Bullwinkle58 -> RE: Landing in a non-base hex (4/22/2010 3:29:59 PM)
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ORIGINAL: witpqs I think it's fine landing in any hex. Terrain does matter and you can not land successfully just anywhere. Also, as far as "...limitations of the land combat system limit the ability to react to an off base (or dot) landing..." this is off the mark. If an invasion takes place 46 miles away well, yeah, your LCU's ability to react will be limited - by distance! It is the laws of physics in action. You don't get the 'ability to react' just because your opponent did something. The game is supposed to be trying to model reality. When a landing took place 46 or 92 miles away one side couldn't call "Foul! I can't react to that". I think restricting landings to only dots/bases is itself a gamey limitation. I simply do not believe that every suitable landing site has been given a base. YMMV [:)] I don't play PBEM, but I agree with you here. I dislike the idea of HRs in general, but this one seems, well, incredibly wimpy. If your opponent is willing to accept the benefit of avoiding CD and accepts the detriment of time and fatigue to land over there and march over here, that's his call. If you see him doing that, stop him. That's what the navy is for, and the flyboys. If you see him doing it (you are air searching, right?) his movement delay gives you time to move forces by land or air transport, to juice fort building, to click up supply, and to send in more planes. That's war. Restricting landings to base hexes and dots removes strategic mobility from the attackers' toolbag, and by that I mean the allies' toolbag. The US spent billions developing and building assets to allow attacks into unimproved beachheads and to supply the troops there. They did it many, many times. Yes, there are places with cliffs and the like where there is no beach. But in the PTO they are few. Jungle right up to the sand was not a problem. CD installations were built to protect industry and housing from direct attack. No CD network in history ever stopped a determined invader. Not Hitler's Atlantic Wall, not the Maginot Line (work with me here), not the USA's coastal network pre-Civil War. If the other guy wants to come ashore and is serious enough about it, he can. It's up to the defender to stop him at sea, or not to let him off the beach.
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