Re: Field Marshal Games Pieces Project Discussion thread

  • Customizer

    I’m wondering about the battleships.  Why go with the Pennsylvania class?  That class includes the USS Pennsylvania and USS Arizona, both commissioned in 1916.  Seems like kind of an old model of BB to go with.  I would have went with the North Carolina or South Dakota class if not the Iowa class.  Then again, an older battleship like that will make for more variety.

    I did a little reading up on the USS Wasp.  There were actually two carriers in WW2 with that name.  The second was one of the 24 Essex class carriers.  The first was actually in a class of it’s own and was basically a smaller version of the Yorktown and Enterprise.  It went out with very little in the way of armor protection and no protection from torpedos.  In fact, it was sunk by a Japanese submarine I-19.  It kind of surprises me that WOTC would base the US Carrier piece on such a flawed model.  Of course, they also made the British BB Royal Oak, which had a rather ignonimous fate as well.


  • @knp7765:

    The first was actually in a class of it’s own and was basically a smaller version of the Yorktown and Enterprise.  It went out with very little in the way of armor protection and no protection from torpedos.  In fact, it was sunk by a Japanese submarine I-19.  It kind of surprises me that WOTC would base the US Carrier piece on such a flawed model.  Of course, they also made the British BB Royal Oak, which had a rather ignonimous fate as well.

    cough Japanese carrier cough


  • @knp7765:

    I’m wondering about the battleships.  Why go with the Pennsylvania class?  That class includes the USS Pennsylvania and USS Arizona, both commissioned in 1916.  Seems like kind of an old model of BB to go with.  I would have went with the North Carolina or South Dakota class if not the Iowa class.  Then again, an older battleship like that will make for more variety.

    I did a little reading up on the USS Wasp.  There were actually two carriers in WW2 with that name.  The second was one of the 24 Essex class carriers.  The first was actually in a class of it’s own and was basically a smaller version of the Yorktown and Enterprise.  It went out with very little in the way of armor protection and no protection from torpedos.  In fact, it was sunk by a Japanese submarine I-19.  It kind of surprises me that WOTC would base the US Carrier piece on such a flawed model.  Of course, they also made the British BB Royal Oak, which had a rather ignonimous fate as well.

    If you take a careful look at the oob mini of the carrier, it’s pretty clear that it’s intended to be the earlier Wasp.  And yes, it was an extremely odd choice for all of the reasons you mentioned.  Mainly though, I think it was an odd choice because it was an atypical ship; its lack of armor and torpedo protection were not really so far behind the standards of its day.  Keep in mind that because the US had the insane idea that they should be honest and honorable with regard to their treaty limitations that their ships in the first half of the war were working with all sorts of disadvantages that they did not have with the unlimited ships that the US built during the war.  It’s been said with much truth that the Pacific War was won not by one US fleet, but by 2 fleets: the first one which fought the Japanese fleet to nearly mutual annhiliation over the first year of the war and the second one which the US built of all-new ship types that then went on to conquer the Pacific.

    This is why I’m so in favor of FMG doing the Essex: it was the carrier the US built when it wasn’t restricting itself anymore and the one with which it won the war.


  • @DrLarsen:

    Mainly though, I think it was an odd choice because it was an atypical ship; its lack of armor and torpedo protection were not really so far behind the standards of its day.

    There was certain amount of debate within naval circles at the time over the usefulness of armour for carriers.  One argument made by the anti-armour side was that the best way to defend a carrier from air attack was to shoot down the enemy’s planes before they got anywhere near the carrier…and that therefore armour should be sacrificed to enable the carrier to carry more fighter planes, which in turn would provide a better combat air patrol around the ship.


  • @CWO:

    @DrLarsen:

    Mainly though, I think it was an odd choice because it was an atypical ship; its lack of armor and torpedo protection were not really so far behind the standards of its day.

    There was certain amount of debate within naval circles at the time over the usefulness of armour for carriers.  One argument made by the anti-armour side was that the best way to defend a carrier from air attack was to shoot down the enemy’s planes before they got anywhere near the carrier…and that therefore armour should be sacrificed to enable the carrier to carry more fighter planes, which in turn would provide a better combat air patrol around the ship.

    True enough, though those debates were primarily about deck armor rather than side armor or torpedo defenses.  And at those times, for the Pacific context, the non-armored-deck camp (whose approach was followed by both US and Japanese designers) was probably right, as the British armored-deck carriers didn’t really come into their own until the last, most-intense, Japanese kamikaze waves… and then only by switching to mostly US carrier planes and packing more of them on than their carriers were designed for…


  • I’m wondering about the battleships.  Why go with the Pennsylvania class?  That class includes the USS Pennsylvania and USS Arizona, both commissioned in 1916.  Seems like kind of an old model of BB to go with.  I would have went with the North Carolina or South Dakota class if not the Iowa class.  Then again, an older battleship like that will make for more variety.

    This suggestion would allow the US to have an early war battleship. Of her 16 or so starting battleships, they all more or less looked like this Pennsylvania class.  The OOB unit and the FMG choice are very close making them both too similar. The Iowa and Missouri class are too similar looking

    The new pieces should be different from OOB wherever possible. IMO

    The Essex class carrier looks too much like the OOB piece. If you had the Lexington it would be a different looking unit and convey an early war looking unit.  Compare the Essex to the Enterprise….the difference is negligible.


  • IL I don’t disagree with you on that they should be different but I think FMG’s pieces may end up being superior to Wizards of the Craps. I plan on replacing mine with theirs. I think the OOB pieces will look inferior to FMGS. We shall see.


  • This is true, but i know many will want to use both and craft technology rules to support them:

    example: early war starting battleships would be 4-4-2 and take one hit, but newly built battleships would take two hits

    or

    early war battleships on a d12 system hit at 7-6 and move 2, but with technology the new class of battleships “Iowa” are 8-8 units

    And this would be different by nation.

    BY just making a class that looks different, you just made use of not only FMG units, but the OOB.

    The alternative is to just dump the OOB pieces? NO.  The colors will match so the differences is detail are not that big since we are dealing with small scale.

    Also, FMG should wherever possible strive to distance itself from using the same types of units that are OOB. I understand in some cases this may not be possible ( e.g. the German tactical bomber must be the ju87)

    Offering a different looking unit  adds to the uniqueness of these pieces.


  • @Imperious:

    I’m wondering about the battleships.  Why go with the Pennsylvania class?  That class includes the USS Pennsylvania and USS Arizona, both commissioned in 1916.  Seems like kind of an old model of BB to go with.  I would have went with the North Carolina or South Dakota class if not the Iowa class.  Then again, an older battleship like that will make for more variety.

    This suggestion would allow the US to have an early war battleship. Of her 16 or so starting battleships, they all more or less looked like this Pennsylvania class.  The OOB unit and the FMG choice are very close making them both too similar. The Iowa and Missouri class are too similar looking

    The new pieces should be different from OOB wherever possible. IMO

    The Essex class carrier looks too much like the OOB piece. If you had the Lexington it would be a different looking unit and convey an early war looking unit.  Compare the Essex to the Enterprise….the difference is negligible.

    Yeah, I don’t think that’s true at all; now if you compare the (original) Wasp to the Yorktown class (which included the Enterprise, the original Hornet and the original Yorktown) there you see nearly identical ships; as I said earlier, the Wasp was just a Yorktown class shortened a little so as to squeak the US total carrier tonnage in under the treaty limits.  But I don’t agree that the Essex looks too much like the Wasp.  I mean, yeah, OK they’re both flat-tops with superstructures… but the superstructures aren’t the same, the deck shape isn’t the same, the elevator arrangement isn’t the same, the Essex has the superfiring twin 5"/38’s on either side of the superstructure, and it’s significantly bigger.  And the last is key to me: if FMG’s ships are going to be a little bigger to better show some detail, I’d rather them start with the biggest, best ships in each category and use the smaller, less distinct-looking oob units for smaller ships than have FMG make larger mini’s of what should be smaller ships!

    I think the same principle should go fo everything FMG makes: if the pieces will be slightly bigger (and we know they’ll be the best, most detailed plastic mini’s in this scale), he should do the biggest and best units in each category…) that means Tiger, Pershing & JS2 tanks, Iowa & Yamato BB’s, Essex & Taiho CV’s, etc.

    I do think it’s a shame that the oob pieces are an odd mixture of early and late units, but their detail isn’t that great, so if FMG’s will be slightly bigger and clearly better, they should go for the top-end units in every category, and we can overlook the tiny details where the oob units aren’t consistently “early war” in their look, just was we overlook their odd mixture now!  Hopefullly, we can then get Coach to do a slightly smaller series of consistently early-war units (like he’s going to do for German tanks, etc.)  I’d rather have FMG do a consistent set; since his pieces will be te best, he should mould the best models in every category.


  • The yamato is a terrible choice for Japanese BB. They only made two of these and the other 18 or so battleships looked like the Kongo or Nagato

    It would be a tragic repeat of a mistake. The classic Japanese battleship is the Pagoda looking ships. The Kongo is the only choice. The OOB Yamato could be an advanced BB design.

    In terms of japanese carriers I think most people would like the Kaga, Akagi, or something that looks like a typical japanese carrier.

    Taiho is a terrible choice, it looks like every other carrier by UK or USA.

    But I don’t agree that the Essex looks too much like the Wasp

    In 1/3000 scale most ships like these are too similar from oob. Compare the OOB to any choice. Now since they look similar, the FMG should make a distinct carrier choice.

    I think it would look nice to have different looking carriers ( both OOB and FMG) as American carriers for aesthetics. But if you made another OOB “looking piece” the wow factor suffers since these become just like copies of OOB with better detail and that is not the most bang for the buck.


  • I want the T-34 for russia and the spitfire for UK. Those units were the icons for those countrys and I want to see them done right.FMG will do that it appears. I see your point of view IL. I am wishing they would have done the Mark 5 for Germany.Beggars can’t be choosers.


  • Well the spitfire must be the British fighter. No question. Some of the choices are obviously to be made.

    The British battleship should be King George V, though i prefer Rodney/Nelson. The Royal Oak  OOB UK battleship was an old battleship like the Pennsylvania BTW.


  • @Imperious:

    The yamato is a terrible choice for Japanese BB. They only made two of these and the other 18 or so battleships looked like the Kongo or Nagato

    It would be a tragic repeat of a mistake. The classic Japanese battleship is the Pagoda looking ships. The Kongo is the only choice. The OOB Yamato could be an advanced BB design.

    In terms of japanese carriers I think most people would like the Kaga, Akagi, or something that looks like a typical japanese carrier.

    Taiho is a terrible choice, it looks like every other carrier by UK or USA.

    But I don’t agree that the Essex looks too much like the Wasp

    In 1/3000 scale most ships like these are too similar from oob. Compare the OOB to any choice. Now since they look similar, the FMG should make a distinct carrier choice.

    I think it would look nice to have different looking carriers ( both OOB and FMG) as American carriers for aesthetics. But if you made another OOB “looking piece” the wow factor suffers since these become just like copies of OOB with better detail and that is not the most bang for the buck.

    Yes, but you’re overlooking the fact that the Yamato was the only NEW BB the Japanese built.  All the others were just attempts to spruce up their obsolete equipment; and no, it’s not 18, it’s only 10, and the Japanese were planning on building 4 of the Yamato’s until Midway forced them to rethink their priorities… no Japanese BB class had more than 4 in it.  This means that the Yamato’s would have been tied with the Kongo’s for largest class and would have made up over 80% of the total tonnage of the IJN BB fleet within a year of Midway, if Midway hadn’t been such a disaster.

    Neither Kaga nor Akagi can be said to be typical in any way; like the Lexington’s, they were conversions of ships otherwise slated for scrapping due to the Washington Treaty… both were a one-off (not even the same class as each other, either!)  And neither was a particularly handsome ship… putting all this together makes both of them absolutely a TERRIBLE choice for FMG’s lone Japanese CV mold.  Yes, the Taiho was a unique ship, but it at least points to the Japanese ideal for what they would have built more of if they had the chance!  The only Japanese carrier that could be fairly said to be “typical” would be the Hiryu/Soryu/Unryu series, which weren’t identical, but were cousins if not sisters… and they were planning to build many more Unryu’s.  But these were smallish and unimpressive ships.  The Shokaku-Zuikaku twins would be much better choices if you insist on “typical.”  But with Japanese warships, “typical” is not easy to determine, since they have so few large classes of ships and NOT A ONE large class of large ships!


  • Now at least the Lexington has the advantage of being a handsome ship that would look great given the FMG treatment.  I still prefer the Essex, though.  Like I said, it’s the ship that won the war!  How much more pivotal could a ship be!  And with 24 of them made, we’re talking about a ship that was made in greater #'s than all the other carrier classes in the world combined up to that time!

    The Pennsylvannia class would be a terrible choice for FMG, too!  I seem to remember you yourself, IL, once referring to the US Old BB’s as obscolete “death traps” unworthy to float on the same ocean as the Bismark, and though I thought at the time that your rhetoric was a bit extreme, there is a reason why none of the US Old BB’s were ever to fulfill their original mission of sea control.  Note that at Guadalcanal, when it was a close-run thing, it was 2 US new BB’s that were sent in to save the day (Washington, a North Carolina Class, and South Dakota, first of its class) and no US old BB’s were even sent into the theatre for the entire length of the campaign, when things were really on the line!  If FMG must do something not oob, he should do a new BB of some kind.  But why not an Iowa?  We could just call the oob ones a “South Dakota”, since it’s indistinct enough to fill the part, and will probably be almost exactly the right size in comparison to FMG’s Iowa.  Let Coach or TT do an “old BB” and then we’d have the best of both worlds!

    But my bottom line is that FMG should just simply do the best in every category that was fielded in #'s.

  • '10

    The Japanese also built the Musashi which was commissioned in 1942. It was the second of the Yamato class.


  • Yes, but you’re overlooking the fact that the Yamato was the only NEW BB the Japanese built.  All the others were just attempts to spruce up their obsolete equipment; and no, it’s not 18, it’s only 10, and the Japanese were planning on building 4 of the Yamato’s until Midway forced them to rethink their priorities… no Japanese BB class had more than 4 in it.  This means that the Yamato’s would have been tied with the Kongo’s for largest class and would have made up over 80% of the total tonnage of the IJN BB fleet within a year of Midway, if Midway hadn’t been such a disaster.

    But the Kongo class looks very close in design ( they look) much more like the other classes, and Yamato looks like something completely different:

    Nagato Class

    Ise Class

    Fuso Class

    This is the majority of the types of Japanese ships that did the dirty work. Yamato and Musashi are totally different and only account for 2 actual ships and lastly, where used sparingly until late in war. Most of the battles involved a typical Pagoda style BB that made Japanese ships interesting.  You can’t base a sculpt on what could have been arguing for 4 ships, when only 3 full ships and hull 798 of a forth were made. The sculpt must reflect the ships that actually mostly fought in these battles. Again Kongo looks alot like the other three classes, while having 6 yamato’s on the map looks ridiculous.  The OOB BB should be the tech upgrade for super battleships.

    Neither Kaga nor Akagi can be said to be typical in any way; like the Lexington’s, they were conversions of ships otherwise slated for scrapping due to the Washington Treaty… both were a one-off (not even the same class as each other, either!)  And neither was a particularly handsome ship… putting all this together makes both of them absolutely a TERRIBLE choice for FMG’s lone Japanese CV mold.  Yes, the Taiho was a unique ship, but it at least points to the Japanese ideal for what they would have built more of if they had the chance!  The only Japanese carrier that could be fairly said to be “typical” would be the Hiryu/Soryu/Unryu series, which weren’t identical, but were cousins if not sisters… and they were planning to build many more Unryu’s.  But these were smallish and unimpressive ships.  The Shokaku-Zuikaku twins would be much better choices if you insist on “typical.”  But with Japanese warships, “typical” is not easy to determine, since they have so few large classes of ships and NOT A ONE large class of large ships!

    Shokaku is what the OOB looks like, though it says its the Shinano. The japanese carrier choice. This choice should convey the classic look of a japanese carrier with a very small superstructure and the classic pylons under the flight deck in front and or back.

    Soryu is good because its got the pylons
    Ryujo is good because the superstructure is almost non-existent.
    Akagi is great because its got both: small superstructure and large pylons….when you think of Japanese carrier thats the one.
    http://combinedfleet.com/akagi01.jpg

    Taiho looks like a British carrier it has no distinction as being a quintessential “Japanese looking” carrier. it looks like a standard carrier.
    http://combinedfleet.com/taiho01.jpg


  • @Fishmoto37:

    The Japanese also built the Musashi which was commissioned in 1942. It was the second of the Yamato class.

    OK, typo, it should read “…that the Yamato was the only NEW BB class the Japanese built…”

    Anyway, that makes my point.  The only other BB’s even on the drawing board in Japan were essentially “super-Yamato’s” (the A-150 design) or “baby-Yamato’s” (the B65 design… and seeing as the Japanese planned for 4 of them and had the 3 halfway built before converting it into a carrier after Midway, the Yamato is as close as it gets to a “typical new” Japanese battleship, as otherwise atypical as it may have been by world-wide standards.  And I think FMG should concentrate on new stuff, not old stuff.  Let Coach do old stuff and we can use oob stuff to fill in for old stuff until then…

    My picks, based on by “DO THE NEW!” principle are:

    US:

    Tank 1: M36 (Pershing as second choice)

    Tank 2: SHERMAN (LATE WAR!)

    Transport: Liberty Ship

    SS: GATO CLASS

    DD: SUMNER CLASS (Fletcher as second choice)

    CA: BALTIMORE CLASS (Wichita as second choice, then Cleveland, then Brooklyn)

    CV: ESSEX CLASS (Lexington as second choice)

    BB: IOWA CLASS (South Dakota as second choice, then North Carolina)

    Bomber: B-29 (B-24 as second choice)

    Tac: TBM/TBF AVENGER

    Truck:GMC 6x6

    Air Trans: C-47 DAKOTA

    Artillery: 155 MM LONG TOM

    Infantry 1: STANDARD W/ M1

    Infantry 2: AIRBORNE W/ M3 (folding-stock M1 carbine as second choice; Thompson was rather heavy/ unwieldy for airborne troops…)


  • I seem to remember you yourself, IL, once referring to the US Old BB’s as obscolete “death traps” unworthy to float on the same ocean as the Bismark, and though I thought at the time that your rhetoric was a bit extreme, there is a reason why none of the US Old BB’s were ever to fulfill their original mission of sea control.

    The point of this was to illustrate the obvious advantage that Bismarck had in speed ( 30+ knots vs. 21 knots) and range and fire control of her guns vs. old ww1 style garbage fire control and toilet paper thin coffin battleships.  Bismarck could just maintain range and pick off every ship in battleship row one after another… it would be a joke.  Those old BB’s were death traps. Timerover51 was trying to downplay Bismarck and make it seem that any old US battleship was the same as Bismarck, simply because he hates the axis and no other reason. This is his Achilles heal in arguments because he always makes it seem that axis was totally inferior at all times in all things.  He is also the guy who claimed that no people of German heritage helped work on the Atomic bomb, when most of the people who worked on it were of German decent. He basically hates Germans.

    Note that at Guadalcanal, when it was a close-run thing, it was 2 US new BB’s that were sent in to save the day (Washington, a North Carolina Class, and South Dakota, first of its class) and no US old BB’s were even sent into the theatre for the entire length of the campaign, when things were really on the line!  If FMG must do something not oob, he should do a new BB of some kind.  But why not an Iowa?  We could just call the oob ones a “South Dakota”, since it’s indistinct enough to fill the part, and will probably be almost exactly the right size in comparison to FMG’s Iowa.  Let Coach or TT do an “old BB” and then we’d have the best of both worlds!

    The old battleships had alot of action in these campaigns as well. The choice should be based on:

    1. which look conveyed the majority of the Battleships in the war  ( in battleship row just about every ship looked like the Pennsylvania)
    2. which battleship has a look different than OOB
    3. avoid late-war units. It does not look right in a 1940/41 game if you got a sculpt that came out in 1942-45.

  • Shokaku is what the OOB looks like, though it says its the Shinano. The japanese carrier choice. This choice should convey the classic look of a japanese carrier with a very small superstructure and the classic pylons under the flight deck in front and or back

    You think the oob looks like a Shokaku?  Are you smoking something?  (Just kiding :-D)

    Well, OK, I’ll concede that it is a little indistinct; I think the oob Yamato looks like a hybrid Kongo/Yamato, with its disproportionately pagoda-esque superstructure so maybe I should give the oob Shinano’s another look.  But in any case, to the extent that this is true, it actually makes my case that the oob pieces can fill in for more common early-war types, especially since, (AND THIS WILL BE KEY!) they will be a little bit smaller, since FMG has said he’s making his a little bigger to show more detail.  If you convince FMG to make a bunch of smaller/ early-war units that are all physically a little bigger than the oob pieces, it would look absolutely RIDICULOUS to then use the OOB pieces as “super” versions of bigger and nicer-looking “typical” pieces.  It makes far more sense to have FMG do all the “best and biggest”, and we’ll at least have one consistent-looking set that is consistent.  Then we can use oob for “typicals” as a stop-gap and Coach can do a consistent early-war set.  Then we’d have two consistent sets and one inconsistent oob set that we can gradually dispense with, instead of 2 inconsistent ones… which then would make it almost impossible for yet a third attempt to have even a chance at consistency!

    FMG has already picked a set of mostly the “best and biggest” for Italy and Germany; it would be a big mistake for him to then give the allies nothing by obsolete “death traps” (in your own words).  Yes the axis had the jump on the allies in new equipment at war’s beginning, but why stick them with nothing but “garbage fire control” (in your own words) in their tanks and BB’s for the rest of the war.  The whole dynamic of both A&A and WW2 is that the allies have their responses coming, in production, technology, numbers, etc., but will they get there in time… that’s the whole drama.  Stick the US with obsolete stuff and you’re basically predetermining that the cavalry will never come… and then where’s the drama!  The outcome is over, the “evil empires” have won and they might as well start learning German and Japanese…


  • Shokaku

    http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/japan/images/zuikaku.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/japan/shokaku-cv-schem.htm&h=325&w=950&sz=39&tbnid=e5fkjTCiuh4UpM:&tbnh=51&tbnw=148&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dshokaku%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=shokaku&hl=en&usg=__TdUNna6QbgS64x0gbQSSwC2lScU=&sa=X&ei=G2OeTYyRCerfiALntPGMAw&sqi=2&ved=0CD8Q9QEwBg

    Shinano
    http://www.google.com/imgres?imgurl=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/japan/images/shinano.gif&imgrefurl=http://www.globalsecurity.org/military/world/japan/shinano-cv-schem.htm&h=550&w=1000&sz=144&tbnid=Pve2ioVmhI6IlM:&tbnh=82&tbnw=149&prev=/search%3Fq%3Dshinano%26tbm%3Disch%26tbo%3Du&zoom=1&q=shinano&hl=en&usg=__uy6MPJpp31qUqBPHLdaA7qeFkv8=&sa=X&ei=TmOeTbTeKYThiALKk9T-Ag&sqi=2&ved=0CDQQ9QEwAw

    The OOB piece for the japanese CV look like the first picture, though they are supposed to look like the second picture.  Also, both carriers look like classic UK or US carriers.

    The OOB piece Yamato looks nothing like a Kongo or Nagato.

    I made no claims about the size of the pieces, only that they are similar to OOB.

    Also, i am not interested in looking at only OLD UNITS. In the case of the Battleships this might be the case. But your choices are all units that were mostly used in late-war and you got no early war units.  FMG did not pick the biggest or baddest. If they did the Me-262 would be used and the JU-87 would not since its early war.

    The biggest and baddest does not work at all. The choices must reflect the majority of the “LOOK” used in most of the units during the war and also not choices that didn’t fight till late war, since many games start in 1940-42.

    For USA the Sherman is grudgingly acknowledged. Pershing is a joke choice on the other hand.

    P-51 is a good choice and the plane choices are just fine.

    The ship choices are fine as long as they don’t look anything like the OOB units.  This is where the Pennsylvania comes in. All your choices look like a do over of OOB and OOB got it wrong.

    The German choices have a mix of early and midwar units.  Your list is like 99% late war. Not good.

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