the supply lines south. After that, we will begin a massive regrouping of forces and move on to the next phase of the Chinese offensive. Bear in mind that the offensive in India has two objectives. 1) cut supply to China and 2) mess things up for the allies by taking and destroying HI.

If my calculations are right, China should be experiencing a massive supply shortage in 6-12 months. The next offensive is targeted for Oct-Nov 1942 and will aim at taking the center.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 394
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 2:46:17 PM   
Flicker

 

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Even as a relatively new player, I've read enough AARs to know to garrison Tezpur and Rangpur to defend against paratroopers. I like to prepare the Chittagong to Ledo line for defense (and to supply China), so building airfields at Tezpur and Rangpur with base forces improves supply. My SOP is to dig in and build fort 1 before improving a base (and now because of this on my next turn I'm going to get the engineers to build up the forts a bit more).

I also recombine the 17th Indian Division (IIRC Brits and Gurkhas) at Chittagong to provide infantry support to the Chittagong Fortress (6 x 6" guns).

I see that you took Silchar, blocking possible reinforcements from Ledo.

Chittagong is isolated and it will take awhile for the Allies to restore LOC. You've also cut the Chinese supply from Ledo if the Allies were using that base for air supply. Any Allied troops in Burma are in trouble if you take Chittagong.

Nicely done.


< Message edited by Flicker -- 8/2/2012 2:49:37 PM >

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 395
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 3:57:31 PM   
Hortlund


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D -3

Two important things happened today.
The paras were attacked by armor, but held. Magnificent! They bought another day for my troops.

His CVs launched a strike against 2 DDs of mine. Looks like two USN CVs and at least one Brit CV. We press on!

Tomorrow we split up the invasion convoy, the assault forces will begin the sprint to the beaches, the SCTFs will clear the way. Bombardment TF heading to Akyab. Carriers to take position between the USN CVs and the transports. Banzai!!





Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Flicker)
Post #: 396
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 3:58:44 PM   
Hortlund


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Im trying to give the impression im landing at Pt Blair. Every day counts now, every false move by the allies increases our chances of success.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 397
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 4:02:44 PM   
veji1

 

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You got balls to press on likely facing US+UK CVs without a full KB.. Best luck to you but an utter disaster remains a real possibility !

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Adieu Ô Dieu odieux... signé Adam

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Post #: 398
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 4:12:07 PM   
Hortlund


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Meh, I have 4 fleet carriers together with one CVL and two CVEs. I'll put that force up against two USN CVs any day of the war.

Not only that, if Canoe comes closer with his CVs, he will be inside Betty-range from Rangoon. Also, I have land-based Zeros and Oscars flying top cover over the non-CV TFs. I think he will lose more than he wins if he attacks.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to veji1)
Post #: 399
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 7:26:56 PM   
Hortlund


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D - 2

Full speed for the invasion forces. SCTFs scout ahead. Carriers well to the rear, but inbetween allied CVs and the transports. What do we find...?

USN dive bombers have rebased to Akyab. Our bombardment TF did not go in during the night-turn for some reason. This meant 40 DBs escorted by 20-something fighters sortied against an invasion TF. Some got through, two transports sunk. No hits on warships. Yamato was spotted, so now he knows what he is facing. Perhaps this is good, I doubt he will send in surface forces now.

We have to run this gauntlet now. The forces are committed, the surprise is complete. We might take losses, but we have more than 100 000 men enroute to the invasion beaches. We press on. BANZAI BANZAI BANZAI

Night airfield attacks ordered, another bombardment run on Akyab. Fighters on CAP over the transports.

Battle stations! All ahead full.




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 400
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 8:31:29 PM   
Hortlund


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D -1

We are ashore! And we will capture the base on D-Day!

Very little action today. I was expecting to have the kitchen sink thrown at me, but no air-attacks whatsoever.

Notice that paratrooper unit among the landing forces? Day after tomorrow, they will wreak havoc deep inside Indian territory...




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 401
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 10:20:19 PM   
pws1225

 

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Banzai!

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 10:45:02 PM   
Wirraway_Ace


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund

D -1

We are ashore! And we will capture the base on D-Day!

Very little action today. I was expecting to have the kitchen sink thrown at me, but no air-attacks whatsoever.

Notice that paratrooper unit among the landing forces? Day after tomorrow, they will wreak havoc deep inside Indian territory...




PjH
Banzai, but...The divisions are significantly under strength. Were they completely unloaded when the screen shot was taken?

Mike

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 11:13:23 PM   
Ingtar

 

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I am now reading both sides, so no comments from me except that seeing this from both sides is wildly amusing.

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/2/2012 11:17:36 PM   
Hortlund


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Wirraway_Ace


quote:

ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund

D -1

We are ashore! And we will capture the base on D-Day!

Very little action today. I was expecting to have the kitchen sink thrown at me, but no air-attacks whatsoever.

Notice that paratrooper unit among the landing forces? Day after tomorrow, they will wreak havoc deep inside Indian territory...




PjH
Banzai, but...The divisions are significantly under strength. Were they completely unloaded when the screen shot was taken?

Mike

They are not unloaded, in fact Im surprised that so many AVs got ashore this turn. They were 9-10 hexes out yesterday. Normal movement 5/4 but they made a full-speed run to get to the beaches as fast as possible.


_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Wirraway_Ace)
Post #: 405
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/3/2012 4:13:24 AM   
Cribtop


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Oh, my.

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D-Day - Operation Natalie - 8/3/2012 8:59:54 AM   
Hortlund


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As could be expected, lots of action today. It seems most of the allied airforce is based at Calcutta, all the attacks flew from there.

My Zeros really held their own. The kill-ratio for today was 80 kills for 5 losses.

The allies came in wave after wave, mostly during the AM-phase. The first raid penetrated the CAP 18 SBDs and 15 TBDs escorted by 4 Buffalos. They scored bomb hits on the two CVEs escorting the invasion fleet. They paid a heavy price though, of the 33 attacking bombers only 1 (!) made it home.

Then 10 Swordfish came in unescorted...they all perished. Although some got through to an attack run first.

After the two big battles came Bleinheims escorted by Hurricanes. By the looks of things Canoe was LRCAP:ing Chittagong.

In the PM-phase, another handful of SBDs came, I think they were 5-6 in total, but they managed to penetrate the CAP and put two bombs in the remaining CVE.

Both CVEs should be gone, they are disbanded in port, but they are both on fire.

We took Chittagong, and now the race to the paratroopers to the north is on.

Those paratroopers are having a real Arnhem up there. They have held for three days now against shock attacks by the armored brigade they first threw out of the hex. I have another para-unit marching up the road to link up with them. Amazing, this is warmovie-material.


I lost two CVEs and a handful of transports in this offensive. On the plus-side I think we have bled most of the Indian airforce dry. At least the dangerous units. There really cant be much left of those USN-airunits now. The Swordfish are gone, the Vildebeeste went out during the battles of Palembang in the early days of the war.

My two Zero units were rebased to Burma, I think they have something like 15 exp 80+ pilots between them now. They will have a well-earned R&R, while two new fighter units take up position at Chittagong. We can expect heavy airbattles up here.

The supply-situation in Burma is so-so, mostly because this had to be a fast operation. I had no time to ship in supplies in advance. While the battle for northern India commences other units will attack Port Blair, Akyab and Cox Bazaar, and fresh supplies will be brought in. My main objective has already been achieved though. As long as those paratroopers hold the line at Arnhem, there are no supplies flowing to the Indian airbases flying supplies to China.




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Cribtop)
Post #: 407
RE: D-Day - Operation Natalie - 8/3/2012 9:06:34 AM   
Hortlund


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The battle for Tezpur. Is this our Arnhem, or is it Pegasus Bridge?




Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 408
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/4/2012 1:52:07 PM   
Hortlund


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Orders:

NE India
Move north to cut railline. After that is achieved, commence strat-bombing campaign on Indian industry.

Malaya/Sumatra
38th Div ordered to clear out Port Blair, after that, Sumatra. Then Singapore. Goal is to "roll back" from NE India, removing all allied bases.

Java/NEI
Clear out last pockets of resistance at Java, after that, forces relocate to Singapore.

North Pacific
Prepare defence. My hunch tells me this is where the first counterattack will strike.

South East Pacific/Australia
Grab what can be grabbed, then dig in.

China
Cut off Lanchow from rest of China. After that, reposition for the offensive battles in the center.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to witpqs)
Post #: 409
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/4/2012 7:13:35 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund

Orders:

NE India
After that is achieved, commence strat-bombing campaign on Indian industry.


May I ask what is the objective with this move?

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The Moose

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/4/2012 7:48:33 PM   
Hortlund


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Victory points. And lots of them.

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The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 411
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/4/2012 8:33:18 PM   
Bullwinkle58


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund

Victory points. And lots of them.


I thought that was your intent, but I didn't want to presume.

The manual (Section 17.0, page 264 in PDF) says:

Industry damage – Two VPs per point damaged, 20 VPs per point destroyed (an item destroyed
when damaged will yield 18 more VPs). Industry can only be destroyed by firestorms and
A-bombs, but can be damaged by any type of attack (including firestorms and A-bombs). VPs
scored by damaging industry is cumulative; if an industry hex is bombed, damaged, repaired,
then bombed again, the player keeps earning VPs as long as the industry hex keeps generating
value by repairing itself.
This is true for all industry types including manpower.
Points will only be scored by the Allies for bombing industry in mainland Japan, and by the
Japanese for bombing industry in North America, Australia, and/or Hawaii.


_____________________________

The Moose

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 12:18:08 AM   
PaxMondo


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I can confirm, no VP's earned for strat bombing in India for IJ.

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Pax

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 1:54:43 AM   
Coach Z

 

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Sorry for the lateness of my question but I'm planning my own JApanese !st Turn and opening moves.

But what units did you use to take Palembang?

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RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 7:15:04 AM   
Hanzberger


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Great AAR PH, late to the party but I am pulling for ya~!
First a comment on the recent posts. Why have you stopped bombing in NOPAC? I thought it was a brilliant idea to take Alaska, almost a sucker punch. Or was the whole strategy merely to stop him from doing a northern advance?
2) How is the R+D looking? getting close to any new toys?
3) How about a screen shot of western China. IMO, and hopefully Pax will comment, I think this is the weak side of things in China and can cause some real headaches for the AFB's. If you can take both flanks, I think the center dies.
BANZAI~!


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Japan AC wire chart here
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Post #: 415
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 10:49:34 AM   
Hortlund


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58

I thought that was your intent, but I didn't want to presume.

The manual (Section 17.0, page 264 in PDF) says:

Industry damage – Two VPs per point damaged, 20 VPs per point destroyed (an item destroyed
when damaged will yield 18 more VPs). Industry can only be destroyed by firestorms and
A-bombs, but can be damaged by any type of attack (including firestorms and A-bombs). VPs
scored by damaging industry is cumulative; if an industry hex is bombed, damaged, repaired,
then bombed again, the player keeps earning VPs as long as the industry hex keeps generating
value by repairing itself.
This is true for all industry types including manpower.
Points will only be scored by the Allies for bombing industry in mainland Japan, and by the
Japanese for bombing industry in North America, Australia, and/or Hawaii.



Oh...that was somewhat unexpected.

Is there any reason to go after the HI anyway? Im thinking supply production, but on the other hand, there isnt enough fuel in India anyway to use all those HI, right?

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Bullwinkle58)
Post #: 416
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 10:54:32 AM   
Hortlund


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Coach Z

Sorry for the lateness of my question but I'm planning my own JApanese !st Turn and opening moves.

But what units did you use to take Palembang?


I used a mix of units that all start in taskforces with the movement bonus. Also I load units from Samah and Cam Rahn on fast transports (speed above 14kts). I used the CVL that starts in a warp TF at Babeldaob to move and meet up with these units just north off Singkawang/Kuching. And the BBs and CAs that usually protect the Kota Bharu landings.

Of all these units I create several SCTFs to screen the invasion forces, one CVTF and one SCTF to stay in the same hex as the transports. There are alot of allied surface combat ships avaliable in this region from day 1 of the war, so it is important to have several SCTFs that can block any movement towards the transport TFs, and it is also important to have heavy enough SCTFs with the transports (in a separate SCTF) to be able to handle PoW and Repulse.

I think you can get about 250 AV from various units this way, more than enough to take Palembang if you land within a week.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Coach Z)
Post #: 417
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 10:58:04 AM   
Hortlund


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Hanzberger

Great AAR PH, late to the party but I am pulling for ya~!
First a comment on the recent posts. Why have you stopped bombing in NOPAC? I thought it was a brilliant idea to take Alaska, almost a sucker punch. Or was the whole strategy merely to stop him from doing a northern advance?
2) How is the R+D looking? getting close to any new toys?
3) How about a screen shot of western China. IMO, and hopefully Pax will comment, I think this is the weak side of things in China and can cause some real headaches for the AFB's. If you can take both flanks, I think the center dies.
BANZAI~!



Thanks!
1) I have stopped bombing because there is no cost-efficiency right now. Canoe has hundreds of fighters on CAP. Im going to start building up the bases to prepare for the counterattack right now. Im expecting this area to be the first area where Canoe goes in the offensive.

2) I should get the Tojo sometime in April I think, two months before schedule.

3) right now Im moving for the northern flank. After that, the plan is to regroup and attack in the center. There is an opening right now that may mean I can take Siam, Im thinking about it.







Attachment (1)

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hanzberger)
Post #: 418
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 10:58:37 AM   
Hortlund


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Also note that Canoe has abandoned Nanyang.

_____________________________

The era of procrastination, of half-measures, of soothing and baffling expedients, of delays, is coming to a close.
In its place we are entering a period of consequences..

(in reply to Hortlund)
Post #: 419
RE: Where the eastern wind is blowing... AAR against Ca... - 8/5/2012 11:10:25 AM   
Historiker


Posts: 4742
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From: Deutschland
Status: offline

quote:

ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund


quote:

ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58

I thought that was your intent, but I didn't want to presume.

The manual (Section 17.0, page 264 in PDF) says:

Industry damage – Two VPs per point damaged, 20 VPs per point destroyed (an item destroyed
when damaged will yield 18 more VPs). Industry can only be destroyed by firestorms and
A-bombs, but can be damaged by any type of attack (including firestorms and A-bombs). VPs
scored by damaging industry is cumulative; if an industry hex is bombed, damaged, repaired,
then bombed again, the player keeps earning VPs as long as the industry hex keeps generating
value by repairing itself.
This is true for all industry types including manpower.
Points will only be scored by the Allies for bombing industry in mainland Japan, and by the
Japanese for bombing industry in North America, Australia, and/or Hawaii.



Oh...that was somewhat unexpected.

Is there any reason to go after the HI anyway? Im thinking supply production, but on the other hand, there isnt enough fuel in India anyway to use all those HI, right?

90 oil and 90 refinery in Ledo.

Propably better to turn off the refinery and let the oil be sucked into Burma and then to Indochina and Malaya.

But you may capture a few hundred thousand fuel. Still, the gain is rather limited.

_____________________________

Without any doubt: I am the spawn of evil - and the Bavarian Beer Monster (BBM)!

There's only one bad word and that's taxes. If any other word is good enough for sailors; it's good enough for you. - Ron Swanson

(in reply to Hortlund)
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