Lokasenna
Posts: 9297
Joined: 3/3/2012 From: Iowan in MD/DC Status: offline
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With a very careful watch of the replay, you can get a much better idea of how many planes were actually shot down. I wouldn't say that results are 90% inaccurate (a variance of 90%), except in extreme cases of ground battles (I've seen doubling/halving of actual casualties for sure, but it's also hard to tell exactly how much because of post-battle repairs that happen before you can check on the unit). Take a hypothetical air combat - let's say you have 25x P-38's sweeping against an enemy CAP, and you don't watch the animation for the battle or don't tally the results as they happen. You see 6x of your P-38s as destroyed in the combat report vs. 4x Ki-44 Tojo destroyed. This right here tells you that your guys almost certainly (99% if not 100%) lost in terms of kill ratio, but the degree of the defeat could vary. Let's say you load the turn and your aircraft losses screen says you actually lost 9x P-38s in air to air. It's pretty reasonable to assume that the actual number of Tojos lost varies from somewhere between 3-4 and 6-7. While you can't trust the numbers, you can always trust the general result for air combat - did I "win" or did I "lose." For ships, listen for sinking sounds. If the ship has aircraft capability, check for planes destroyed on the ground in the intelligence screen - if there are any, they will be reported (although the number may be slightly incorrect). For example, if you hit a Kongo-class BB and see heavy fires, heavy damage... but you can't tell if the sinking sounds you heard were the Kongo or the xAK that your submarine hit earlier in the turn, check the aircraft destroyed screen. If you see any IJ float planes destroyed on the ground, and you did no airfield bombing that destroyed these float planes, you know the Kongo did sink.
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