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Joined: 1/11/2008 From: Brussels, Belgium Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: DesertWolf101 The Great Vladivostok Disappearing Act Meanwhile in the south, I have been keeping a close eye on the Vladivostok pocket and I have noticed something strange over the past several weeks.... Soviet units are disappearing! At first I thought it was probably something wrong with my intelligence picture but my recon flights are extensive and the DL on each base very high. Moreover, there is a clear and identifiable trend of the number of Soviet units in the pocket dropping - there is no fluctuation, it is a constant decrease over several weeks. I naturally looked into this further and went back to the manual. My sneaking suspicion was it must be something to do with disbandment and sure enough from the manual with my underlining for emphasis: "Disband Unit: If located at a base with greater than 100,000 supplies or in a key base (Delhi, Auckland, Sydney, Vladivostok, San Francisco, Osaka or Tokyo), then the player may manually disband units which will return 100% of active devices to the pool and 50% of disabled devices. If in a key base this is free; if in a base with 100,000 supplies it will cost a portion of the units VP value. The player is given the option whether or not to have the unit disbanded rebuilt in 180 days as an administrative cadre." Essentially, Andy can and is disbanding units that will teleport to the north and face me in about 6 months at essentially no VP cost or loss in devices. This essentially means the following for me: 1) The pressure is on to reach my strategic goal in the north before these units come back into a massive army. 2) There will be no massive haul of VPs from the Vladivostok pocket as he can just disband before I take Vlad itself. 3) Similarly no significant loss of Soviet devices aside from 50% of the ones I manage to disable. 4) Supply will last longer in the pocket given the lower number of mouths (devices) to feed. 5) Raises the question of whether taking Vlad itself is even worth it in this situation given the significant losses I can expect to sustain in assaulting high forts even with less units there. Thoughts? That’s smart. While I agree with Alfred’s assessment, that Andy should have gone on the offense on the south when he saw you were only holding your positions while focusing on the north*, this move by Andy essentially voids your strategy of « siege and let wither » Vladivostok. Like I said earlier, the battles to conquer Vladivostok would be extremely bloody, so this is reason enough to keep a decent portion of forces there ; but with enough supplies he could have endured a year-long siege without assaults before he would have supply problems, if not two years, and before you could see the effects of the lack of supply. Come to think of it, maybe he didn’t move as much supply in the pocket before the invasion. You’re right that the big advantage of a Soviet invasion is amassing VP, and those essentially come from destroyed devices (and planes). You now face the choice of letting your future haul of VP disappear, or expend the supply and troops to conquer Vladivostok now. Maybe he’s trying to elicit that response of you. This evacuation is a bit gamey though, given the unrealistic transfer of all those assets to an off-map base, IMHO, but it’s your game. * another advantage of an offensive is that, if I’m not mistaken on the game engine’s particularities (I never tested that case), capturing a Manchurian or Korean base by the Soviets would allow the other Allies to base bombers (and other planes) from there, enabling a strategic bombing campaign, even if short lived until you bring reinforcements to reconquer it.
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