Elvis -> (7/5/2000 11:18:00 PM)
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I also belive that the tactical use of vehicle crews should be toned down a bit.
(Forgive me if I'm rehashing ideas that have already been posted)
While I don't think that they should be kept in a permanently "routed" state, I suggest the following:
1. Automatically rout on abandoning a destroyed vehicle. Crews abandoning a damaged but still functional vehicle will check for rout depending on experience level. In either case, the supression level can be reduced in successive turns according to current game mechanics. Players should be allowed to move vehicle crews (if in contact) as necessary.
2. Crews abandoning a destroyed vehicle should not have any weapons other than personal sidearms (i.e. pistols), if any at all.
Weapons such as submachine guns, rifles, and grenades would have been stowed in the vehicle, by that I mean secured in some manner (anyone who has ever crewed an AFV knows what I am talking
about - loose items bouncing around in a moving steel box tend to hurt when they fall on your head).
My rationale?
Consider this: Your (insert favorite tank here) has just been hit by (insert your least favorite anti-tank weapon here) and has started to burn, as tanks tend to do.
You are faced with 2 options:
a) Get the out of the vehicle in
the quickest manner possible,
considering you have been extremely
lucky to survive up to this point.
b) Take those extra few seconds
to fiddle with the poorly-designed
and hard to operate bracket
securing your submachine gun to the
rack behind your seat.
I feel safe saying that 99.9% of rational human beings would choose option "a" without a seconds hesitation.
Again, a crew abandoning a damaged, non-burning vehicle would have a chance (depending on experience) to retrieve any SMGs, grenades, etc. that might be stowed in the vehicle.
3. Dismounted crews should not have radios.
Vehicular radios (especially 1940s-era radios) were large, bulky, and not designed for dismounted use. Manpack radios were not in widespread use, and those that were would not have been part of the standard equipment of a typical AFV.
4. Dismounted crews should not be capable of offensive operations.
AFV crews were not commonly trained as infantry. As such, vehicle crews should not be capable of assaulting and calling for/observing fire. Crews should be allowed to return fire if directly fired upon, depending on experience.
Just my two (well, ten) cents...
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alea iacta est
[email]sooperduk@hotmail.com[/email]
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