vettim89
Posts: 3615
Joined: 7/14/2007 From: Toledo, Ohio Status: offline
|
quote:
ORIGINAL: witpqs quote:
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel It was a nutty, captivating, amazing sequence, wasn't it?! Here's kind of how I remember the battle, John: 1. Allies get pretty decent strategic surprise. You catch wind of the invasion fleet approaching northern Japan, and you're wondering where they are heading (and I am too, somewhat!). 2. You had just finished withdrawing most of your Australian Expeditionary Army (don't make me relive that debacle!) from Oz to places much closer to Japan. 3. My invasion force came ashore on Hokkaido in relatively decent shape, but very quickly the wrath of Japan descended, sinking scores (hundreds?) of transports. 4. I managed to take Sopporro and another base or two or three, but you counterinvaded right behind me and chased my beleauged force right up the coast. While I was trying to figure out how to save my Hokkaido army, I landed a force on lightly garrisoned Sikhalin Island and managed to take both bases (and this proved the key moment in the battle). Then I surprised myself in evacuating a decent part of my Hokkaido army to Sikhalin Island. Winter had descended, so you had no chance to counterinvade for months. 5. Meanwhile, the KB and Kaigun arrived and we engaged in a bitter battle all around the Kuriles. I took a shellacking. I had already issued orders during one critical turn for the remnants of my fleet to withdraw, effectively giving up on the invasion, when I saw the possiblity to draw to an inside straight. I sent a bunch of PBY Liberators to the Allied airfields or two on Hokkaido and Sikhalin. I didn't have any base forces, but thought there was a shot they might sortie and find your capital ships unprotected. It worked, and how. Suddenly a bunch of IJN carriers were damaged. Then several more ran into Allied combat TFs when I somehow guessed exactly where one of your carrier TFs would end a turn. 6. As a result of all this, the KB was weakened considerably. Meantime, my carriers were totally out of aircraft...but I managed to land enough supply at Shikuka to rearm them. So suddenly, instead of having a totally depleted Allied carrier force facing an overwhelming and untouched KB, I had a totally potent carrier force facing a very dimished KB. And all that happened over the span of about two turns. 7. By the time spring arrive, the Allies had consolidated their hold on Sikhalin Island and the campaign had ended. My supply line was intact as were my carriers. I was going to be okay. Man, what a battle! Well planned and all went according to the script. What's truly amazing is that after that the man had the audacity to post in my AAR a few months later that I was too aggressive going for Tarawa in the summer of 1943. Forlorn Hopes will likely be the only game where we saw an Allied invasion of Japan in 1943 and a Japanese Invasion of India in 1945 (or was it late 1944?)
_____________________________
"We have met the enemy and they are ours" - Commodore O.H. Perry
|