--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ground combat at Ponape
Japanese Shock attack
Attacking force 10827 troops, 49 guns, 0 vehicles
Defending force 17396 troops, 142 guns, 0 vehicles
Japanese assault odds: 22 to 1
Japanese ground losses:
161 casualties reported
Guns lost 11
Allied ground losses:
15263 casualties reported
Guns lost 138
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Ground combat at Kuala
Japanese Shock attack
Attacking force 750 troops, 0 guns, 0 vehicles
Defending force 381 troops, 0 guns, 0 vehicles
Japanese assault odds: 106 to 1
Allied ground losses:
6 casualties reported
Defeated Allied Units Retreating!
Obviously, I'm missing something. I've never imagined myself a strategic genius or anything, but I landed 2 whole U.S. infantry divisions at Ponape (defended by a naval construction brigade, an engineer maintenance unit, and an infantry unit -- forget size and type, but not a division), bombed it once (then withdrew carriers to avoid retribution from stronger enemy group), and, similarly, at Kuala I landed two Dutch infantry battalions against a single construction battalion.
Both landings were amply supplied; in the previous combat round neither side achieved anything so overwhelming (assault odds 0 to 1 or 1 to 1 on both sides).
How is it that in this round the AI got such overwhelming odds? This doesn't make any sense to me. I would really like to see whatever logic is behind the results I got. And that's not a complaint so much as a genuine desire to understand.
















