ORIGINAL: Mad Russian
ORIGINAL: ravinhood
ORIGINAL: Erik Rutins
Ravinhood,
I'm sure long battles did happen, particularly for troops in extremely desparate situations. I don't think that contradicts Mad Russian's comment, which I agree with, that most battles were much shorter in terms of the length of the actual firefight. Now you might have a firefight for an hour, pause for an hour, resume fighting, etc. but there were usually pauses and often multiple hours between engagements.
But, I'm not talking about the "usual", I'm talking about situations where fighting went on much longer than a few minutes as he said earlier. If you're going to portray history you need to portray ALL of it, not just choice or usual moments.

So, I don't agree with the philosophy of everything set in the "usual" sense in a RANDOM generated atmosphere. Everything should be POSSIBLE.
The usual engagement for a company would be about 40 minutes.
The entire Battle of the Bulge for fifty hours huh? You can't name a single battle in WWII that lasted fifty hours from beginning to end with no break. Not the same company. Never happened.
Sure I can I just did "The BATTLE of the Bulge". 50 hours non stop full scale attacking. How much plainer do I need to make it?

Now if you're only definition of battle means attacking I might concede the point, but, a BATTLE entails a lot more than just attacking, you have to MOVE, PLAN, EXECUTE, SUPPLY, RESUPPLY, but, it doesn't mean the battle is over just because bullets aren't flying.

Why you think they called it BATTLE of the Bulge? And every encounter didn't have a NAME as well. So, you can't sit there and say no battle lasted longer than a few minutes either bud. As I said some battles could last minutes, hours or days. It just depends on what one defines as a BATTLE.
I see. All that MOVE, PLAN, EXECUTE, SUPPLY, RESUPPLY is what the main point to you was. That no company could be in intense combat for fifty hours. I've never found a single instance of a company sized unit in COMBAT for 50 hours. Moving, planning, executing, supplying, resupplying and RESTING...yes. Fighting the whole time. No.
You proved nothing. A vague reference to your uncles combat experiences proves nothing. You want to discuss this with documented cases we can do that. Making vague references to actions you weren't even involved in I won't do with you.
The "BATTLE OF THE BULGE", as you call it, was actually a campaign that started on 16 December 1944 and ended on 28 January 1945, or there abouts, depending on who you want to believe. That would be 44 days. So, for your battle of 50 hours straight what happened to the other 41 days and 22 hours, The other 1,006 hours? They were the Battle of the Bulge too. Did the Germans just quit fighting then after the 50 hours?
No, of course not.
Because the Germans intended the breakthrough portion of the campaign to last for 50 hours, doesn't in anyway mean, they expected all of their combat units to be in sustained contact for 50 hours. Just like they knew their soldiers wouldn't be in constant contact for 44 days. All military operations are run somewhat like a basketball game. There are times when there is no action and other times when there is a flurry of things going on but time and physical exhaustion put limitations on what can happen and for how long.
In military operations there are breaks in the execution of battle plans in that same way. An attack is not all just pure combat.
Wargames tend to be that way. If you play my scenarios, you will find that intensity in them as well. I come to wargames to fight!! You will make contact in most of my CM scenarios within the first 5 turns. No matter how long it is and most of mine are short. My scenarios are not known for long periods of time where you are moving across the open steppes...but bone jarring, monitor cracking, screaming at the computer combat!
I take the slice of time where the balance hung in doubt and try to the best of my abilities to model that. Normally not the entire battle, although if the battle were short enough I have done it in it's entirety.
Good Hunting.
MR
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Blah blah blah all you talk is blah blah blah and stuff you read in a book lol My uncles were there....were you? NO so you have no clue as to what happened in their COMPANIES in those first 50 hours boy. You really should stop thinking everything you read is the truth or what actually happened. Books on subject matter are closely related to things that happened, but, never the EXACT story minute by minute second by second. The real stories are from the people who were actually there, I can see in their eyes as they tell me the tales that what they say is more truthful than anything I would get out of a silly book.
This guys a joke I wouldn't play anything he designed or made he thinks everything in a book is the truth lol. I'd just as soon play a quick random battle or campaign they will be just as believeable as anything he could come up with. Some people just make me laugh, they open a book and think they know it all. lmao