loki100
Posts: 10920
Joined: 10/20/2012 From: Utlima Thule Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: gingerbread Great Read, or perhaps: Great Write! Interesting lesson from your T39 activities with 26th A. The Soviets cannot, or very rarely, use the Axis/German tactics of indirect threat due to that the shoulders from which the Soviet neck is stuck out cannot be trusted to hold, at least not until Rifle XXX can be used to form these shoulders. It is OK to strike at a German neck, provided the strike succeeds. Don't put too much faith in early Guards Corps as their TOE is only 5 Brigades. They can be brought up to strength after taking losses by splitting, refitting and recombining but that takes a couple of turns. thank you. re 26A (& indeed the Crimea), I really am learning a huge amount here. Have had a fair bit of experience PBEM in the 1941 scenarios but never into this phase. So its a real challenge trying to interpret what is going on (helps that we seem to have a balanced game too). The other mistake I made was I assumed the relative slow progress in the first two turns was a reflection of German capacity, it was actually the impact of blizzard. The shift to snow converted a steady retreat into a pocket. But there is a mindset issue too. Its clear at this stage, I don't really have the tools to attack with (and your comment about having vulnerable flanks is spot on), but its so tempting to lash back rather than just take the punishment. I'm not too keen on early corps conversion, in general I think more separate units is a bigger gain, so I'll only convert a few. But it really depends, if its an attritional battle for Moscow then I will convert as many as I can, if its a running battle in the south, then they can wait. quote:
ORIGINAL: jwolf quote:
ORIGINAL: loki100 I'm using Oshawatt's beehive around Tula. If I am right that his infantry are weak, then I think that deployment will harm the Pzrs more than a weak carpet of 1 cv units. I think I understand a "weak carpet" as that is my typical kind of defense. What is meant by a beehive? quote:
I've a lot to think over, as its tempting to have some offensive capacity, but I think the main task has to be win a defensive victory first. Definitely agree on this. The 'beehive' (love the image) to me is to prioritise strong stacks, perhaps with gaps. Its risky but it can really cost the Germans in MPs and combat losses. A stack of say 15 cv behind a river has to be fought the hard way. It also reflects that while keeping my army intact is my primary goal, there are sectors which I can't afford to cede easily. The risk of course is if he can pull off a grand encirclement at Tula I am in deep trouble, but thats why I am collecting the forces for a third defensive group (outside any feasible pocket), not just to re-open but to really hit hard at any spread out Pzrs. What I am putting together is a front made of run of the mill rifle divisions (say stacked 2 high), a second line of shock and cavalry armies, a third line of brigades (ie a fall back fortification zone), a fourth line of my Stavka reserve (ie those units currently wailing on the Finns). quote:
ORIGINAL: Oshawott quote:
which really makes me suspicious its an exit port capacity limit (or total transport capacity in the Black Sea)? I bet it's total transport capacity in the Black Sea. That makes sense to me. I'm now not so sure, I note that in an earlier turn, 3 units routed through Sevastopol, they were in the hex next to it, so Sevastopol was fully stacked and in a zoc. But I have been using naval transport a lot, so it maybe that I'd overdone it in the final turn? quote:
ORIGINAL: Wuffer quote:
ORIGINAL: Wuffer ... but imho really nobody should have escaped, OK, I have changed my mind and claiming vehemently the opposite. I will leave this idiotic statement as perfect example, how this bloody germanocentric propaganda crawled in my brain - the Russian not only built better and much more tanks and arty and planes with nearly the same industrial base as the Germans, no, the German were even permanently asthonished by this facts until the end. Normaly, this could be the plot of a big comedy, if these idiots would not have killed half Europe. However, History repeats itself, and hopefully in Loki's AAR. Hopefully. You didn't really express a moment of surprise by youself, Loki, as a complete division in a mighty fortress simply capitulates?? Kill 'em. stop storytelling. :-) Oh the cussing when the turn was opened was substantial .. one of the joys of PBEM is you can get your frustration out of the way in the safety of your own space. I can rationalise it (ie they were the rearguard) and the loss of one division is not that critical - I've built about 30 extra brigades over the winter, so not only does this give me some deep fortification lines but also the means to replace immediate losses. 26A as an eg, is already back up to full strength despite being 70% destroyed in the previous turn.
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