As Simon says you can’t move any of your ships in that sea zone on NCM. There is a provision that allows you to move them to flee the sea zone on the Combat Movement phase without taking them into combat. The real purpose of the move though is to prevent any transports in the sea zone from loading ground units in that sea zone. You can still move to another sea zone on Combat Move and load ground units as long as it is a friendly sea zone. If you haven’t seen the video it explains everything;
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pkj_9K3lfQk&t=166s
Fleet Sizes
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… for every turn this fleet sail away from its Home Port, the Battleships ability to soak hits will be more and more valuable. IMHO.
As has been said, fleet configuration depends on the reason for the fleet’s existence. To add to Narvik’s point, the battleship’s bombard can be crucial especially in a tight amphibious assault.
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@aequitas:
But I like your analysis madscientist!
It is a way to look on what to purchase this or next round regarding cost/effectivness.
Thank you.The analyses of Madscientist is correct when this fleet is supposed to be used in a seazone adjacent to the factory that build it, but for every turn this fleet sail away from its Home Port, the Battleships ability to soak hits will be more and more valuable. IMHO.
This sort of depends on how many times you actually plan to fight with your main fleet. In the games I play, we actually only use the main fleet once. We very rarely get to kill blockers (since it is usually better to threathen counterattack than to block a move). Every fleetmove, each player thinks: “If I move like this, can my opponent attack me and kill my fleet?”. if the answer is yes, then the player moves the fleet to a place where it cannot be attacked, if the answer is no, then the player can move the fleet there. Because we move like this, we never get big or medium fleetbattles, the game becomes all about fleetpositioning and pushing your opponent to a postion where he cannot retreat and then attack. Since this is usually just one fleetbattle, the BB is the worst unit to buy by far. The best unit is sub, both in attack and as a huge part of defence. I think quantity is vastly underrated by most axisplayers. From what I remember from my calculations (if we ignore that subs cant hit planes), is that the optimal fleet for defence has about 40% of the units in subs.
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Kreuzfeld, I agree that in the Pac there is a lot of cat & mouse positioning, and re-positioning between the Japanese and combined allied fleets (sometimes very little fighting). When I’m the allies I like to put together a rainbow defensive fleet (multiple nation) as soon as possible composed of many loaded carriers and destroyers because at some point you need to get close to the Japanese Imperial Navy. Maybe take an island with US (or move to a friendly island) that has an air base, then fly Anz ftrs to it for more def. You need to threaten or take Japanese possessions (DEI, Phil, Malaya etc). You also need to be able to take a hit from Japan, and that depends on where the bulk of the Japanese air force is. Sometimes you have to wait for the Japanese to strike India, or the Chinese so there air force is out of position.
When you said that subs are the best all around attack/defense unit you lost me for a minute. We know that when subs are attacked they aren’t too good defensively (def @1), but if you are buying enough to make them 40% of your fleet to soak hits, then yea they are cheap and will keep your high end units firing longer (still not too sure though). It would be similar to buying 4-5 US bmrs and flying them to London to deter a Sea Lion. They aren’t great on defense, but you just changed the odds so the Germans might bail on the idea.
I sometimes might sacrifice a large defensive fleet (many loaded carriers/destroyes), as long as I can safely land any surviving air units (say he calls off the battle after a couple rounds), and have a counter attack set-up to kill his damaged capital ships. The counter attack would be comprised of subs, bmrs and anything else I have (If I’m allies probably from both the US and Anz to double hit). So in that respect the sub is a defensive tool, but as you pointed out would be more as a deterrent.
In the game I’m playing now, my allied combo fleet is about the same size as the Japanese (he has bought some ss/dd and a carrier). I have bought some subs with both the US and Anz, maybe I need to buy a bunch more lol?
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The real danger of a sub heavy fleet is that your opponent might just attack it with air units, and the subs don’t get to defend or take hits.
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@Shin:
The real danger of a sub heavy fleet is that your opponent might just attack it with air units, and the subs don’t get to defend or take hits.
Very good point, especially if Japan is attacking because they start with 21 aircraft.
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Yea, air complicates things, this is why you should always count it out so that you can withstand the japanse if he does the attack without DDs. It is however nice to know how to design the optimal defence in a world without airpower, because you can then use that info as a baseline to designing your true fleet.
the thing about subs is that people really underestimate the value of volume. You can use a A&A battle calc and et up a scenario where your opponenet attacks with a fairly evenly balanced fleet (with DDs) and you defend with a failry balanced fleet. Then you remove 3DDs and add 4 subs. you continue doing that until you find the best use of your money.
One such scenario: the attacker attacks with 10 DDs, how many subs do you need to actually have a good chance at holding the terr?
Correct answer; 14.142. Which means that if you have 15 subs, you have a more than 50% chance of holding. 15 subs costs 90 IPC. 10 DDs cost 80 IPC.
In the scenario above, I did not use a better defence profile. so lets imagine an attacker attacking with 20 DDs and then the defender defending with 20 DDs. We can then run a battle calc.
Underneeth is a table for 20 dds attacking against the same IPC value in dds/subs
here i take the defenders sub to dd ratio
#DD #sub Avg attack loss Avg defend loss
20 , 0 133 133
17, 4 137 127
14, 8 140 122
11, 12 141 121
8,16 139 123
5,20 135 128
2,24 124 136So you see that in almost every scenario it is better with subs than with DDs. The best defence according to the numbers is abotu 50% DDs and 50% subs. If you don’t believe it, just test it :)
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So you calculated the possibilty kreuzfeld,
But most of the time the dice decide the battle.Alea iacta est… :-)
I’m not saying that there is anything wrong with your statement.
It may be a good way to figure things out. But it will allways be a dicey game. -
Who attacks with a balanced fleet? If you want to see the values of subs (and they’re AWESOME, don’t get me wrong), you have to assume that it’s an overwhelming advantage for the attacker. Otherwise the fleets just stare at each other.
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when i said “balanced” I didn’t mean balanced in power. I meant “a fleet that is well balanced in its capablities”. A fleet with alot of subs is really bad if your opponents fleetpower is made from 60 planes and 30 Carriers and a few DDs. (that is an unbalanced fleet).
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A well-balanced fleet would be something like 2ac 2ftr 2tac 1bb 1cruiser 3DDs 3 subs 4 trans and 8 land units.
Extra DDs and subs are for playing the area denial/movement blocking game. By the time the fleet gets reinforced, it can be down to one DD and no subs and still be in good shape.
Units and bb/cruiser plus the 2ftr/2tac are your land invasion support. Amphib shots give continuous benefit as long as you continue to make raids.
BB second hit allows you to walk over your first enemy picket ship for free even if he hits.
If there are no large enemy threats nearby you can split the fleet to protect transports in multiple zones at the end of a strike round. One half gets the bb, the other the cruiser, each gets an ac/ftr/tac 2 trns and 4 land units, leaving each reasonably capable to small attacks independently.
While this fleet is together it will take a large enemy force to kill it. It is more likely to have to return home to get more land units than retreat for damage done to it, unless you walk into a trap.
This composition gives you the ability to do anything you could possibly want to do from sea (including tactical bombing!). Both Japan and the US can put together this force easily from starting units (US will have 3ftr/1tac on the ACs instead).
You could of course add more to this but at that point it would be a strike fleet or a defensive fleet. With fewer units you start sacrificing capabilities.
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Easy answer:
Carriers,
Fighters,
destroyers,
Subs,
…. That’s it.
In the PAC, you need more dds and subs to act as fodder. In the Atl, mostly loaded carriers w/a dd or 2, or some subs are all you need to protect the transports. Airbse in Gib is key for the allies.
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Maybe this puts me with Kreuzfeld?
Subs ROCK!!!
Buy just enough DD’s to ensure you can block and attack enemy subs where you want, especially enemy subs convoy damaging you.
I like to trade subs for destroyers, though.
Not a fan of destroyers. They are expensive - nearly as expensive as a fighter, and cannot attack land in any way (like carriers, cruisers, battleships, fighters, tacs, bombers). Also, if you have few destroyers, then you have more chances to (as people have pointed out) trick your opponent who is just putting everything in a battle calc by attacking his fleet WITHOUT any destroyers so the subs are not eligible casualties.
I could say a lot of things from all my experience, but I’ll just give you this rule of thumb. I like to have about 4 Allied destroyers in the Pacific for blocking.
Oh, and it’s worth saying again. Bombers and subs. Tremendous bang for the buck and not expensive to add them. Carrier and 2 fighters is 36 bucks by comparison.
One more comment, as far as the whole purpose of fleets being to facilitate transport of ground units. WRONG! Carriers greatly extend options for your fighters/tacs, and make all kinds of attacks possible that otherwise would not be. You could even airstrike ground units or tactical bomb facilities from carrier based aircraft - NO TRANSPORTS REQUIRED!!
ALSO - almost forgot - oh my goodness, CONVOY DAMAGE. Again, subs are vastly superior to destroyers, obviously, for this purpose. -
Good afternoon Gamerman01. Do you use the US airbases on Wake, Midway, and Guam for the bombers? I played a game once before as the US doing this but I think I focused too much on this tactic and did not invest in the destroyers or subs as you have suggested.
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Hi Dafyd!
I don’t usually have many bombers in the Pacific, but yes those airbases can all be key! I’ve been finding that putting about 5 fighters on a combination of Midway and Wake on US1 seems to cause the Axis player to delay an attack until J3. And then there’s always the nasty naval base to Midway (or possibly Wake) when the Japanese player thinks he’s going to block you off with 1 or 2 destroyers! I think I pay more attention to these seemingly minor islands with airbases than my opponents often do, even as Japan…… Indeed, I have found myself collecting the weird Japanese perimeter island NO in more games than not, lately :-o It starts innocently enough… just snagging Guam, Midway, and Wake… Then all you need is Solomons (very key landing place for attacking bases on Queensland or fleet in 62/63) and Gilbert and you’re there :wink:
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I can stop grabbing islands whenever I want. Just one more objective…
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@WILD:
When you said that subs are the best all around attack/defense unit you lost me for a minute. We know that when subs are attacked they aren’t too good defensively (def @1), but if you are buying enough to make them 40% of your fleet to soak hits, then yea they are cheap and will keep your high end units firing longer (still not too sure though)
Ok. One way to think about this is. Imagine that art is 2 attack and 2 defence, they cost 4 and do not give a bonus to inf. How many inf would you have in your main force then?
THe price dfference between art and inf is the same as dd vs sub. The number of dice you get is very similar .
I would even in such a scenario have about 70-80% inf and the rest art. (+ whatever i buy in tanks and planes).
Subs is the infantery of the sea.
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The ability to INF to picket vs. the inability of subs to do so should not be overlooked.
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Good point - in that way, destroyers are the infantry of the sea
But Kreuz was absolutely right, that subs are the infantry of the sea when it comes to cheapest fodder, and it often makes sense to spread them out, 1 per zone, for example
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Long time lurker….
For this reason, I always buy both subs and destroyers in equal parts. You have the flexibility of a destroyer picket when you need it, or to provide some fodder from an air only attack, and you have the cheap subs to provide fodder for the massive fleet attack/engagement.
Sometimes, balance is the min/max…
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Welcome from out of the shadows! You should post more! :-)