@Imperious:
A bid is more flexible, while a 15 IPC factory in India is totally arbitrary and based on nothing when the results of AA50 games do not indicate any need to give the British player this to make the game balanced. Rather it is just an opinion based on somebodies playing style while the results or ‘after action reports’ do not indicate this need at all.
Let’s ask this question. What would the allies do with a 15 bid? Hmm. Help UK in Africa (Egypt) and Russia in europe to defeat Germany. Why? To help an already effective and most commonly used KGF playout.
sure, you COULD place the bid elsewhere, but IF YOU WERE PLAYING TO WIN THE GAME (not for fun or game play testing), the allies would MOST likely follow the Revised game plan of KGF(KIF).
Why can I say this with such certainty? Because Godzilla (70+ IPC Japan) eventually will kill you if you don’t get Germany first. AA50 playout is doomed to be as predictable as AAR in a tourney situation.
@Imperious:
It is not like AA50 is imbalanced unless the British player “gets a fixed 15 IPC factory in India at game start”
I am not so sure Cousin_Joe’s main reasoning behind the limited IC idea was meant for strictly balance. I believe the real main reason is to open up other strategies in AA50. The way AA50 is now, unless UK (and USA) get some pressure on the western Axis powers, they will grow too strong to be conquered (if they haven’t taken out Russia first!) So this limits the allied strategic options.
Making an IC in India / Australia a VIABLE option serves to open up the allied option of trying to go after Japan first/primarily (as well as add balance to a game heavily weighted in the Axis favor)
@Imperious:
If the value of the allied bid is proven to be at 15 IPC, then allow the Allies to decide what they want to do to allow more variation is strategy, then to stick them with some line of play that forces them into something they don’t want to do.
There is no forcing UK to buy an IC, just like there is no forcing the Allies to place their 15 bid units in India.
@Imperious:
If you want “what if” a factory in India for UK is non consistent with that philosophy. Rather let the allies decide what they will buy as the bid has worked before.
See above discussion about just WHERE that bid will go, and you will realize that there will become the optimal placement for the bid.
Look, I am not saying that the bid system is bad. Is is good and simple and it does add balance to the game. But I think a bid is lacking in it’s ability to add variation in game play. Why? Because the bid level will never get high enough to make a huge difference in the pacific/asian theatre. In the end, it will only serve to strengthen the best allied game plan.
If you try to think outside the box of using only a bid, the IC placement can give the allies another VIABLE strategic option of in the Pacific theatre.
Remember, these are two different concepts to altering imbalance that is inherant in 1941 scenario with NOs. The IC has other characteristics to it beyond what a mere placement of additional units does to change the game.
One last thought. Has anyone besides C_J tried this idea? I am defending it based merely on the idea that playout variability will be increased.
I intend to game play test this next week.
It’s easy to speculate on an idea that changes the game, it’s another to prove it through several games of testing. THEN we can make better judgements on how good an idea is.