Treefrog
Posts: 702
Joined: 4/7/2004 Status: offline
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quote:
ORIGINAL: GordianKnot I thought it would be nice to have a thread of strategy and game play tips for beginners. (Please merge this if that thread already exists). Here's a few of mine: . . . . 3) As the Union player, I feel its an absolute MUST that you take Paduccah , KY (sp?) before the CSA gets it. Once the CSA gets a fort and some heavy arty in there it can be VERY difficult to get him out and that point shuts down river traffic and makes transportation and initiative a problem for the Union player in the West for a very long time. I'm willing to pay any early invasion penalty for KY if it means I get that territory. Granted, CSA occupation of Paducah interrupts your riverine movement until captured, but I don't know that I'd plan my whole Western campaign around seizing Paducah early with the requisite downside of paying political points to invade Kentucky first. If you take Paducah, isn't the CSA going to just put the forts and artillery at some other points on the river/rivers, perhaps within support/reaction distance of the inevitable battles at Bowling Green and north of Nashville? In the alternative, is Paducah a large prison camp? If you choose not to fight there, is the CSA just stockpiling troops in an area with no fighting while you face his outnumbered troops elsewhere? If the CSA invades Kentucky you'll be able to move in and fight on the open Kentucky plains, killing rebs that are out in the open. Then you move into Tennesse and do more of the same. All the while he has major forces tied up in Paducah doing nothing. Eventually you'll cross the river south of Nashville and be way behind him. Frankly, I'd rather be astride his railroad at Chattanooga or Knoxville than hold Paducah (there are only 2 east-west southern railroads; the other goes through Mobile and is therefore susceptible to attack at your leisure). Such an approach was described by B.H.Liddell in his classic Indirect Approach. Instead of driving directly into an objective, drive between two objectives (Paducah and Chattanooga), forcing your adversary to defend both and still put troops in the way of your advance. Or, pay the political cost to invade Kentucky early enough to avoid your anxiety about CSA occupation.
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"L'audace, l'audace, toujours l'audace."
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