Finally was able to afford to pre-order my Italians… now I can breathe again!
Posts made by kevlar56
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RE: Re: Field Marshal Games Pieces Project Discussion thread
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RE: The new SBR system
Personally, I think this is brilliant! I hated the old unrealistic system of Bombers being able to hit IC’s pretty much at will with only a 1-in-6 chance of an AA hit. It used to frustrate me to no end to have Fighters in a territory with an IC just sit there and be unable to do anything about it. And I’m glad they made it an official rule instead of just an option. Now if you want to pursue a real strategic bombing campaign, you better make a real investment (fighters for escort and extra bombers to take your losses)! And the fact that defending fighters roll on a 2 is ‘accurate’ in the sense that they are defending their own territory and can sortie multiple times as opposed to the escorting fighters having to fight far from their own bases. LOVE this rule!!!
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RE: What power is your favorite to play?
So far, I think UK has been my favorite. I love the challenge of trying to come up with strategies to use and coordinate it’s far-flung pieces and territories to make a final impact on the outcome. Well-played UK is the key to Allied victory IMHO!
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RE: Reality Check
Kudos to Omega (if I had a karma to give I would :-)). :-) The more I play, the more imperative a Ger1 CV seems to become. It is SO valuable in so many ways! Be sure that if the UK concentrates on Germany that you are taking full advantage of the weaknesses they WILL be leaving elsewhere across the board. Remember, every IPC you take away from the UK is one less they can spend on attacking Ger. or defending the USSR. I also agree that heavy inf buys with Ger. can assist, especially around turns 3-4. Don’t forget to defend France and you should be okay. IMO trading France with the Anglo-Allies is a mug’s game.
All the best,
Kevin -
RE: Italian Africa?
Well, actually I was both joking and pointing out an historical ‘anomaly’ in that it DOES say “Italian” Africa and yet it starts under UK control. Agreed, it may be both unbalancing and out of line with the spirit of the game in that an Italian infantry starting there might be too advantageous to the Axis, (not to mention to having an Axis foothold in East Africa in fairly easy reach of Japan), but it could be interesting to see how it might play out. Certainly, if the Italians were allowed to start there, a UK unit(s) must be added elsewhere in Africa in order to maintain balance (perhaps Rhodesia or Sudan).
Gamewise, I think it would be great fun to have another “mini” theatre that would add strategic depth to the southeast Africa/Indian Ocean theatre if it could be done without detracting from the battle for Egypt.
Thanks for your replies!
Kevin -
RE: How many here play Warhammer Fantasy and 40K?
I do! Have a Dark Elf and Lizardman army for Warhammer, and Eldar, Tyranid, Chaos, Space Marine and Genestealer Cult for 40K.
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Italian Africa?
Okay, call me slow, (hope I don’t lose Karma for this!) but the 1941 scenario starts Spring 1941. Italian Africa should be just that, an Italian controlled starting territory with at least one inf. If this has been addressed, I apologize, but considering that, including native troops, the Italians had almost 300,000 men under arms and didn’t surrender until November 1941 (with guerillas fighting on for another year or so), shouldn’t that UK symbol be an Italian roundel? After all, the Italians achieved their only victory against the Allies without German assistance when they captured British Somaliland the previous year and they deserve some recognition! :-D
I’m sure there must be pretty good reasons why it’s not, game balance, etc… Anyone know for sure? Also, it might make for an interesting variation at least.
Best regards,
Kevin -
RE: A Chess-players thoughts on strategy in A&A
Very good points! Just out of curiosity, does anyone think in terms of ‘misleading’ an opponent into believing you’re going one way (KGF for example) and actually intending KJF? If so, how do you cover your deception, table talk? Indirect moves? Or does anyone do purposefully ‘bad’ purchases like two UK IC’s or a lot of US1 subs?
Often in chess, especially if you’re familiar with the way your opponent plays, you can try and move the game into middle game positions they’re uncomfortable with. (If they like to attack, close the position; if they prefer playing closed or semi-closed openings, force exchanges to free the center up… etc).
Thanks for your replies!
Kevin -
RE: Where do you live?
Saint Charles, Mo (Just west of St.Louis)
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A Chess-players thoughts on strategy in A&A
From a lot of posts and forums I’ve read, both here and on BGG, it seems like many players keep searching for ‘optimum’ or ‘perfect’ opening moves for each of the major nations, and while this is a great thing, sometimes it seems that the forest of overall strategy gets lost in the trees of specific purchases/moves for turns 1-3.
As the great Savielly Tartakower said a chess game is divided into three stages; the opening, when you hope you have an advantage; the middle, when you think you have an advantage; and the endgame, when you realize you have lost! The point he was trying to make is that chess (like A&A!) is a dynamic game of fluidity and pressure and he who makes the second to last mistakes, wins.
It seems that many A&A players are searching for openings that can force a win for one side or the other. While the search for truth over the board is commendable, a forced win in A&A, like chess, is a chimera or will-o-the-wisp that can lead one to overlook long-term goals that may be much more productive.
A case in point (look at the forum subject) can be taken from the ‘Romantic’ era of chess. Players attacked at all costs, sacrificing pieces right and left in a glorious bid for victory. It was not until the Age of Steinitz that things calmed down and players began to re-appraise the value of defence and the cautious accumulation of small advantages which would eventually convert into permanent postitives leading to wins.
As time went on, the pupils of Steinetz developed what became known as the Classical school of Chess, promoting conservative play, control of the center of the board (optimum moves) and a reluctance to take chances (ie, trading material for less tangible positives like pawn structure, space or time). This seems to me to be where A&A strategy had gotten to over the last decade with A&A Revised. Such as an “optimum” strategy based on a quick KGF with all Allied resources bent to that end and the Axis going all out for Moscow …and many alternate strategies being discarded to the wayside as inneffective.
In Chess, the Hypermodern school, led by Breyer, Reti and especially, Aron Nimzovich, proposed that one can approach the game from an indirect point of view and attack strategically from the sides and edges, enticing the opponent into building an overly strong main attack in the center and then hitting them from the flanks. While the Hypermoderns were effective in presenting new ideas into the game, they bent over backwards too far sometimes and that, eventually, led to a “fourth” or ‘the modern’ approach.
“Pragmatism”
The Romantics wanted to attack, the Classicists wanted perfect moves, the Hypermoderns wanted depth and exoticism. Each school has pluses and minuses and the “pragmatists”, Lasker, Alekhine, Fisher and Karpov wanted to play, not perfect or deep moves, they wanted to play complex moves leading to complex positions, moves that could allow them to use their knowledge and skill to give them an opportunity to win!! Basically, the “pragmatists” took the best of all of the above and tried to discard the dogmatism of the above in order to bing about a new paradigm in which skill, not memorization, determined the victor.
Stepping forward a few decades (and with the introduction of AA50) it now seems time to move toward a more “pragmatic” approach to long term strategy in our game.
Is a UK IC the ‘perfect’ move? No, it depends on everything else that’s going on in the game.
Is a Ger. CV the ‘perfect’ move? No, it depends on everything else that’s going on in the game.
Is there an “unbeatable” strategy for ANY nation? No, it depends on everything else that’s going on in the game.
And THAT’s what this post is about! :-)
Agree?
Disagree?
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RE: G1 naval build?
Thanks all for the karma, I feel kinda like I’ve come home! :-D Perhaps I wasn’t completely clear on my second point, which is enticing the UK into desperately spending money to smash a German naval build. The UK economy is based on territories spread all over the map and unless they want to see their IPC income shrink by 1/2 (or more!) they have to have both money to spend and troops in the right places to defend those territories. To MY thinking (and this is just IMHO), if the UK spends enough to eliminate a Ger. Baltic Fleet it won’t have enough money to build and defend an IC in Ind. or SA and I believe at least one of those is a necessity unless the UK player is willing to be reduced to a minor power by turn 4 or 5. The corollary to that is that Japan (and possibly Italy) will be pulling in big bucks and able to dominate the eastern hemisphere/africa so much that they will dictate the strategic events of the endgame. A Ger. CV build increases the strategic threat the UK has to face. The opening for the Allies is a tightrope and the more decisions you force them to make, the greater the decision tree and the greater likelihood that errors will be made.
Sorry for being so long-winded, but after reading so many threads about KGF’s and ‘unbeatable’ strategies, I’m just trying to bring things down to earth and present pragmatic ideas as to why a Ger. CV build, while perhaps not an “optimal” choice, is still a viable one and worthy of consideration as a strategic option for the German player.
Best regards,
Kevin -
RE: G1 naval build?
Well, I’ve been watching this conversation for awhile and I do feel I might have something to add to the discussion. I have played the axis twice w/AA50 and won both times, once via Sealion. Both times, I have bought a Ger. CV on G1. Remember, on the Russian front, there are three IC’s and only one can be taken early and held. The whole problem with Ger vs. USSR (IMHO) is that it takes too long to get Ger inf to the front lines.
Take out most of the UK fleet on G1. Build CV and 1 trans and ready capture of Karelia on G2. That gives two inf build per turn and 2-4 land unit trans to Karelia trading/attacking towards Moscow. Ger. arm can reach the battlezone every other buy and you can keep funneling attacks to Moscow while still keeping the UK at bay UNLESS the UK/US go KGF. IF that happens, then Japan can go aggressively (I dislike the term ‘hulk smash’, but oh well), towards Moscow, or even US West Coast. If Japan is allowed to have free reign in the Pacific, while US goes KGF, Australia falls, India falls, Africa falls, and you’re looking at your Allied partners saying, uh gee, I guess we lost…. AGAIN
If the UK holds Britain and challenges Japan in the middle, then Ger. can hold USSR front w/inf, build bombers and ships, Italy takes UK$ in Africa, UK economy dries up, Germany strat bombs UK factory and eventually Sealion is possible again around turn 7-8.
In that case, US MUST go all out against Japan (if they don’t, Moscow will eventually succumb to a Jap assault from the east) and still be ready to direct figs to UK to prevent any Sealion.
Perhaps what I’m trying to say is that a Ger. CV turn is viable so long as Japan is willing to take advantage of the opportunities which may be presented if the Allies aggresively attempt to refute that buy.
Best regards,
Kev -
RE: Why is 1942 scenario so unpopular???
I apologize that my first post as a newbie (on the forums, anyway)is perhaps unwarranted, but a game with politics and giving that '39 feel already exists. I think A&A is better suited as it is, presenting a situation and let the players ‘take command’. Certainly an enhanced version of A&A, including politics and the geopolitical situation as it existed in '39, would be a welcome addition. The thing is, it would need a larger map and an increase in complexity that Avalon Hill would not be willing to approach. A great idea, though.
Best regards,
K