Froonp
Posts: 7995
Joined: 10/21/2003 From: Marseilles, France Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: marcuswatney Thanks for your approval, Wosung. The wrong route of the Yellow River is a mistake every game on the subject has made so far, so we are in good company. I use it as a benchmark of good or indifferent historical research (as with the Nanning rail-head, which I am very impressed Patrice has got right!) I "got it right" thanks to Wosung, who provided a hge lot of help, and who I trust blindly when it comes down to China. About the course of the Yellow River, I had maps with the course you describe (as in post #47), and I had also maps (of the same period) with the course as shown in the game. Also, the original WiF FE game's map has the Yellow river with the northward course too. So between the two, I sticked with the northern course. quote:
Since the dykes were blown up to create an obstacle for the Japanese, it is hardly likely they were rebuilt while the war was continuing, doubly so since they were in the front-line. Anyway, a river is not an obstacle in WiF, so having the Yellow River on any course would not change something to the game. Unfortunately as I said before, we can't change river courses no more now. quote:
I was under the impression we were using Anglicised spelling throughout the map (so Yellow River, not Hwang Ho). Certainly in all English books of the period, it is Yenan. Not important. For China I used the names advised by Wosung. For the Yellow River, I liked to also add the Chinese name, don't know why, this is good looking to have Chinese names in China. quote:
It is a long time since I played WiF, but I thought all resources went to the capital, from where they were used to build units anywhere in controlled territory (or perhaps controlled cities). That's the classic gaming convention. Why has this changed? Resources (RP and OIL) need to go to factories, where they produce a Production Point (PP). The total Production Points are multiplied by the Production Multiple (PM) (that increases with time, and also increase depending on enemy actions) to obtain the Build Points (BP). With BP the players buy units. The Resources move to the factories using railways, roads and convoy routes. So here the Burma Road is a normal Road that has the ability to be politicaly cut by Japan to block the allies to provide RP or BP to China. quote:
If it is essential to keep a road to Changsha, then at least let us have the historical link from Kweiyang to Chungking included as well. Otherwise, anybody considering buying the game will think we haven't done our historical research. Well, I would like to do that, for historical accuracy, but WiF FE originaly don't have it, this would be a big departure from the original game where Chungking is rail-isolated from the rest of the world, meaning that an army wanting to go there needs a lot HQ to simply move there. Not talking about even fighting. This is a decsion Harry can take, not me.
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