Charles2222 -> RE: Who moves first? (5/19/2006 9:24:10 AM)
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ORIGINAL: BLUESBOB Can I hijack this thread for uno momento? Regarding who moves first, since the Japanese player starts the game, hence moving first, in every game turn that follows the Japanese are moving first. That includes all ship, plane, and LCU movement. I do not think this has ever caused a problem...however.... I first wrote about this in the AAR section. I believe that Japanese first moves present a problem in naval combat. When two fleets engage each other and the window pops up so I can watch the engagement, a strange thing always occurs. One side always seems to get get the element of surprise. But, what I see happening is the Japanese ALWAYS get the element of surprise. I had a TF move toward Amboina from Darwin. It consisted of CA's, CL's, and DD's. The Jap player had a TF there consisting of DD's, AP's, and AK's. My TF moved up and was NEVER spotted. The Japs never saw us coming. I received spotting reports on him everday that we moved up. We knew exactly what was there. And we had SCR radar on several ships. But, when we slipped in at night to engage, guess who got the element of surprise? Long Lancers in the water!! Big B set up an ambush of a Jap TF at Midway. He knew that they were coming in to bombard with heavies. As luck would have it, he had BB's galore waiting there for him. Again, Big B had spotting reports, he had radar. With no intelligence, the Japs never should have known what hit them. But, once again, guess who got the element of surprise? Long Lancers in the water!!! These are not the only instances. I have witnessed several others. PT's vs. DD's...DD's vs. DD's...it's always the same. Surprise is a great element to have in a game. It allows you to set up those ambushes which happened frequently in the war. However, I think there is a problem with it, and that problem lies within Japanese first moves. I have a feeling that first move overrides an Allied surprise. In other words, the Allies might achieve the element of surprise, but the first move protocol overrides the suprise and the Japanese player makes the first move. If this is so, it's a shame...because the fun of getting one over on your opponent is lost. Does anyone know anything about surprise and how it works? It might also be that especially for the night attacks (you didn't specify the time of the latter battle) that the significant night advantage for the IJN is overriding what you guys are doing. IOW the night advantage may be larger than the movement advantage. I am curious also as to how you guys know for certain that the IJN isn't aware of your TF's presence. There are ways I know, but I doubt they're foolprooof. The IJN usually has better experience for capital ships in the daytime too, especially early in the war too, but you would think that if the IJN TF has been tracked for a turn or two, that should shut off the surprise element, even if they do have more experience, though given how the darkness of night can change things drastically, maybe even with working radar, I wouldn't be so certain in that instance.
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