What do we want in AAE40 that we didn't get in AAP40?


  • @SgtBlitz:

    Neutrality that lasts as long as you don’t attack neutral powers.  (Otherwise, what’s point of neutrality, unless you like jumping the gun?)  In 1940, the USA wasn’t at war with either Japan or Germany, and didn’t really want to go to war either.

    The above statement is not fully accurate. The American people felt disillusioned by their experience in WWI. (Which they had been told was a war to make the world safe for democracy, but which turned out to be a war to make the world safe for France to exploit Germany.) They were, accordingly, deeply isolationist, when just a generation later the idea was tossed around of once again going to war against Germany.

    But America’s elites–most especially including FDR–strongly favored war with Germany. The media was also becoming pro-war; and that became more pronounced as media consolidation occurred. Between the influence of a pro-war administration, a pro-war media, and other pro-war elites, it is probable that even without an Axis attack, America would have gradually drifted into war, much as it had in WWI. By 1940, the U.S. Navy was already participating in joint search and destroy missions against German submarines.


    London, by the end of June 1940 was expecting delivery from the United States of no less than 10,800 aircraft and 13,000 aero-engines over the next eighteen months. This was in addition to the Britain’s own production of 15,000 military aircraft. At the same time, the British Ministry of Aircraft Production was negotiating with the Americans to order many thousands more. By way of comparison, total German aircraft production came to only 10,826 aircraft and in 1941 it expanded to only 12,000, a disappointing increase which we will discuss in greater detail below. In addition, there was America’s own gigantic rearmament programme, which tilted the balance even further against Germany. In fact, so large were the combined demands of the British and American programmes that they stretched even America’s industrial resources. But the United States did not respond by seeking to restrict British purchases; quite the contrary. On 23 July 1940 British procurement agents in Washington were invited to a clandestine meeting with American industrial planners, from which emerged a scheme to expand the capacity of the United States aircraft industry so that it would be able to deliver no less than 72,000 aircraft per annum, guaranteeing a supply to the British of 3,000 planes per month, three times the current German output.


    Adam Tooze, The Wages of Destruction, 405 - 407

    Even though the United States was still technically at peace with Germany in 1940, the former nation’s industrial might was already being put to work to crush the latter.


  • @Brain:

    If you want more realism. Each piece should have different attack and defense values when engaged in air,ground  or naval attacks. Bombers attacking at a value of 4 makes sense when attacking ground units, but not against fighters.

    There are three possible methods for doing this:
    1. The Larry Harris way. Units have:

    • An attack value
    • A defense value
      2. The method I used in my rules set. Units have:
    • A land combat value
    • A naval combat value
    • An air combat value
      3. Combining the two methods. Units would have:
    • An attack value (land)
    • A defense value (land)
    • An attack value (naval) . . . etc.

    Method three results in six different combat values; making it both the most realistic and the most complex. The methods Larry and I used are relatively similar in their complexity, but involve differing trade-offs with respect to realism. Infantry hiding behind trenches should have an advantage–an advantage which Larry’s system incorporates. Mine does not, because all units have the same land combat values whether they are on offense or defense. But to make up for that, my rules set allows for the inclusion of air-to-air combat–combat for which fighters are specialized. It has the following definitions for aircraft:

    Fighter
    Anti-air combat value: 4
    Land combat value: 1
    Naval combat value: 1
    Movement: 4
    Cost: 10

    Fighter bomber
    Anti-air combat value: 2
    Land combat value: 4
    Naval combat value: 5
    Strategic bombing value: 1 IPC
    Movement: 4
    Cost: 10

    Strategic bomber
    Dogfight value: 1
    Land combat value: 2
    Naval combat value: 2
    Strategic bombing value: 3 IPCs. Plus a permanent, 1 IPC reduction in the territory’s value.
    Movement: 6
    Cost: 15


  • That’s what I am talking about.


  • Nice, I like the concept


  • I think WWII Struggle for Europe and Asia is like this.


  • dont you think a 5 naval attak is alot?

    Yeah, that is pretty high.

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    Your opponents should check your loaded dice :wink:


  • @KurtGodel7:

    @Brain:

    If you want more realism. Each piece should have different attack and defense values when engaged in air,ground  or naval attacks. Bombers attacking at a value of 4 makes sense when attacking ground units, but not against fighters.

    There are three possible methods for doing this:
    1. The Larry Harris way. Units have:

    • An attack value
    • A defense value
      2. The method I used in my rules set. Units have:
    • A land combat value
    • A naval combat value
    • An air combat value
      3. Combining the two methods. Units would have:
    • An attack value (land)
    • A defense value (land)
    • An attack value (naval) . . . etc.

    Fighter
    Anti-air combat value: 4
    Land combat value: 1
    Naval combat value: 1
    Movement: 4
    Cost: 10

    Fighter bomber
    Anti-air combat value: 2
    Land combat value: 4
    Naval combat value: 5
    Strategic bombing value: 1 IPC
    Movement: 4
    Cost: 10

    Strategic bomber
    Dogfight value: 1
    Land combat value: 2
    Naval combat value: 2
    Strategic bombing value: 3 IPCs. Plus a permanent, 1 IPC reduction in the territory’s value.
    Movement: 6
    Cost: 15

    I like your ideas, Kurt.  It’d be nice to not have the cheap 4 attack of the bomber used on everything halfway around the board.  Bombers used in land fights wouldn’t be so over-represented (and represent an apparently infinite supply of bombs for however many rounds of combat).  Navies would be mostly fights between carrier borne aircraft, as it should be.  Bombers would be mainly used for SBRs, and as support aircraft, not the main force for attacking.

    Not sure about the rule for the territory value loss there…  By round 3 of a dedicated Allied SBR campaign Germany will be producing 0 units even with repair (4-5 Brit bombers and 4-5 US bombers day/night raids).  Maybe have the “SBR territory damage” bought back at 2-3X the normal repair cost.  Assuming the fighter rules allow defending fighters to shoot down the bombers on a four or less, and the bombers shoot back at 1, does this seem like it could be balanced.  Even then, all a power has to do is stack his capital with 3-4 fighters and SBR is removed from the game altogether… 4 to 1 attrition rate!


  • @SgtBlitz:

    Assuming the fighter rules allow defending fighters to shoot down the bombers on a four or less, and the bombers shoot back at 1, does this seem like it could be balanced.  Even then, all a power has to do is stack his capital with 3-4 fighters and SBR is removed from the game altogether… 4 to 1 attrition rate!

    Fighter escorts would solve this.
    And really that’s what fighters do best: engage other fighters.


  • @allboxcars:

    @SgtBlitz:

    Assuming the fighter rules allow defending fighters to shoot down the bombers on a four or less, and the bombers shoot back at 1, does this seem like it could be balanced.  Even then, all a power has to do is stack his capital with 3-4 fighters and SBR is removed from the game altogether… 4 to 1 attrition rate!

    Fighter escorts would solve this.
    And really that’s what fighters do best: engage other fighters.

    I guess the Allies will need to take Norway or land in eastern europe somewhere to pull fighter escorts off?

  • Customizer

    I guess the Allies will need to take Norway or land in eastern europe somewhere to pull fighter escorts off?

    The answer is the long-range fighter tech (for me this should be separate from the long-range (and heavy) Bomber technology.


  • We need a battle strip for this new concept


  • @Brain:

    We need a battle strip for this new concept

    Would be cool to include dogfights in AA, that’s for sure.


  • Do you think that a bomber would attack a fighter and have an equal chance? In A&A that is what you get 4 vs. 4


  • If it was stealthy and hit the airfield before the fighter scrambled. Israel did this, granted they used fighter-bombers.


  • The single biggest item I want in AAE40 is that it is well tested/edited before it goes into production. I don’t want to pick up a game that is unplayable out of the box. I’m giving the folks over at WotC one more chance to redeem themselves. Otherwise AAE40 will be the last Axis & Allies series game I ever purchase.


  • My foremost wish is a quality game with easy to understand rules, plenty of pieces/chips, and a nice finished feeling.  NO CHEAP COP-OUTS!!!


  • And now I hear the only unique figure the Italians will have is the infantry piece.


  • Which is lame…they had unique boats tanks and such in an earlier edition. Does FMG make italian sculpts?


  • @idk_iam_swiss:

    Which is lame…they had unique boats tanks and such in an earlier edition. Does FMG make italian sculpts?

    Go to the variats forum and see for yourself.

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