@Alsch91:
Yes Clyde, the game gives you choices.
Choices like attacking Russia, which was very much an ideological enemy of Japan.
Japan doesn’t abandon its own objectives by attacking Russia. It simply realizes a different option available to it.
If you want so much historical accuracy, why do you say -
It may need a few tweaks here and there, such as having the Italian navy start the game all deployed in the same sea zone
When the Italian navy in reality did employ a strategy that required it remain at harbour, very much vulnerable to the British Med carrier-based forces that did effectively cut the strength of the Italian navy in half with one fell swoop? Why are you against this option?
or-
or changing the Japanese NO that gives them money for not invading FIC
Like how America did place stronger trade sanctions on Japan for the forceful occupation of the Indo-China region? Why are you against this very real and historical parallel?
I apologize if I seem rash, but I really don’t understand your qualms with this game.
It’s a game, naturally there are superior and inferior strategies.
Ideologically, yes, it made sense for Japan to attack Russia. From any other standpoint it made no sense. Japan had no desire or ability to slog through thousands of miles of land that was far less valuable than land to the South. The Soviet Far East isn’t exactly a rich territory. I’m not saying Japan shouldn’t have the option of attacking Russia; I’m just saying it should be more inclined to actually want to follow its own goals instead of essentially being a German puppet (which is certainly was not in real life).
There’s also a difference in allowing for different broad strategic options (like Japan attacking Russia, or Sea Lion) and having an opening situation that makes a specific tactical option (e.g. Taranto) very preferable to one side and devastating to the other. Hence the problems with the Italian fleet and, to a lesser degree, the FIC NO. I don’t like a situation where a nation should always do a certain option or never do another (in this case always Taranto, never FIC).
When it comes down to it A&A is about historical plausibility, not historical accuracy. If it went for accuracy the Allies would always win, after all. But it really isn’t plausible at all for Japan to divert tons of resources into attacking relatively poor territories in the North when it can go for richer territories in the South. It is somewhat more plausible for Japan to actually benefit a bit from taking FIC, and for the Italian navy to not be in such a bad strategic position at the beginning of the war.