Mike Solli -> RE: How do you stay organized? (3/9/2005 11:10:38 PM)
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Hi Guys, I was surprised at how little time you spend planning your invasions/attacks. For the first turn as the Japanese, I will spend 40-60 hours preparing everything to include logistics, production and operations. To be honest though, I'm an operations officer in the Guard and am just coming of a deployment out of the country as a logistics officer. (I actually arrive home tomorrow.) I was deployed when I got the game. This kind of planning is my thing. Anyway, I keep spreadsheets on everything you can think of and also have a one inch binder packed full of notes. I'm kind of anal too. I task organize the Japanese fleet down to the ship and have the ships in divisions and squadrons, pretty much on historical lines, but I do move around some divisions to maximize their strengths (high AA DD classes for the carrier fleet, for example). I do the same for the air units too. I have the training Air Fleets (the on map pilot training program devised by Mogami) in Japan, as well as Air Divisions/Flotillas for Burma, China, Central Pacific, SE Pacific, DEI, etc. They are IJNAF (Air Flotillas) and IJAAF (Air Divisions) and each area has one or the other with primary responsibility, although some areas have both present. (Burma, for example, has an Air Flotilla with Nells/Betties and Zeros along with some recon to keep an eye out for the British Fleet.) As far as ground units are concerned, I have them divided up by area, but some are transferred relatively early on. (I transfer some SNLFs, regiments and brigades from the Southern Army to the SE Fleet to take Rabaul as early as possible. The units available at start are not sufficient to take Rabaul quickly. I also send a couple of extra engineers there too. In China, I have a list of units to be used as garrisons and which base each unit is heading to. The remaining units are divided into 3-4 armies to be used in various campaigns designed to capture the Chinese held resource areas. My plans in China are relatively simple. I don't attack until I have at least 100k men in the attack force, with 125k being preferable. I have one goal as the Japanese player: to loot Indonesia. In order to do that, I need to have as large a defensive perimeter as possible that I can effectively defend to protect that area as well as the supply lines to Japan. One concern I have early on is with PPs. I can't transfer all the units I want to the Burma Area Army. I usually send the 56th Division to Malaya and then to Burma. The number of points needed to transfer it to Burma is extrordinary. I usually can't transfer it until March-April 42, although it is there long before that time. Enough of my rambling. Time to pack to go home so I can start my next planning session (in my own house for a change). Mike
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