Forwarn45
Posts: 718
Joined: 4/26/2005 Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: Timmeh And you may ask yourself " How did I get here?" Tim did a good job of summarizing the game so far but here's a little bit from the Allied perspective. France fell on schedule. I had a chance to delay another turn here, but I pulled back most of the British militia for fear of losing them when Vichy France is declared (a 50% chance for each). The odds of holding Eastern France were still somewhat close (I think Tim said 40something percent) even with my pullback. The WA had invested heavily on the ground and to a lesser extent in the air so Sealion was ultimately averted. Unfortunately for me, Tim changed his plans post-haste and invade the Soviet Union a turn earlier than I expected - in Spring of '41. I had been emphasizing Russian air for a couple reasons. For one, it is cheaper than in vanilla WAW because the Axis air starts out better and your spies often steal evasion and attack tech. Air is somewhat less powerful at killing ground units but can still turn a battle and also kill infrastructure. And the old strategy of just building AA isn't quite as good since it often just suppresses air rather than shooting it down. At least, that's what I think from my experience so far. Anyway, I was short enough on ground troops that I elected to pull everything from Siberia even though there wasn't much Japanese threat. The Japanese promptly attacked. However, I'm not sure this worked out so badly - since it ultimately sped up US entry by a couple turns. Even so - if not for Norway, Stalin may have been looking at taking the last flight out of Moscow sometime in '42. In '41, I had counter-attacked when possible in order to bleed the Germans and push them back from key areas. But my lower quality troops suffered heavily and it also cost in supply. Also - for a couple turns, I was not getting lend-lease because the route in the North was cut off. Norway helped in a couple ways. For one, I was ultimately able to reopen the convoy routes. And second, it pulled an increasing number of Axis ground and air troops from Russia. As Tim said, Russian production hit a low of less than 20. This isn't so bad when you are getting free supplies but if you have to spend 5 or 6 of that to build supply, it is trouble! Fortunately, the pressure eased in time and Russia has lately been able to divert forces to push the Japanese back and consolidate the position against Germany. The US entering in Winter of '42 was a 50-50 shot as we were 2 readiness points away in Fall. The downside is the US still (in early 43) has 2x production as readiness did not increase to trigger 3x since the Axis didn't attack me. The upside is I was able to rush a few artillery and ground troops to the DEI and Singapore (the latter recently fell) to contain the Japanese.
< Message edited by Forwarn45 -- 10/27/2006 9:13:54 AM >
|