PhyseterCatodon
Posts: 16
Joined: 7/15/2018 Status: offline
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Hey everyone, Just as I thought I was getting the hang of things, I tried my hand at the God of War scenario and after a long time of planning I got my ass handed to me within a couple of minutes. So here I am, frustrated and back at the drawing board. I briefly want to lay out what I had in mind for the scenario, how it turned out and hopefully the more experienced players on this forum can give me some tips about where it all went wrong. In the planning phase I initially wanted to attack all airbases at once, not giving the Vietnamese a chance to get airborne (this was sort of hinted at in the description). Upon further inspection this seemed too ambitious and I narrowed my focus on Kep and Bai Thuong (the two northernmost bases) with smaller strikes to Da Nang and Pang Rhang. I wanted to lead with a SEAD strike to punch a hole in the Vietnamese air defenses and follow it up with cruise missiles coming from my strategic aircraft. Meanwhile the plan was to fly CAP around northern Vietnam and keep my stealth fighters handy to intercept any Su-30s that flew in from the south. I assumed I would be able to destroy the northern airbases before anything could get airborne. During the execution of my plan I found two S300 systems in the north of Vietnam, pretty much as expected. I let my ELINT aircraft patrol down the Vietnamese coast at a safe distance to map any hidden air defenses they might have. Everything looked to be going to plan as my first strikes went airborne. However, soon things started to turn for the worst. The Vietnamese radars probably picked up my missile launches, since a few minutes after my Badgers had launched their cruise missiles, fighters started to get airborne. The dreaded Su-30s, which I had not expected so early. In addition, their missiles had a much bigger range than I thought. Despite this, I chose to go forward with the plan and soon my SEAD aircraft were within range of the S300 and started unloading their missiles. My stealth fighters had done a good job staying hidden as they flew into the S300 range, however they did not drop their long-range bombs and flew in too close to the enemy radar and air defenses. Not exactly sure why they did this, but they were the first casualties of the war, getting absolutely swamped with anti-air missiles. Meanwhile, to my horror, I noticed that most of my missiles were being shot down by the anti-air defenses. After redirecting some of my SEAD aircraft to put all they had into the S300, I managed to destroy one of the two S300 systems. Along with one or two of the older anti-air systems, these were the only results of my first strike, which were supposed to cripple the northern Vietnamese bases. At this point I basically gave up. Casualties on my side were mounting and there was very little to show for it. So, for my personal observations about this disaster: 1. Trying to launch strikes at 4 airbases simultaneously was too ambitious. 2. Destroying the airbases before they get anything airborne was an unrealistic expectation. 3. I need to have my stealth fighters in position to combat the Su-30s from the beginning. Other than that, I am not quite sure what went wrong. Perhaps my weapon allocation? Against the air defense network I planned to use the ARMs, extended range bombs and the short ranged cruise missiles on my own Su-30s (Kazoo, or something). Against the runways I planned to use cruise missiles from my Badgers and ground batteries. All of this I wanted to follow up later (after all air defenses were down) with a huge strike of my MiG-21s and my other Badgers (which had ASMs by default) outfitted with 250kg bombs to destroy the planes that were stuck on the ground. Perhaps a better plan would've been to use all my cruise missiles to saturate and drain the enemy air defenses and quickly follow up with a SEAD strike? I really don't know. Thanks for reading all this, and I hope you guys have some tips for me.
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"I watched a snail crawl along the edge of a straight razor. This is my dream; this is my nightmare. Crawling, slithering, along the edge of a straight razor, and surviving." - Colonel Walter E. Kurtz
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