Courtenay
Posts: 4003
Joined: 11/12/2008 Status: offline
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With the parachute, German expected loss is 1.178 units, French is 1.263, Germans take Lyon 42.75% of the time. Without the parachute, German expected loss is 1.55 units, French is 0.717, Germans take Lyon 15.67% of the time. That first figure assumes that the French use the notional. If they do not use the notional, the German expected loss is 1.187, the French is 1.25, and the Germans take Lyon 42% of the time. In other words, the French should NOT use the notional -- the gain of six defense points is not worth the +1 modifier for using the notional. So the Germans do better with the Parachute, except that it costs more to rebuild the Parachute, and they will lose it almost three fifths of the time. (I don't think I would make this attack, unless the Germans are going for a conquest of France, rather than Vichyfication. Trading German units for French at almost 1-1 does not strike me as a winning strategy.) Edit: Oops. These numbers are wrong. I forgot that Lyons is a city with a factory. I do not know if there is a German HQ in the attack, or if there are any engineers. If there aren't, the numbers change to this: With the parachute, German expected loss is 1.395 units, French is 0.963, Germans take Lyon 26.25% of the time. Without the parachute, German expected loss is 1.550 units, French is 0.717, Germans take Lyon 15.67% of the time. That first figure assumes that the French use the notional. If they do not use the notional, the German expected loss is 1.403, the French is 0.95, and the Germans take Lyon 25.67% of the time. In other words, the French should NOT use the notional -- the gain of six defense points is not worth the +1 modifier for using the notional. With the city modifiers, this attack is clearly a bad idea. Reedit: Somehow I had the wrong numbers here in the second line of the edited numbers. Fixed now.
< Message edited by Courtenay -- 9/8/2021 12:52:44 AM >
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