mind_messing
Posts: 3393
Joined: 10/28/2013 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: Q-Ball quote:
ORIGINAL: skraft16 So, I have the original version of WITP, and I finally decided that I had the time to take the plunge and buy the Admiral's Edition. So I thought I would play a campaign game vs. the AI to acquaint myself to the "new" edition. I would like to know if the allies, when controlled by the AI, specifically target oil or resource facilities in the admirals edition, or if they mostly do "manpower" and HI/LI attacks. I found that in the original edition, attacks on oil fields and resource sites were overpowered. In my one PBEM game using the original edition, once I had secured the SW Pacific and Burma, I committed nearly every Japanese army bomber squadron to repeated attacks on Chinese factories, and especially the Chinese oil and resource sites. The Chinese army then starved and were mopped up by mid-1943. Of course, payback is a female dog, and the Americans can do this to the Japanese home islands late in the game and then mop up the ill-supplied Japanese Home Army. Things got to the point that I started championing a house rule against any strategic bombing except for industry and manpower attacks, to keep this ahistorical economic devastation from happening. It seems cheesey to me that you should be able to bomb farms/rubber plantations/mines and oil fields directly and that should have such an impact. When you get to PBEM, almost all games include a HR against strategic bombing in China for that reason....it's too easy to decimate the Chinese In general in WITP-AE, the limitation for the Empire is usually supply. Bombing OIL will hurt supply production (eventually downstream OIL is converted to SUPPLY), and bombing HI will hurt supply production. Bomb those. Bombing LI also helps, but LI is more dispersed. No, the strategic bombing house rule exists because detailing squadrons to provide CAP over strategic targets isn't "fun". China stands or falls depending on external supply getting in. The native supply production helps, but it's the supply brought from elsewhere that's the deciding factor.
|