Charles2222
Posts: 3993
Joined: 3/12/2001 Status: offline
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I find Lynx's question a curious one. I'm not saying it's incorrect in another setting, however in this one here it's often the opposite that is prevalent. Some seem to believe the fascination in German arms or belief that if the Germans weren't the best military nation, they were close, is tantamount to believing they were invincible, which from what I've seen is utter nonsense. It seems to me this specific sort of conflict emerges when the US player wants to brand the German player a traitor or some such. There also seems to be the belief that the Germans couldn't be as strong as German players think them, otherwise they would've won the war. The reality is that it's often the US player who believes the German propaganda and so the German player is required to prove that they were invincible, a thing the German player often never states themselves. I find it odd that nobody I've yet seen, ever debates whether Germany in a one-on-one fight would've beat any other one nation, it's always about that Germany had to conquer the world or they weren't invincible (they lost). That just seems to be the nature of things. Technically Hitler and his cronies claimed invincibility, but playing Gerry isn't being given over to such a ludicrous position, but when that position is imposed upon the Gerry players by others, there's no way such a person can argue through such labels. This is sort of an example of what I'm talking about from Flashfyre: quote:
Soem of the 'pro-German' feeling is, IMHO, a buy-in to the myth of the Wehrmacht invincibility. This myth has been perpetrated by many historians, filmmakers, and politicians to the extent that it makes the WWII German army seem nigh unbeatable in a fair fight. And so it leads to gamers loving the toys they used, and believing them to be the best created during that time. Note the word 'invincible' again. It's Flashfyre's interpretation. Myself, I would never claim Germany was invincible in a fair fight, but they were possibly the strongest; invincible NEVER. There's too many things that could go wrong even for a nation twice as strong as another. For one thing there is the inevitable thing with Germany, and that is that they were so hostile that there would never be such a thing as a fair fight for them. Either they were the ones up by a considerable advantage, hence the aggression, or their aggression brought forth the unfair fight against them, because they were unfair so to speak, in the first place. Basically any nation that gets that strong is going to end up with lots of enemies standing up against them. About the only way any nation gets a so-called fair fight, in reality, is if they are the ones attacked, and usually the aggressors aren't stupid enough to attack unless they're with a good sized advantage in the first place (but it still would be one nation against the other).
I'd also like to add that while many US players may put it upon the Gerry players that they believe in German invincibility, when they do not, they have probably fallen into this belief quite probably for the very same reason that many Gerry players find WWII Germany fascinating, and that is that they took so much territory, with only the USSR coming close, and that they could've done so much better in lots of areas with just a basic better idea here or there (so much the story of all nations).
I also think that despite what some people may feel is Gerry players dumbing down US stuff, it seems more prevalent the other way around. The US player may feel that there's no way a losing nation should have such good units, but what such people fail to remember is that this game models what were probably the height of German arms, be that in many cases the tanks and the general troops. If you get more into air power and naval power such as this game does not, then Germany models more what they really were, not invincible by any means, but very strong in the areas with which SPWAW deals with (one land unit against another, without the disadvantage of fighting against more than one foe who had superior numbers).
I agree with General Mayhem's point about the East Front. If it hadn't been for the German attack there, they probably never would've had the Panther and Tiger series.
Maybe speed isn't so impoartant a facotr in war, but some things I lookat in comparing the West Front to German attacks in Farnce, and I wonder how a nation that seems to always be played as so weak there, was able to hold off the Allies for nearly a year. I also have to wonder if the Germans had signed a peace with the USSR, and that was practically impossible, would the Allies had ever landed? Because if they did they certainly never would've considered it without getting up a much larger force to deal with a one front Germany (or 1 1/2, depends on how you look at it). Would the Germans without the USSR in the war, been stupid enough to go off attacking somewhere else just before D-Day started, larger invasion D-Day invasion or not?
I may not be correct about any of this, but I think a lot of us don't try to think very much outside our own boundaries. I'm all hurrah for the good ol' US, but silly things like us never losing a war is the sort that ends up with nation's in captivity, particularly if said nations don't have a vast ocean protecting them. Basically the idea that the US has never lost a war, and never will, is basically just the invincibility angle with another spin. It seems to be that people don't believe in more practical reasons why the US would win and wouldn't have to try that hard (or at least not lose), but instead think they have the 'stuff' or are 'superior', just the same nonsense the Germans believed so that they disarm instead of trying to keep a reasonable force. Just how much quicker would Germany had fallen if America had bothered to declare war along with France and Britian, or at least made some real efforts at rearmanent before Japan attacked? If the US has declared war in '39, and subsequently had upped preparedness, perhaps the attack on Pearl would've never happened. That doesn't even begin to address whether if the US had joined Britain and France in standing against Germany by verbal commitment to Poland, whether Hitler would've attacked.
Well enough of me.
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