NO! you guys aren’t getting it!
1. First, this whole thread has been threadjacked from the topic of when to buy German air. I will continue this evil trend so I can address what I consider a dangerous misconception. Well, dangerously funny maybe.
2. Kids . . . don’t plug your brains into calculators. Use your brains. That’s what they’re for . . . those lovely plump juicy brains . . . Think about what must be. Yes, it was correct to think about the relative costs of artillery and tanks, but that was only a SMALL step on a MUCH LONGER ROAD. Completely ignored was the LOGISTIC and PRACTICAL applications of REAL WORLD SITUATIONS (insofar as a “game” has “real world situations” :-P
3 LOGISTICS? Let’s say you have a big fat stack of infantry and artillery, you have more offensive power for your buck. But in the actual game you don’t just have a fat stack of infantry and artillery slammed up against another fat defensive stack. You have territories in between that must be crossed, and TANKS have an important LOGISTIC advantage in that they MOVE TWO SQUARES.
So if you produce nothing but infantry and artillery, let’s say on round four your attack might be 12 inf 8 artillery. (68 IPC worth) But if you do inf/art tanks, on round four your attack might be 9 inf 2 art 10 tanks (85 IPC worth). All these calculations on whether there is some “ideal” ratio COMPLETELY IGNORE the fact that when you are on the ATTACK, the LOGISTIC POWER of TANKS GREATLY CHANGES THE FORCE YOU CAN BRING TO BEAR.
Furthermore, there IS the fact that tanks CAN move two. Already said, you say? But it’s only been mentioned on the attack. FORWARD progress tends to stall out. BACKWARDS progress, though, means defense, and that’s something that hasn’t yet been addressed here.
That is, imagine this situation - you have 10 infantry on Berlin, 10 infantry on Eastern Europe, and scattered light forces at Karelia, Belorussia, Ukraine, and Western Europe. Now drop 16 tanks on Eastern Europe.
With 16 tanks on Eastern Europe, first, there is a fat chunk of units on Eastern Europe that is hard to attack. So the tanks are acting as defense that protect the flow of German infantry east as well as the 3 IPC Eastern Europe territory. But also the tanks threaten Western Europe, preventing an Allied landing in force, and threaten to attack through Karelia/Belorussia/Ukraine into any of the key territories of Archangel (where a stack of Germans can prevent Allied landings), Belorussia (where the Allies are forced to choose between Russia and Caucasus), and Caucasus (where there’s an industrial complex).
Compare with a stack of 20 artillery on Eastern Europe. That won’t help prevent an Allied landing in force on Western Europe, nor does it threaten Archangel, Belorussia, or Ukraine. Incidentally it also can’t do things like hit Norway when necessary/appropriate.
In other words . . .all this talk about infantry being in a 3 to 1 ratio to artillery, or whatever and whatnot - TRASH! It’s like you washed up on a deserted island shore, and you have a cookbook that tells you how to make the most delicious duck . . . only you have rocks and pineapples to work with! What you need is a book that tells you how to use rocks and pineapples for food, shelter, weapons, entertainment, and long-range communications.
I know. Ducks are smexy. But you gotta use what you have to work with. Which means not thinking about those beautiful laboratory conditions that specify 3 to 1 ratios, and working with the real situation. Or . . . getting a better laboratory that can better describe and approximate real world situations . . . but that would, like, involve work and stuff, and that’s scary.
4 PRACTICAL application - again, using these wonderful JUICY BRAINS . . . probably I will not need to say that on the front lines, artillery are usually “better” than tanks, because they’re cheaper. When they’re being ground up and thrown on a pile of corpses, you want your casualties to be on the cheap. But your RESERVES should not be artillery. Your RESERVES should be smexy wonderful tanks. Even for seemingly end game situations in which Germany’s been pushed out of Africa, and the Allies have a fat stack on Eastern Europe, tanks have their application - say if Germany takes Western Europe, Balkans, and Southern Europe on its turn, UK can take Western Europe and Balkans on its turn, and HAVING TAKEN BALKANS, US can blitz tanks through Balkans into Southern Europe - but ONLY if US has tanks in the first place!
Okay, having read this wonderful text wall and not having fallen asleep by this point, I suppose I will reward readers with . . . a wonderful real-real-world application! “Wonderful” being the word my agent’s telling me to use of course. Buy the book. Watch the movie.
Anglo-Egypt Sudan! Yes, in MYSTERIOUS AFRICA, the DARK CONTINENT!
Let’s say on G1 that Russia did Ukraine/West Russia (WHICH IT MAY NOT DO, I KNOW), and that you’ve decided you want to wipe the UK battleship. So you send sub/fig/bomber there, leaving only a limited amount left for Anglo-Egypt Sudan (AES). What you got? You got the Balkans fighter, the inf/tank in Africa, and either inf/tank or inf/art from Southern Europe. So what should you use, inf/art or inf/tank?
(runs to frood net for calculations)
If you use inf/art, there’s about 91.74% you kill all defenders. 11.12% you lose all attackers, 10.74% you only survive with tank or fighter, 24.22% you keep tank and fighter, 30.66% you keep artillery, tank, and fighter.
If you use inf/tank, you get 91.62% to kill all defenders. 11.14% you lose all attackers, 10.16% you only survive with tank or fighter, 24.14% you keep tank and fighter or two tanks, 31.96% you keep two tanks and fighter.
So everything seems pretty cool right?
BUT WAIT! (exclamation mark!)
Think about the UK turn. Probably UK will counter Anglo-Egypt to stop tanks blitzing through Africa. So if you take inf/tank, probably you will just lose the tank. Therefore, it’s probably better to use inf/art. The inf/art will be on the “front lines”, probably being ground up by the UK counter, and inf/art in THIS situation gives decent percentages when compared to inf/tank, so . . . you see? And the Southern Europe tank can potentially be used to create a hard point at Karelia that Russia won’t be able to attack (depending on the particulars of R1 choices and dice of course). The artillery from Southern Europe can’t reach Karelia.
(closes book) okay class remember to study study study! Quiz on Tuesday!