Stevechase
Posts: 161
Joined: 10/5/2013 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: Mgellis quote:
ORIGINAL: Bazza042 I suspect that the relative lack of 'Cold War' scenarios is twofold. The first is the one you mention: the (non-existent) concerns over copyright, as to a degree evinced by Meroka37. (no criticism intended) Whilst I take Mike's argument about 'copying' there are only so many 'reasonably authentic' OOBs that can be created to populate scenarios such as those for Iceland, Norway, the GIUK gap etc so there is bound to be a considerable overlap in any OOBs created for COMMAND and Harpoon in the Cold War era. So there is going to be considerable duplication (copying, if you will) between these types of scenarios as far as OOB and locations are concerned. But I also believe a major factor is the 'been there, done that' factor which leads many designers to move onto the the more 'glamorous' stuff like F22 Raptors, Mig31s, the newer CVNs etc. I'm with you on this, however, its a shame that, so far, the Cold War is being largely ignored by the designers for whatever reason........ My own take on this... I'm not too worried about copying scenarios because I either come up with my own orders of battle, events, etc. (and that makes it a new, original scenario) or, if I was going to translate someone else's scenario unit-for-unit, I would ask permission. That pretty much covers the issue, I think. I sometimes get frustrated because I have limited information on the exact orders of battle for certain historical periods. I've got copies of Janes Fighting Ships for the early 1990s, the early 1980s, and the mid-1950s, but otherwise I've got to piece information together from sites like Hullnumber, DANFS, etc. I am probably just over-thinking things, but I am trying to make the historical scenarios as "real" as possible, so tracking down things like "What was Ghana's air force like in 1971 and where were their air bases?" can be tricky. I don't want to just make up stuff, although sometimes coming up with a guesstimate is the best I can do. (In other words, Cold War scenarios can be more work than future ones because you have to track down the details instead of just making them up and/or basing them on current information that is usually on wikipedia.) Another thing, and this is just a personal quirk, I'm sure, is that World War III scenarios often make me sad. I have trouble getting around the fact that a war in Europe would likely to go nuclear, and if it goes nuclear it will probably go all-out, and that means, simply put, the end of America, Europe, and Russia. Even a limited exchange, a few hundred warheads, would cripple the northern hemisphere, kill hundreds of millions of innocent people, etc. (It probably did not help that I recently watched Threads, about the the most depressing movie ever made about nuclear war, doubtless because it is probably the most realistic in what a war like that would do to civilization.) I try to work up the backstory to a scenario and I realize it's probably going to be "well, everyone we love is dead, so let's at least get revenge" and it just makes me depressed. Here's a bit of light reading for those interested in the subject... http://www.johnstonsarchive.net/nuclear/nuclearwar1.html Actually, a good alternate history would be "Ten Years After" in which the nations not affected in a major way by World War III--Australia, South Africa, Brazil, maybe India, maybe Indonesia, etc., are starting to flex their muscles and establish the new world order. And, yes, there is the sense of "been there, done that" sometimes. What I'm trying to do is come up with the situations that haven't been looked at much, and especially at smaller conflicts, real and what-if, that are not going to turn into a nuclear exchange. So, I do things like, "Okay, there was a coup in Ecuador in 1963...what if it turned into a civil war, and the U.S. decided to back one side, but had limited resources to do so, what with the Cold War and everything, and sent a task force with some helicopters, etc. to help out...??? Hmmm..." That sort of thing. (Wikipedia has some terrific "lists" by the way, including a list of major coups, successful and failed, throughout history, that can be used starting points for building scenarios. Basically, all you have to do is assume any conflict got out of hand and either neighboring countries, or regional powers, or one of the superpowers decided to get involved.) Anyway, that's my take on the whole thing. Hey Mgellis, Why don't you try a modern version of "Cold War" or WW3. Say Alternate History where somehow Russia reemergis as a superpower and Nato/Warsawpactish conflict ensues with modern platforms. We could work on it together if you like or with others. Anyway I would certainly be willing to help and I am sure others would also
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