@frood:
I was wondering about a battleship too, but thought, “that’s a bit pricey…”
Another alternative is a stack of 3 subs. Consider:
- They cost the same as 1 BB.
- They add 6 to punch, rather than 4
- They sustain 3 hits instead of 2 (although not self-healing, but cheaper to replace)
- They get that nice opening attack
- But downside: vulnerable to air attack. Depends how and where the RAF are. If Germany has no navy I often fly the RAF to Caucasus to help defend against Germany and be available for support in the east, but if there are a bunch of fighters in UK the BB may be better.
I’m liking that naval option more and more as I think about it. Just spend what you need to to keep Russia at bay, and let Japan grind it out. It makes D-Day a lot more expensive for the allies.
Actually . . . no.
UK sees the German build of 3 subs, and counters with 3 fighters. Germany threatens an invasion with 1 inf 1 tank 6 fighter 1 bomber (any incoming attack from the Mediterranean can be blocked). UK defense is 1 AA, 1 bomber 2 inf 1 art 2 tank 5 fighter, and US can seal the deal with transports from W. US. UK navy can consolidate southwest of England. There is no real reason for UK NOT to run three fighters, because UK can’t run transports in the Atlantic (which it should do ASAP) while Germany still has a strong Baltic fleet.
So now you have these mostly useless Baltic subs - if you move them out of the Baltic, they are vulnerable to attack by UK navy and air - if they stay where they are, all they do is deter the Allied navy from getting close, but a 3 fighter response means the Allied navy doesn’t need to get close - and a weaker front against Russia. You have to respond to the threat by purchasing a carrier on G2. If you do not, 5 fig 1 bomber vs 5 sub 1 trns 1 destr is very bad.
If you WAITED to build Germany’s navy, to see where UK’s navy went, the UK should probably just try to blow up the Baltic fleet immediately, so it can start shuttling infantry into Europe on UK2.