I’ve created a separate thread for my work on the OOB 1914 map. Please go here to discuss it in more detail.
Images of the Map?
-
I agree with you on this one Flash I think some of these rules and the map will need to be cleaned up in the second edition we have been talking about. I like the combat system but I don’t like the rules on tanks or fighters from what I can see. I need to see it first hand to see if it will work.
-
I actually like the tanks and fighters rules; in fact I think the combat system might just be the best thing to happen to Axis and Allies since, well, the MB edition.
I just wasn’t expecting it all to take place on a slightly modified Diplomacy board.
-
But its unhistorical anyway because Moscow wasn’t the capital of Russia until after the Revolution, when it was moved there as the Allies were getting rather close to Petrograd.
And doesn’t the fact that historically Russia collapsed with the enemy nowhere near Moscow demonstrate that there were many other factors involved? Further, that many other powers came close to revolution for similar reasons, again with no threat to their capitals, showing that factors other than capturing the capitals should be considered as victory conditions? The Germans got (and presumably in the game will get) much closer to Paris than they ever got to Moscow without France losing its government.
Couldn’t revolution have been based on:
Number of home tts lost (regardless of proximity to Moscow)
Number of battles lost
Number of casualties
All contributing towards a morale decrease which at a certain point triggers rebellion.
Revolution could have occurred anywhere by 1917; if (and only if) the game allowed this to happen to any power, it might make sense for Moscow to be a similar distance to the enemy as other capitals.
I’m not saying this makes it a bad game, but it makes it questionable as a representation of WWI.
Russia is drawn this way I believe to make the Russian revolution more plausible according to Larry’s rule on it. It makes the central powers try to knock it out. If Russia had say 3 to 4 spaces from Germany to Russia according to Larry’s rule it would never have the revolution. I am not disagreeing with you guys I am simply pointing out I believe this is why it is what it is. To think that England has as many territories as Russia is nuts but that also may be an advantage to Germany. England can’t possibly defend all of that coastline and mount a solid offensive with the French. Can anybody say Sealion 1914 style?
I’m in total agreement Flash.
We are going to have to come up with fixed russian revolution rules before the boxes are even on the shelf.
-
Mock up of the full map.
Still some areas we can’t see, so guessing here and there.
The “Western Turkey” area is almost as weird as Sevastopol, but that seems to be how its done.
Congo may not have an Atlantic coast
Again it would be logical for:
Paris to border Marseilles
Berlin to border Bohemia
Venice to border Switzerland
but it wouldn’t be Diplomacy…
I’ve reduced GB to 4 areas, as I can see only 4 infantry stacks there, but then again there’s nothing in Ireland so this may be a mistake.
-
Further update:
Been trying to count infantry stacks, and concluded that it doesn’t follow Diplomacy in Western Europe as closely as in the East.
Germany is largely guesswork; I may have one tt too many.
Divided Black Sea to accommodate Turkish & Russian fleets.
Don’t know whats going on with the Tibet/China tt.
-
Battles lost and Casualties taken is a REALLY hard stat to keep track of in beer and pretzels terms.
The main factors are:
1. Duration of game (which is a catch for # of battles lost and # of casualties)
2. Home territories lostIf you want simple rules for ANY power it might go something like this:
At the end of your turn, if you did not win a battle, and the enemy occupies any two of your home territories (with a printed IPC value), your citizens may become restless and you may experience a revolution.
Roll a die and consult the following chart:
(on turn 1 or later) Roll of 1: Labor Strikes - collect one die less IPCs during your collect income phase
(on turn 2 or later) Roll of 2: Mutiny - The enemy may remove one of your Infantry from up to three territories you control that are not contested or bordering enemy forces.
(on turn 3 or later) Roll of 3: Armed Revolt - The enemy may replace two of your infantry with his infantry in one of your original territories that is not contested.
(on turn 4 or later) Roll of 4: Protesters at the Capital - You must maintain at least 10 infantry in your capital city, and you no longer collect IPCs from this territory.
(on turn 5 or later) Roll of 5: Change in Government - A shift in the ruling classes results in a curtailing of offensive actions. You may only make offensive movements with 5 units per turn.
(on turn 6 or later) Roll of 6: Capitulation - You have lost control of your forces. You may no longer make offensive movements and are now at peace with the opposing faction. -
Not if you have a morale chart and a casualties box.
The morale chart is updated after every action affecting morale, just like the IPC tracker.
Put all eliminated units in the casualties box. When you see an enemy power has 10 units in there after a combat phase, place them back in his unused units box and move his morale tracker down one space. Simple.
Another map, with redone Eastern Europe and Turkey. Russia is allowed to move the capital to Moscow at the start of its own turn.
I guess the other main reason for Moscow to be so close to the German/Austrian borders is the placement of all new units in the capital. Clearly this would have to be modified if using a map such as this.
Or of course implement strategic rail movement within Russian home tt.
-
I guess a morale tracker like that might work….but it’s going to tempt players to not make attacks…which WWI was about, in a grand sense, but not so much on the ground.
We see pictures of men sitting in trenches and think it was a defensive war, but we know that those men charged out of those trenches frequently.I would hate to see a game mechanic that punishes action.
My idea is more of a war weariness shot clock that you are subject to if you are in a losing position. -
I also have a universal morale reducer after each year of war.
-1 at the end of year one
-2 at the end of year two, and so on.
In the end, nearly every county should be just hanging on.
-
That being the case, would countries suffer penalties as their morale score falls down the ladder?
For instance, lose a die roll of IPCs per turn if your morale falls below 20
Lose d6 infantry if your morale falls below 30
So on and so forth.These penalties could stack all the way up to…70 maybe, when you have a revolution on your hands.
Each power, instead of having NO’s might have a list of nation specific morale penalties, such as
United Kingdom: Automatically lose 10 Morale if you have no surface warships on the board at the end of your turn
France: Automatically lose 10 Morale if you hold no overseas colonies
Germany: Automatically lose 10 morale if you have no naval unitsSo on and so forth.
-
I have 2 stages - disorder & revolution
In disorder you have to make a mutiny roll for every army ordered to move/attack
In revolution you are effectively out of the game, unless you manage to wipe out red units and restore the ancient regime.
-
I also have a universal morale reducer after each year of war.
-1 at the end of year one
-2 at the end of year two, and so on.
In the end, nearly every county should be just hanging on.
I dont think the real world works that way. Some nations just keep on fighting to the bitter end, while others just surrender for nothing. I figure it has something to do with the current leaders. Kaizer Wilhelm surrendered easily when Hitler would fight to the dead. Halifax wanted to surrender, but Churchill would fight to the dead. The same people, the same nation, but different leaders. Look at Vietnam before 1945, always a slave to others. Then they got Ho Chi Ming, and he told people to fight, so they kicked out the French, then the Americans, and then the Japs, etc But how to make this a game mechanic that works, only Larry know how, man
-
Larry big man. He knows everything. He designed the game. Smart.
But I maintain that by 1918 everyone had had enough. The Kaizer really had no choice, Germany was falling apart. The navy refused to sail, the people were starving, their Allies had all dropped out.
It was game over Hans, despite the fact that Germany was unoccupied and in fact held 200% more tt than it started with, and that their enemies were further away from Berlin than when they started.
The fact that Halifax wanted to do a deal with Hitler is precisely why he didn’t become PM - the country wouldn’t have tolerated it.
-
With neutrals invadable, it will be interesting to see the western front develope, as everything from Holland, Switzerland and even Denmark are suddenly possible battle grounds.
-
This is as far as I can take the map without more info.
Cleaned up some of the area names to correct anachronisms, but keeping those we know are in the official game such as Belarus.
Mexico probably isn’t in there; Montenegro might be, but it doesn’t look like it.
Might be another SZ in the north (Arctic), but wouldn’t really effect much.
Southern Russia looks silly whatever I do, we’ll just have to accept this given the capital rules Larry has described.
Just as we’ll have to live with the Topkapi tank factory, and US fighters flying across the Atlantic, something that no powered aircraft managed until after the war. And no Anzacs. :cry:
Oh well.
-
I think India and Anzac will be represented as English units mobilized in Bombay. What other reason could there be for the map stretching over to India. There must be some kind of mechanic for English ground units to enter through Bombay. Could just be an inf or two each round, but the UK will need to have ground units enter the game from that edge of the map to resupply, and not get over run. I also think the Canadians will be able to offer some inf too. I see it as a special rule for the English Empire getting support from the Commonwealth in some form.
BTW thanks for taking a stab at how the map may look Flash. I know it would be a lot of work going through Larry’s posts, counting the inf stacks from the pro-mo pic (blowing it up), and try to see some of the boundaries and sz’s etc….
-
Let me know if you see any errors.
Another concern I had was that the war in Africa will just fizzle out if you cannot recruit more native troops; nobody will bother shipping units down there.
We’ll have to see what the German report brings in.
-
Yep his reports are pretty cool and answer some questions. Also looking forward to the Germans, then France and UK go back to back I believe.
-
Oh my. Flashman, that “Dogs of War” postcard at the bottom left of your imagined map is hilarious. Nice touch!
Yrs.,
R. -
Africa just looks like it’s there for the Germans to take away some of Great Britians income for a turn or two. There is no way Germany can last longer than two turns, but they’ll get the chance to take away some of GB and France’s income for a turn or two. I don’t see it fizziling out, the Allies definetly have enough units to finish off the germans after a turn or two.