rtrapasso -> RE: I don't get it... (6/17/2008 4:12:36 PM)
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: herwin quote:
ORIGINAL: rtrapasso quote:
ORIGINAL: herwin quote:
ORIGINAL: hvymtl13 I've seen that too. I attributed it in alot of cases to them being on a base with a different parent command. SWPAC unit in a CincPac base etc. Sometimes it's a bad leader, or malaria like GBL said. Or heavy losses to thier pals in the unit. Range to the Overall HQ sometimes too. Different things act weird on morale. Hard to tell what it might be. They've got a co-located corps headquarters with a good leader, and the base belongs to the same parent command. The area HQ is in Baguio. Three of thirteen units experienced decreases in morale; none increased. Average fatigue increase was 0.7 over the 13 units. WTFO? What is the combined size of the base (AF+Port)? If it 5 or below, you will suffer... i think you need to get up to around 8 to get things to the point where morale won't drop and disruptions don't go up... usually 20,000+ supply is also necessary (this in malarial zones.) Also, as discovered recently - the current version of the game actually DECREASES fatigue and disruption (and this effects morale) when the unit is bombarding... prior versions of the game didn't do this. So, if a unit had been in combat and moves away (and thus stops bombarding) in a malarial zone - i'd guess this could start making morale drop. Doesn't make sense that being out of combat in a malarial zone is worse than being in offensive combat in the adjacent hex (which happens to be non-malarial due to the base development). Somehow I wouldn't expect the mere presence of development on the other side of the front lines to express itself that way. Hmmm... if the adjacent hex was non-malarial, i think this could explain it... most of the casualties in places like Guadalcanal were from malaria and jungle diseases, which pretty much wiped out the 1st Marine Division, leading to its replacement by an Army division later in the campaign. iirc, something like 80% of the 1st Marines were seriously sick by the time they were replaced.
|
|
|
|