A) 19 IPC from France
B) 26 IPC from England (you have to assume England’s been hit by CRD a few times, and lost territory.)
German losses:
At least 5 transports ~ 35 IPC (lost because they are not ground forces, they still have utility just like the Minor Industrial Complex in Paris still has utility, it just isn’t optimal when attacking Russia.)
7-8 Infantry lost in France ~ 21-24 IPC in loses (countered by 19 IPC gain from the treasury + 4 for the territory, let’s just call it a wash.)
2 or 3 planes lost in SZ 97, 20-31 IPC lost
7-8 Infantry, 2-3 Artillery, 1-2 planes lost in England (tanks remain to take the land, assumed, need to be transported out again) ~ 39-56 IPC lost for 26 IPC + 6 TT + 5 NO gain / 37 IPC gained.
All in all, before Russia is attacked, Germany should have lost about 146 IPC in war materials (includes lost units for buying the transports to win Sea Lion) and gained 183 IPC (by start of Round 4). Worse however, they are not in a strong position to invade Russia yet, they still have to get their stuff to the Eastern Front.
Russia, in contrast, has gained 111 IPC in gear prior to Germany’s invasion on Round 4. Thus, while Germany has effectively remained at the same strength after those invasions, Russia has doubled in strength and now has greater strength than Germany.
Italy is in the game too, but as mentioned, they take A LOT longer to grow than many suspect, with an “energetic” England.
How you all are having issues keeping Germany/Italy at bay with Russia for 8 or 9 rounds is beyond me. You don’t have to WIN, you don’t have to be in control of all of SE Europe, all you have to do is stop them from getting Stalingrad, Moscow and/or Leningrad (any two effectively stops a VC win.) That should NOT be hard. Germany gets 50 IPC to Russia’s 40 IPC, fine. So what? You start with more gear, and it takes at least 125% equipment to beat a defender, more likely 140% to be assured of having enough gear left after the attack to hold the territory. That’s not all that hard to accomplish!