Hortlund
Posts: 2884
Joined: 10/13/2000 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: No idea quote:
ORIGINAL: Panzerjaeger Hortlund quote:
ORIGINAL: Telemecus Also the departing player is missing out on most of what the game has to offer. How to conduct a blizzard defence, what to do in 1942, fighting with really big armies, and how to make the end fighting retreat are just as interesting if different kinds of games. Once you have paid for the game why not try all its aspects? The Barbarossa blitzkrieg is fun, but there are only so many times you can play just that. I agree completely! Who would not want to see what 1943 brings? Who would not want to defend Berlin in a desperate struggle into 1945. I just dont get the ones who just leave. As for the Soviets, 1941 is a nightmare to get through. You are litterary hanging on by your fingernails waiting for that mud, and then waiting for that blizzard. Its not really fun in 1941 as the soviets, there are only degrees of pain. But you keep struggling, because you wait for that blizzard, and you try to counter that 1942 summer offensive. But to just have the other guy quit because he is hurting during the mud and snow and blizzard? I mean come on. I think the problem with some german players is that, once they have failed, and it is easy to make things wrong with Germany, they face that "Only degrees of pain" for the next four years. Even if you play well, but you havent won by 1942, it is just "degrees of pain" for a few years. Well, that is what happened in real life after all...yes? It should be something you are aware of when starting a game about ww2
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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..
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