If you live in the DFW area leave a note. Am looking for other A&A 1914 players.
Best posts made by GeneralTuna
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Anyone in Dallas, TX Care to Play?
Latest posts made by GeneralTuna
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RE: Historical Board Gaming first Gaming Convention.
I’d be very interested in going to this. I live in North Texas. Look forward to learning more.
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Anyone in Dallas, TX Care to Play?
If you live in the DFW area leave a note. Am looking for other A&A 1914 players.
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RE: German Strategy
@xxstefanx see the earlier comments in this thread
Swiss is attacked by both Munich and Alsace army, from Swiss, Piedmont was next, which was the end destination of the German army in Italy as the France intervened. However by doing so, France was not able to attack Germany in the West and the Austrians were able to press through Venice, to Tuscany and Rome. Austria attacks Venice in turn one with everything possible. All, but one infantry from Vienna, are sent to aid the Italian Austrian forces as well.
Both Serbia and Romania are attacked by Austria.
Germany sents all units from Hanover, Berlin to the East, but one infantry, which moves to Munich with the fighter of Berlin. Fighter aids the German Italian contingent. All German purchases are meant for the East.
What about the rest of the Western Front? That is a very long line to defend. Does Germany just sacrifice that territory in order to kill italy?
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RE: First Game - Allies in A Rout
@WILD:
I really like this game, and have played OOB several times (only sniffed a CP win once). I would defiantly use the FAQ in your next game though. Even w/US unable to doing anything before the 4th turn the CP will have a hard time. Movement on land causes much trouble for the CP, and reinforcements come to slow (need to chose a direction and stick with it to keep fresh troops coming). Russia as you found out can be really tricky, and in our games Russia rarely attempts to bulk up in Poland, or Romania (it’s kinda suicide for them). We also see them move everything they can to Ukraine the first turn (tough nut to crack). You might try a major push with say Germany (nearly everything) to one front (have a few Austrians w/them), and have the other CP power(s) defend on the other front. It seems to serve them better instead of say spiting Germany into both fronts (and you don’t have quite enough on either to push through).
The allies also have a major advantage at sea. Many ppl are reducing the French sz 15 fleet to only a cruiser (swapping BB for cruiser, and removing the transport). This isn’t an official change at this point, but Larry has acknowledged a problem, and it is likely to happen (and it has happened in his new tournament rules that also include faster land movement among other things). These are just suggestions, but I think it plays out better.
From my experience it seems like Germany has to commit to one front as well. I was really surprised how quickly Russian infantry can pile up on the Eastern Front after four turns. FAQ rules seem quite logical. But I’d like to play a couple more games before adopting them. But all told, your suggestions all make sense.
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RE: First Game - Allies in A Rout
British troops on American transports is a little sketchy.
It is sketchy. But, according to rulebook, not illegal :-o
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RE: First Game - Allies in A Rout
@Tyberius:
U.S. forces didn’t attack anyone.�
below is from the FAQ thread (pg. 14):
As the United States is neutral before it’s at war, it has no friends or enemies; therefore it may not move units into territories controlled by other Allied powers. It also may not load units onto transports before it’s at war.
What you did was not Legal with the US., Sorry
Kim
Yes, according to the FAQ it was illegal. But as I said in my intro, I played the game using only what was in the original rulebook. The rulebook states the following:
The United States begins the game neutral, but with Allied sympathies. While it remains neutral, the United States may not move land or air units into Central Powers-controlled or contested territories or attack Central Powers sea units. It will not enter the war unless either its units are attacked by the Central Powers or it loses income to a German submarine attack (see “Collect Income”, page 23). However, if it is not yet at war at the beginning of its fourth turn, the United States will enter the war at that time.
I agree, the modified version as stated in the FAQ makes more sense. But for now I wanted to test this game with rules straight from rulebook.
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First Game - Allies in A Rout
I decided to do a self-play before introducing the game to my axis buddies that way we don’t spend 10 hours stuck in round one. First, hats off to the designer of this game. The board is beautiful and the map is a sight to behold. Yes, some more pieces would be helpful and the tiny dice are a bit strange but there are work arounds so it didn’t bother me. I was having too much fun conducting military maneuvers. This first game was completely by the book and included the RR. I know there are numerous fixes floating around on the boards but I wanted to play test the game on its merits, as it is, coming out of the box.
Here is how it went.
Round 1
Aus: buys 4 inf, 2 art, 1 fgt
Attacked Venice, Poland, Serbia, Romania resulting in four stalemates. Lost total of 12 inf and 1 art.
IPC Total: 26Rus: buys 5 inf, 1 art, 1 fgt
Attacked Mesopotamia resulting in stalemate. Moved everyone to Ukraine. Lost 2 inf.
IPC Total: 22Ger: buys 4 inf, 5 art, 1 fgt
Completely wiped out the British navy in the Atlantic. Lost two subs. Attacked Belgium with combined forces of Alsace and Ruhr and wiped out all forces. Attacked Holland from Kiel resulting in stalemate. Lost 3 inf total. Moved 5 inf from berlin west and the rest of the forces east. Munich and Hanover moved to Alsace and Ruhr.
IPC Total: 40France: buys 8 inf
Counter attacks into Belgium with combined force from Lorraine and Picardy and Holland resulting in stalemate. Germany rolls poorly resulting in 9 losses as opposed to only 5 for the French. France move Parisians to Picardy and fleet to SZ 14 activating Portugal and relocating N African inf to Portugal.
IPC Total: 27Uk: buys 4 inf, 3 art, I fgt and puts it all in india. Attacks two german inf in angola with 2 inf and art resulting in stalemate. Activated arabia with 1 transported inf. Attacked Persia and wiped out all forces suffering 2 lost inf.
IPC Total: 33Tur: buys 4 inf, 1 art. Attacks arabia resulting in stalemate. Attacks Mesopotamia resulting in conquest. 3 inf and 1 art lost. Forces in Constantinople activate Bulgaria.
IPC Total: 19Italy: buys 2 inf, 2 art. Attacks Venice and takes the territory with 4 inf, 4 art left to spare. Activates Albania with forces from Libya. Reinforces into Tuscany.
IPC Total: 16US: buys three transports
Round 2
Austria counter attacks into Venice and moves its Galician stack into Poland. It conducts mopping up operations in the Balkans and Romania. Russia then decided on a dangerous plan of attacking Romania with 12 inf and 9 art. The attack failed as it scored few hits and lost its fighter. Russia relocated all forces to Belorussia. It appeared the writing was on the wall. I calculated Russia would fall without the revolution by turn five. However, a Russian battleship came in and did serious damage to German navy killing two cruisers. Germany reinforced into Poland creating a massive stack. They also took Ukraine with one inf. Ger declined to attack Belorussia. The Navy stayed in port. France poured everything into the Western Front including, Portuguese forces, and sailed up north to sz 8. Britain added one transport to SZ 8 and poured everything else into India. UK attacked into Mesopotamia and attacked a combined german force in Africa. Both resulted in stalemates. British troops then boarded American transports heading to Mediterranean. Turkey continued the stalemate in Mesopotamia and reinforced into Romania. They took Arabia as well. Italy attacked Austrians in Trieste with Albanian forces creating a stalemate while they took Venice outright. U.S. docked their fleet off the coast of Portugal.Round 3
Austria hung on in Romania with 1 infantry and massed their forces in Tyrolia. Russia kept their stack in Ukraine while Germany Followed Austria into Belorussia. Germany continued to pour forces in to the West but they were forced to cede Lorraine back to France. The UK made a disastrous attack into Jordan losing four inf to only 1 tur inf. British forces began landing in Picardy from French transports. Turkey withdrew from Mesopotamia and controlled Jordan with 4 inf and 2 art threatening Africa. U.S. moved into Mediterranean and plunked down more transports.Round 4
A disastrous round for the CP’s. This is the round when the CP’s flawed strategies (and built in allied advantages) kicked in. First, the CP’s got outmaneuvered by the Russians. Who withdrew to Ukraine and sat there until Germany moved into Belorussia. At that point they attacked with a combined force of infantry and artillery that totaled 36 from Russia and Ukraine. The CP’s had about 30 infantry and ten artillery plus air superiority but the Russians rolled well. A stalemate ensued but the entire Austrian army and a chunk of German infantry were taken out. Russia was depleted and lost the territory the next turn. But the dispersion of forces meant that Russia held everything but Poland and Belorussia and they had 8 inf and 4 art sprinkled in an arc around Belorussia while germany had 5 inf 9 art and a fighter in belorussia. In short, Germany would not have enough war material on the eastern front to overtake Russia and there were no supplies on the way. They were as standed as Field Marshall Paulus in Stalingrad. Furthermore, there was still a sizable Russian force in Romania (3 inf, 2 art) ready to hit the Turks in Bulgaria. On the Western Front Belgium continued to be fiercely contested but with the British now landing the odds were now swinging to the Allies. Austria was under siege as American transports dumped some Americans to join the Brits resulting in a stack of 8 inf and 4 art in Albania. Italy held Venice with 4 inf, 7 art. Turkey was putting up a noble defense and still held all its territories except for Mesopotamia.Round 5
Austria hit the allies hard in Albania but the resulting stalemate essentially deprived Austria of vital war material needed on the Italian front. Meanwhile, Russia went berserk. Sent lone infantry all over the place, taking Poland, Galicia and Budapest. They ended their turn with a whopping 35 IPC. Germany made a final desperate lunge into Moscow but were outnumbered 18-15 and despite the massive artillery barrage supported by air they stalemated Moscow and clung to their position with only 1 inf and 5 art and a fgt. Russia had 4 inf, 7 art and they were scheduled to go next. At that point, the game was clearly over. The CP’s were under siege on every front. The game was unqualified Allied ROUT.Conclusion
First, this game isn’t WWII A&A and my tactics for CP did not adjust accordingly. The Russian strategy of just sitting in Ukraine while the CP’s tentatively move north is quite effective. By turn four Russia has produced another stack of war material equal to what Germany has in Poland after turn 1. Also, on turn one I diverted 5 inf west from Berlin. That was a mistake. Everything in Berlin needs to go east. Also, the CP rolls could have been better. But that doesn’t explain the CP’s complete collapse on the Eastern Front. Clearly, CP strategy was defective here. Another thing is the CP’s never bought any ships and the Austrian Navy did nothing. The CP navy basically acted as defensive shields keeping allies out.But even if I had managed to take out Russia there would have been very little CP forces left and the Western Front was a complete mess for the CP’s. The CP’s may have still been able to win but the logistical problems for the CP are so severe that it would have taken at least ten more turns, probably more.
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RE: Who Wins
@Tyberius:
I guess what I find most puzzling is the relatively puny size of the Russian Army. The Central Powers have a huge concentration of inf and art right on russia’s doorstep.
It is very deceptive. Russia has the strength that all of their starting units can easily mobilize in one territory: the Ukraine. The Russian “super stack” round one is immensely intimidating at the start of the game and the Central Powers have to walk on eggshells in the Russian territories, planning each move carefully.
If you slip up on a single move or attack as the central powers, Russia can bring the hammer down and wipe out your forces on one side. Germany and Austria have to work together. You don’t beat Russia in this game by force, you beat them by outmaneuvering them and forcing the Russian revolution. In all of our games when the Russian revolution happens Russia still has an overwhelming mass of troops left in one spot. The trick is that you have to make it so that Russia can’t risk splitting up so many troops to attack everywhere or else they leave Moscow too weak to defend and Germany or Austria will simply conquer Russia.
Instead of a brute smash it’s more of a cat and mouse. Russia will still be making 15-17 IPCs even toward the end and can still pump out troops all the way to the end. With their starting units and a few rounds of buildup the Central Powers are easily looking at fighting against a 60+ infantry stack and a decent amount of artillery.
Excellent point. Looking at the map I can see how a blustering player can very easily botch things on the Eastern Front. But surely, most players with a fair amount of A&A experience should be able to shrewdly maneuver the Russian stack into a contested fight in Moscow? I agree, the Russian army cannot be so big that the game becomes lopsided in favor of the allies. However, making the Austrian army larger than the Russian one is far more historically inaccurate than allowing the U.S. to offload troops to Europe in turns 1 to 3. At least the U.S. was shipping war goods to the allies in the early years of the war. But AHO with a larger army than Russia when the reality was that the Russian Army was twice the size of the Austrian one? It’s a major historical flub. While I’m at it, I’m not a big fan of assigning a 1 IPC value to Switzerland which instead should have just been labeled “Swiss Alps” and declared unpassable.
Still, this map looks AWESOME and this game has an epic scope on the scale of A&A 50th Anniversary, which is my favorite of all the games. Wish the game would already hurry up and get here.
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RE: Who Wins
Just ordered the game and haven’t played it. But I’m looking at the starting unit numbers and the Central Powers heavily outnumber the Allies on the Eastern and Western Front (which is historically wrong in terms of the size of the armies in 1914).
Observe:
Central Powers
Germany (63 inf, 23 art) (actual size of army 1914: 4.5 million)
Austria (48 inf, 12 art) (actual size of army 1914: 3 million)
Turkey (23 inf, 6 art) (actual size of army 1914: 210,000)
Total (134 inf, 41 art) (actual combined size of army 1914: 7.71 million)Allies
Russia (36 inf, 13 art) (actual size of army 1914: 6 million)
France (30 inf, 8 art) (actual size of army 1914: 4 million)
UK (34 inf, 10 art) (actual size of army 1914: 1 million)
Italy (22 inf, 7 art) (actual size of army 1914: 1.25 million)
U.S. (6 inf, 2 art) (actual size of army 1914: 200,000)
Total (128 inf, 40 art) (actual combined size of army 1914: 12.45 million)What I find most bizarre of all is that austria-hungary is significantly stronger than Russia, which is laughable. AHO was as everyone knows “a corpse shackled to Germany.” Yet in this game AHO is a huge power stronger than every other power outside of Germany.
Furthermore, the central powers are poised to flatten Russia with all that power thus making it pre-ordained that Russia falls due to sheer numbers deployed on the eastern front. I look forward to seeing how things play out but my first impression is that the Central Powers should be the clear favorites in this game.
You will be surprised at how this game favors the Allies. It favors them so much that the creator is looking at optional rules to balance the game.
Even if the infantries deployed round1 looks inaccurate, the game as it is now kinda playes historically.
Russia gets a Revolution and stops fighting after like 6 rounds of play, but by that time the western front will be an impossible effort for Germany to take.
Also since Italy is “already at war” you should consider that after the DOW Italy nearly doubled their army by conscripting lots of young men (my grandftather fought at Caporetto against the Austrohungarian and German alliance at the age of 18).I’ll admit my attention is focused almost solely on the Eastern Front due to it being so important in the other axis games. The idea of a stagnant western front will be a novel and refreshing challenge.