Charles22
Posts: 912
Joined: 5/17/2000 From: Dallas, Texas, USA Status: offline
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Steeler: You've defeated your own point. If knowing the armor thickness is a problem, then lobby for removing the encyclopedia as well. Why do you have to right-click something when you know what it'll show you? With a game as enormous as this can be, seeing something as key as armor, and not having to go to the encyclopedia every time, is a major time saver. The only way your approach makes any sense, since you're not calling for encyclopedia removal is if any of the values showed were transient, and the armor values are not. The armor doesn't have a different rating after being pounded numerous times, and even if it did, I've yet to see the right-click data reveal this.
About your point about crews not knowing about armor thickness, again, the solution is total removal of the data (no encyclopedia). Also, they may not have known the top speed either, the penetration of "their own" rounds or all manner of things, but then I suspect some commanders, which is our role in the game, did, though they didn't have as firm a grip on what to fire on within a few seconds (particualrly with tanks). This isn't an "Across the Rhine" (what an awful game) simulation and even that game, I suspect, gave you stats of armor, be that with immediate pull-up windows, or in an encyclopedia.
What we are playing here, is with people who know most or all of the facts about tanks, encyclopedia, right-click option, or not. I think you're wanting to recreate the lack of knowledge the common troops or commanders may have had in certain areas, fine. The only problem is that such a thing is sort of superfluous when so many of us already know all that stuff and I would argue that non-transient data on a right-click, encourages more newbies than turns them away. I agree, seeing another unit's remaining ammo load, or seeing how many shots it has for the turn is transient in nature, and certainly shouldn't be seen.
I would also suggest that there were many commanders, and probably soldiers of various ranks as well, who kept stats on various developments during combat, so that they knew, over time, just what enemy tanks were inpenetrable and which weren't. I have a book here at home called "Handbook on German Military Forces" which I suspect many commanders had, which has a date of March 1, 1945 (was restricted), which shows data beyond the scope of this game, including such seemingly obscure stats such as fording depth on the German vehicles. They even have a section on German Air Force training program. The troops learned over time, and this is reflected in the experience and morale system within the game. When you have an encyclopedia, there really isn't any fog into what the other forces are made of and right-clicking to see the same data shouldn't matter. Right-clicking in this game, isn't really very natural anyway, is it?
[This message has been edited by Charles22 (edited 05-27-2000).]
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