@ShadowHAwk Those units are essential to defend your capital, as well as Franceās capital. There is no way around having a substantial defensive force if you want to win the game as the axis. Ideally all of those units could attack Moscow, but that is literally not an option. Germany can lose its capital turn 4 if you donāt have enough units to defend, and Paris can be lost to the allies turn 5 if you arenāt deploying enough units to prevent that.
We need an allied playbook.
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Well sometimes this is your last chance. After that, there is no turning back. You take the blue pill - the story ends, you wake up in your bed and believe whatever you want to believe. You take the red pill - you stay in Wonderland and DizzKneeLand33 shows you how deep the rabbit-hole goes.š
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since when is āEat Me/Drink Meā a red blue thing? I find the pill colors so confusingāwhich color pill do I take so that I can remain in the world with the tender grass fed steaks BUT THAT ALSO INCLUDES a copy of the complete works of Jean Baudrillard in audiobook format?
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Didnāt Hitler think he could just bomb Britain into capitulation? Seems like āboots on the groundā is always necessary and US needs a shuck system in place for this. Aircraft canāt take territories and canāt defend fleets needed to bring in troops to Europeāif US leaves shucking to the Brits. Have you play tested the light skies strategy against good opponents?
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@taamvan said in We need an allied playbook.:
since when is āEat Me/Drink Meā a red blue thing? I find the pill colors so confusingāwhich color pill do I take so that I can remain in the world with the tender grass fed steaks ā¦
is that the kirk douglas farah fawcett sci fi ? : ) The blue one that is : )
and sorry corn fed makes for tender :)
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Economic area values:
Americas 68
Europe 62
Soviet Union 37
Africa 21
Middle East 6
China and Korea 30
Southeast Asia 13
Pac islands 20
Aus 10
=267In addition, the starting values:
SU 37
Ger 30
Jap 26
US 52
GB 28
UK 17
Italy 10
Aus 10
Fr 19
Allies=163
Axis=66
Neutrals Pro=End of turn 1: Not counting National Objectives
Ger 39-47
Rus 35-37
Jap 30-42
US 50-52
China 7-11
GB 25-31
UK 14-21
IT 10-18
Anz 10
Fr 8-13 no income
Allies=141-162
Axis=82-107End of turn 1: with National Objectivesā¦
Ger +44-57
Rus 35-42
Jap 30-52
US 55-87
Chi 13-17
Bri 30-36
UK -19-26
Ita 20-28
Anz 10-20
Fra -Should probably do Max NOs for Axis in the Middle game ā¦
The question is: how much do the Axis have to earn in order to be unstoppable? This wouldnāt account for the use of the pieces on the board at that moment, but the growing sense of inevitability for future rounds. Obviously greater than half or 51 percent makes sense. 134 is that number, without adding National Objectives. This also does not factor in the ebb and flow of income as territories are captured and lost every round. Grasshopper has a victory token that crystallizes this concept. I think his number is 144, though I think his includes NOs. If we assume Italy has been chased back to the continent and has 8, Germany and Japan must split the 126 between them or 63 a piece. With all of China, SE Asia, the money islands and the Philippines, Japan would earn 62. This must be the waterline for Japan. One can easily see how important it is to nibble early. The loss of Bombay has to be countered with a gain elsewhere ore immediately retaken. A doomed transport must retake an island or a territory at this crucial juncture in the game.
Germany before OB, hovers around 54. They can quickly shoot to 67 at the gates of Moscow. ā¦got to go
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@Guam-Solo said in We need an allied playbook.:
Didnāt Hitler think he could just bomb Britain into capitulation? Seems like āboots on the groundā is always necessary and US needs a shuck system in place for this. Aircraft canāt take territories and canāt defend fleets needed to bring in troops to Europeāif US leaves shucking to the Brits. Have you play tested the light skies strategy against good opponents?
Yes, Iāve played it right here on these boards. Been gone a few years but back playing in league, and itās the strategy Iāve used pretty much throughout. Iām not the best league player, but Iām not the worst eitherā¦
EDIT: So, I think the playtesting has involved about 30 games so far, although Iād have to find my older games.
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Let me go one step further. Iām not sure you guys have seen a good Germany who buys a lot of bombers. You will be so busy trying to keep up with capital ships with the USA just to shuck a few infantry that will be decimated upon landing.
OR
You can buy bombers. I mean, it makes a lot more sense in Global than you would think. This also doesnāt work for other A&A games ā well, not to this extent. Bombers are also prevalent at the top levels of even classic games when you are rolling tech, but you need land units as well.
This game is different.
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@Argothair Believe or not, I just listened to this thread in its entirety yesterday. Great compact playbook! I was in the middle of my busy season and I get more juice from creating and writing than just absorbing. Now itās slowed down as of this week and I finally caught up. Iām trying to do something even larger and perhaps more comprehensive. Hopefully, it helps the community. One thing I havenāt gotten to and perhaps you could comment on would be strict neutrals, the Spanish beachhead, etc. Also, would you consider putting it out on Youtube or would you mind if I did on your behalf? No pressure. I want to promote Allied strategy and Allied strategic thinking. America is soooo difficult to play.
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@crockett36 Hey there! Iām glad you like it. You are more than welcome to read or summarize my advice on YouTube as long as you give me some credit for it as part of the video ā Iām not likely to be recording a YouTube video of Global advice anytime soon.
My thought about strict neutrals is that theyāre there to help you punish your opponent when they do something really strange or make a mistake. If neither America nor the UK is putting anything into the Atlantic, for example, then Germany can attack Sweden and Spain while Italy attacks Turkey, and you can mostly get away with it ā this can help you take Gibraltar, Egypt, Iraq, etc. without wasting a ton of money on transports. Conversely, if Germany and Italy are dropping huge stacks of infantry into France and Rome but are leaving Poland / Romania / Bulgaria / Greece wide open, and the UK has a big stack of infantry in the Middle East, and Japan has already activated Mongolia as a pro-Allied neutral by invading Amur, then you might be able to attack eastern Europe from the Middle East through Turkey ā sure, Germany can walk into Spain and Sweden, but thatās not a big deal; youāre basically allowing them to keep Western Europe in exchange for a British factory in Greece and a Russian tank swarm fueled by the Spread of Communism NO that will ultimately take Berlin before Spanish infantry can reach it.
These are pretty rare scenarios, though, and of 10 games where youāre tempted to invade a strict neutral, you should probably just pass in about 9 of those 10 games and stick to more conventional strategies. The Spanish beachhead is not as exciting as it looks ā youāre closer to New York, but youāre correspondingly further from Berlin; it saves you a few bucks on transports, but you lose that money by needing to fight formerly neutral infantry, and the attack as a whole doesnāt necessarily save you any time.
Of course, if your opponent is foolish enough to invade a strict neutral, go claim your prizes! It often makes sense to leave one mech hanging around somewhere near the area where your opponent might be tempted to invade strict neutrals so that you can quickly capitalize on the newly available fighting forces. Once the mech runs in there, youāll be able to fly in air support and get a decent offensive punch. Be aware that you cannot ever activate neutrals with a plane, so even if neutrals are āon your sideā, they are still off-limits to your planes until you move a land unit into their territories.
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@crockett36 Am I reading this correctly, you can listen to a thread?
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@Argothair Is the Spanish Beachhead used much by experienced players? Iāve always thought is was a poor manās Normandy, like a fast-tracked D-day that requires less build up. Itās only been used one time in a game Iāve played in, but I saw Young Grasshopper post a pic recently where he used it. I donāt see any Youtube tutorials on this strategy by YG, GHG, DTroy, etcā¦
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@Argothair Solid thoughts on the neutrals as well.
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@Guam-Solo Iām not the worldās most experienced Global player, but Iāve never had a Spanish beachhead used against me as the Axis, and Iāve never used it as the Allies. The difference between invading Spain and invading France is that invading Spain doesnāt require an immediate Axis response ā if youāre in Paris, then you just gained a victory city and youāre one move away from permanently destroying my major factory in Western Germany. If youāre in Madrid, then you just gained 2 IPCs per turn. The consequences for the Axis just really arenāt in the same league. In a sense, actually invading Madrid is just a threat to do D-Day. Whether you pre-position your troops in Canada, London, or Spain, youāre still just pre-positioning. The only reason why I would want to do the Spanish beachhead is if I canāt get control of any sea zones near Europe, and I have to keep sending in waves of suicidal transports to cope with a Dark Skies strategy.
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I played a game once where the axis player invaded the strict neutrals so i did the beachhead and wipe germany out quickly That was fun
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@DessertFox599 I think if England is about to be conquered defend it with infantry and fighters and start attacking German ships if your America go for Germany first always japan is too far away while putting something in the pacific for awhile
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@Guam-Solo voice aloud reader app in play store
great stuff. -
The question is: where is the point of no return for the Axis where victory is assured? When should the American player concede? Conversely, what economic number is so low it is destined to bleed the enemy over the course of say five turns?
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@DizzKneeLand33 I like all bombers for four turns with a mission to Moscow. Then one per turn to account for attrition. Do you have a triple A game you can post? Also, is it only America that should do this or the English as well?
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The question is: how much do the Axis have to earn in order to be unstoppable? This wouldnāt account for the use of the pieces on the board at that moment, but the growing sense of inevitability for future rounds. Obviously greater than half or 51 percent makes sense. 134 is that number, without adding National Objectives. This also does not factor in the ebb and flow of income as territories are captured and lost every round. Grasshopper has a victory token that crystallizes this concept. I think his number is 144, though I think his includes NOs. If we assume Italy has been chased back to the continent and has 8, Germany and Japan must split the 126 between them or 63 a piece. With all of China, SE Asia, the money islands and the Philippines, Japan would earn 62. This must be the waterline for Japan. One can easily see how important it is to nibble early. The loss of Bombay has to be countered with a gain elsewhere ore immediately retaken. A doomed transport must retake an island or a territory at this crucial juncture in the game.
Germany before OB, hovers around 54. They can quickly shoot to 67 at the gates of Moscow. ā¦
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However, neither Germanyās nor Japanās strategic objectives are easy, particularly all of China and Bombay by turn five or six. In addition, we have four turns of builds, around 240 IPCs to create the structure we will need to stop the Axis from ruling over the world. This is one of the reasons Americaās actions must be somewhat independent of what is transpiring elsewhere. We are building a superpower from nearly scratch. Let me say it again, our logistical system of transferring units over water must be mostly complete by turn 4 or 5 at the latest so that we may match the industrial output of the Axis with our own. If the Axis and the Allies are receiving about the same income and we need to spend more on transports while they are buying tanks, we will lose.
In addition, we must be able to affect the enemyās income by turn 6, 7 at the latest. By affecting his income, I mean that it must be a permanent decrease. He gains the Caucasus but loses Norway. And then the Caucasus is recaptured. He gains Bombay but loses Korea. And then Bombay is retaken. These pressures preclude many of the options that I have earlier mentioned as possibilities. Any nibbling at these malignant empires must move the Axis further away from earning 134.