Quick update, due to some last minute play testing and rule tuning, the completed scenario will be delayed until tomorrow (but it is coming out ;) )
Having Italy as the 6th player in revised axis and allies
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yep
so the table has 1942 values of
USA 1235
UK 353
France 116
Utaly 145
USSR 274
Germany 417
Austria 27
Japan 197so it translates to
USA 1235
UK 353
USSR 274
Germany 560
Japan 197so forget the USA, the ratios are
UK 1.8
USSR 1.4
Germany 2.8
Japan 1very different to Axis and Allies
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Thats just one index of economic factors but an important one.
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Why’s the US so high? Just shear manufacturing power, or what?
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look at the link. USA grows each year. The “Arsenal of Democracy” in full effect. BTW we put you on the credits for helping us design this.
and no… your avatar will not appear in the ruleset. :-D :-D :-D
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AS you can see in 1942 Japan is at 197 and Italy is at 145… Japan had a 33% larger wartime economy than Italy. Japan is at 25 thus Italy could be at say 15 or 16 range… I really like that range because they can make most units or buy 5 infantry! What you think?
as you know the allies now will get 15 for lend lease to balance ( free money).
This really could work well because it would involve buying a greater assortment of units also due to the limits we placed on infantry builds under phase one.
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Another reason Italy player represents Balkans too.
The book “Third Axis, Fourth Ally” puts the case that Romania is an important Axis. And the book thinks more so than Italy.
http://www.battlefront.co.nz/Article.asp?ArticleID=1111 -
I know that everyone talked about this more than a couple months ago, but if anyone is interested I have a triplea map that has been setup almost exactly like discussed in this topic. We did add a German transport to the sea zone with the italian ships; it seemed the only likely way for Germany to get troops into Africa.
luc
this is the text file for triplea, if you change it to an .xml file extension it will be recognizable through triplea
[attachment deleted by admin]
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Lucky day:
How exactly is the map set up… can you jpeg it and post the map?
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@Imperious:
Lucky day:
How exactly is the map set up… can you jpeg it and post the map?
IL, we tried to keep it simple, didn’t want to have to print a new board at the time, but use the revised board as much as possible. What we came up with, was pretty close to what is discussed in this thread.
Italy takes control of Southern Europe, Balkans and Libya, as well as the fleet off the coast of Italy. All units there remain the same, but become Italian, with the one exception of adding a German transport, or rather keeping the German transport in the Med.
Country values–Germany became 20, SE became 8 and Balkans became 4. This gives Italy 13 and keeps Germany the same.
(we decided that SBR was limited to 10 in Germany)We played Italy right after Germany, but thought they could also go first, or even after Great Britain.
-this setup we felt wasn’t absolutely ideal, but it was easy to play on the AAR board (no zone or territory changes, only units really) and added a 6th player. We have had both sides win, sometimes Italy was the most important, (amphious assaulting into Caucaus and 1-2-3 punching Moscow) and sometimes they truly were the soft underbelly of Europe.
Here’s a jpg of Europe with this setup
luc
[attachment deleted by admin]
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Cool. My cousin and I played 4 games of the “pact of steel” setup in tripleA and found through switching sides that defeating the axis was extremely difficult (Axis 4, Allies 0). Italy was simply too powerful & added too many units to the German defense of Europe each turn. It looks like this version with a “weaker” version of Italy may help balance this a bit better.
One thing we both liked about having Italy as a power was that Germany could be a bit more offensively minded without worrying as much about getting stomped by the allies.
I look forward to giving this a try. Thanks!
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Yeah you wanna make Italy a meaningful playing but new units are gonna kill balance.
LuckyDay, how did you balance the extra 10 IPC Axis is gaining?
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LUcky Day you sure you dont want to use our AARHE map for this ? As you know our approach is similiar and our map is a million times better.
I could support your efforts to bring the level of asethetics into a higher realm. I could even remake the Icons for the units. At least they wont look so horrible.
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Cool. My cousin and I played 4 games of the “pact of steel” setup in tripleA and found through switching sides that defeating the axis was extremely difficult (Axis 4, Allies 0). Italy was simply too powerful & added too many units to the German defense of Europe each turn. It looks like this version with a “weaker” version of Italy may help balance this a bit better.
One thing we both liked about having Italy as a power was that Germany could be a bit more offensively minded without worrying as much about getting stomped by the allies.
I look forward to giving this a try. Thanks!
Yes, this can be a problem. That Italian forces are used for a stronghold of German defense in Europe. Simultaneous play does nearly eliminate this problem, and I don’t think adding a Transport will be forcing the balance… to much… Adding Italy does make the Axis stronger at first, but it could work against them later on.
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LuckyDay, how did you balance the extra 10 IPC Axis is gaining?
We felt that since the Allies were still up by 13 IPCs that the production advantage was still there’s, and a concerted push by the Allies one way or another would give them the momentum that they wanted while the Axis were still pushing in all directions.
So far when we’ve played we have had games go for both sides so we are still trying to work out where it is out of balance, but our leaning is that the Allies are stronger right now still. We’ve played it FTF, but put together the triplea model because we had a couple new players and wanted them to practice as well as everyone play-testing.
luc
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@Imperious:
LUcky Day you sure you dont want to use our AARHE map for this ? As you know our approach is similiar and our map is a million times better.
I could support your efforts to bring the level of asethetics into a higher realm. I could even remake the Icons for the units. At least they wont look so horrible.
Imperious Leader, I very much like the AARHE map and setup, I haven’t played it yet because we haven’t printed out it out yet, though I’ve gone through all the info a good bit. We would like to use a map that is set for 6 players as that is what we have many times, and the more we’ve played the more that we’ve talked about getting a bigger map with the approriate detail. Just haven’t gotten the group into agreement over the large map yet.
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yea but were talking about a computer map… why does it matter what size it is ?.. you can replace the one in the program and make the AARHE map any size you want… or i can do it for you.
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 We’ve played it FTF, but put together the triplea model because we had a couple new players and wanted them to practice as well as everyone play-testing.
sorry for the confusion IL, thus far we’ve used this map setup for practice in prep for playing in the group FTF with a revised board and extra pieces from various A/A boards. I did not realize that you were talking about better pieces and maps for the computer game. I thought you were talking about physical pieces.
luc
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@Imperious:
http://www.onwar.com/articles/f0302.htm
here is some information from the harrison book concerning Italy and here economic capabilities in 1942.
Here’s another roughly accurate source of of GDP listings through-out the ages.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_countries_by_past_GDP_(PPP)I’ve redone all the IPC values for my games awhile ago. I assigned a value to every territory on the board including neutrals, except for the Sahara and some of the itty-bitty pacific islands.
After several revisions, I’ve settled with the following numbers…USSR 47 (before germany invaded)
Germany (and nations under its influence) 119
British Empire 92 (India alone is 22)
Japanese Empire 55
USA (states only + panama) 172 :-oChina 24 (split between US and Japan)
South America 25Russia simply has no chance and is always crushed by Germany if you use the revised or classic maps original unit setups. :cry:
The game does get fun and out of hand very quickly dealing with tons of IPCs and huge masses of units. :-DEmail me at www.biofury@yahoo.com if you want a copy of a map with these different IPC values and how I figured them out.
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What is the start date? The Soviet IPC are low. They should demonstrate a raising mobilization peaking in 1944, with a little drop in 1945. Plus what lend lease are they recieving? I think the figure is 14.5% of Soviet equipment was from lend lease. Thus you add this to a growing IPC figure.
Soviets
in 1941 =359
in 1942=318
in 1943=464+
in 1944=495+
in 1945=396Germany ( add 632 for average german occupied conquests, but figure is actually about 550 due to fluctiations)
in 1941=412=1044
in 1942=417=1049
in 1943=426=1058 ( probably about 950)
in 1944=437=lost too much territory figure about 600 total
in 1945=310=more territory lost probably about 375 totalitaly (subtract 2.6 for lost territory)
in 1941=144
in 1942=145
in 1943=137USA
in 1941=1094
in 1942=1235
in 1943=1399
in 1944=1499
in 1945=1474now russian infantry was raised at a much easier rate than Germany, while germany had a much better time of raising infantry than say UK and marginally better than USA.
So soviet land units cost one less than everybody else. Try that and see if it balanced out a bit better.
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Here’s another roughly accurate source of of GDP listings through-out the ages.
Thanks for that information. But while GDP figures are a useful thing to keep in the back of one’s head, I prefer to rely on military production figures for game design purposes. Below are some military production data for World War II.
Tanks
Soviet Union: 105,000
US: 88,000
Germany: 46,000
UK: 28,000
Canada: 6,000
Japan: 3,000
Italy: 2,000
Hungary: 500Artillery
Soviet Union: 517,000
US: 257,000
Germany: 159,000
UK: 125,000
Japan: 13,000
Canada: 10,000
Italy: 7,000
Other Commonwealth: 5,000
Hungary: 400Mortars
Soviet Union: 200,000
US: 105,000
UK: 103,000
Germany: 73,000
Commonwealth: 46,000Machine guns
USA: 2,680,000
Soviet Union: 1,477,000
Germany: 674,000
Japan: 380,000
UK: 297,000
Canada: 252,000
Other Commonwealth: 38,000
Hungary: 5,000Military aircraft
US: 325,000
Germany: 189,000
Soviet Union: 157,000
UK: 132,000
Japan: 76,000
Canada: 16,000
Italy: 11,000
Other Commonwealth: 3,000
Hungary: 1,000
Romania: 1,000The Soviets produced 2.3 times as many tanks as the Germans, 3.3 times as many artillery, 2.7 times as many mortars, 2.1 times as many machine guns, and 83% as many military aircraft. It’s true these numbers don’t capture the fact that the Germans devoted a greater portion of their output to naval spending than the Soviets. Also, some of these differences are due to Germany’s late-war production problems. But Germany arguably reached its production peak in 1944; so its late war production problems only explain a modest portion of the production gap between itself and the Soviet Union.