Aditia -> RE: Soviet C&C difficulties June/July/August 1941. WITE 2.0 (8/2/2016 12:31:27 PM)
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ORIGINAL: Michael T Well my idea's are only suggestions. I am open to anything that simulates the chaos. I have certainly read where communications was lost between all levels of command for many days, maybe even over a week in the cases of some armies and fronts/stavka. WITE would be easily be the most lenient on Soviet C&C problems I have played in recent times. I just know when I play as Soviet I have no sense whatsoever of any C&C chaos. Everything in the system works perfectly and predictably. It is simulated by low leadership rolls, low morale and low movement points... Remember these are week long turns; So e.g. the low movement points are simulating difficulties in C2, in the end the orders get there, but movement is not so efficient. Or do you think German vehicles are more adaptable to Russian roads than Soviet ones, or do you think Germans march more efficiently than Soviets? No, if anything the majority of German transportation was wholly unsuited for Russian roads. I'll try and give a historic perspective later in a separate thread, but the sacrifices to reality for the benefit of game play that the designers made for the Soviets in the early game, are at best equal to the sacrifices to reality for the benefit of game play made for the Germans. Most importantly on supply, vehicle and AFV attrition due to movement and the binary way pockets are handled, while in effect German pockets were very 'leaky' resulting in roaming bands of Soviet troops wreaking havoc in the rear. I am mostly getting this from Stahel. I cannot recommend David Stahel's groundbreaking work on Barbarossa (2009!!!) strongly enough to anyone with interested in the subject. Stahel found out that no decent historical work, complying with the rigors of Western historical science, on Barbarossa existed, and he decided to learn German and dive into the wealth of German documents in existence. This research was never done by German historians as military history is apparently frowned upon in the BundesRepublik
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