Centuur -> RE: China always being overrun by Japan (1/8/2014 1:45:34 PM)
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ORIGINAL: Majorball68 Have been trying the last couple of games with the Japanese lining up against the Chicoms and I am finding that it very difficult to contain the Japanese. If you play with divisions and limited break downs its even harder. These allow the Japanese to do a lot of attacks at lower odds than normal as they can always take losses from divisions. Previously you had to be very careful what you attacked because it could cost you a Corps size unit. Also its a lot closer to Chungking from the north than all the mountains in the south. I am starting to think a more central deployment of the ChiNat as this gives them the chance to move quickly north to help the commies. I know the rail line at Changsha is important but its a long way away from the important ChiNat cities and you can quickly move to the central mountains should the Japs deploy in force there. If the Japs dont put 90% to the Chicoms then they will find it hard to break them open. If they hit the Nats hard then it gives the commies a chance to build up to strong. I dont think the Japs have any choice but to go after the commmies regardless of the Chinese setup. My recent game had 7 Axis impulses of clear weather in Sept/Oct 1939 and then a clear turn the first impulse of Nov/Dec turn. I can tell you that the Chinese were starting to look really sick! And how were the French holding up in that game? Such a long good weather turn in SO 1939 means that Belgium and the Netherlands should have been crushed by the Germans. First impulse Poland, third impulse kills Poland, Denmark and the Netherlands, fifth impulse kills Belgium, Seventh impulse starts the attack on France (provided good weather and a good German setup, this is possible to do). Since you got even three impulses more in this game, Paris could be within German range to grab (I lost France in SO 1939 in such a turn. Sure, the Germans had all the luck in the world on the land attacks, end of turn and weather rolls, but it can be done...). That's how things are in the first turn. If weather holds, the Axis can use this to hammer the allies into bad shape. Not only in Europe, but in China too. There isn't anything the Allies can do to prevent this from happening. As long as the Japanese and German armies stay organised, you are in a very bad situation. China is also for me still a question mark. Personally, I think the solution is to make the Japanese overstretch themselves. This means that the Chinese have to make a long frontline at set up to make sure that if the Japanese are committing a large chunk of their forces in China to one of the two Chinese factions, the other one is in position to make life for the Japanese difficult by moving in such a way that Japanese units might be put OOS and Chinese cities behind the Japanese front might be reconquered by the Chinese. Don't sit and wait for things to happen as the Chinese. You could do this in WiF, but you can't in MWIF.
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