loki100 -> RE: Tutorial Scenario Question / How to continue (11/19/2013 9:17:24 AM)
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my own process was: the very short Minsk scenario - only from the German side (too harsh to learn much with the Soviets), but it'll get you used to planning turn 1, encirclements and so on Road to Leningrad - I think its biased to the German side but its good for both. Low unit density, relatively clear objective, will get you used to putting the bits together but not getting lost in the process Road to Smolensk - bigger than the above, so its a nice step up in scale. I was lucky to then find a PBEM opponent who was also learning their way so we went over Leningrad/Smolensk and then Dnepropetrovsk (which I found as the Soviet side the most fun of the 1941 scenarios), Moscow and then into the 1942 scenarios. overall - I'd say this game has one of the best AIs I've seen. It is probably too aggressive but you can play around with the settings (and alter them over a campaign game) to give it a decent hand up and to stop it suiciding - the German AI in 1941 is particularly keen on encirclements (which is good), but tends to overextend (and gives you a free cull of 4-5 Pzr/Mot divisions). What I do is to start it on steroids, tone down the morale bonus over late summer-autumn and then put it back up for the rest of the game. That seems to prevent the suicides I'd seen in a couple of earlier tests. Certainly play a 'Road to' in each of the main German army groups and one of the Moscow battles (that in Lost Battles is a lot better than the original) before launching yourself into the campaign. that way, if it all goes horribly wrong you've not invested too much time and effort.
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