ORIGINAL: Blackhorse
In game terms Shore condations are not a consideration.
Be careful with using "game terms" to support your line of arguement, pardner. [:)]
In game terms, all units in a 40nm hex can engage all other units -- which you are contending should *not* be the case when CD guns engage invasion fleets.
As you correctly note, the primary role of CD guns is to protect the port. Since the game allows any bombardment TF -- including, fx, a bombardment TF supporting an invasion of the North Coast, presumably out of range of the big guns -- to shell the port, in game terms, the CD unit needs to be able to fire back at those TFs. Or AE needs a lot more coding (*shudder*) with different rules for how CD guns engage Amphibious TFs.
Now if only Oahu had been split into two different hexes . . . [8D]
That was the precise point I was about to make, that had Oahu been split into two hexes the land based defenses 'might' have been more accurately modeled. I say "might" because there's only two possible arrangements; a "Pearl Harbor/Honolulu" section and, say, a "Kanoehe Bay" section, or a PH/Honolulu section and North Shore section. Either non PH hex would have a low port/airbase capability, with the NS having a 0 starting port/airfield size and a Kanoehe Bay hex with a minimum port/airfield rating. The ratings would be less for development and more to create defensive problems for the Allies. The PH/Kanoehe Bay hex arrangement would probably work better than a North Shore, since no one had any realistic beliefs that an invasion could come from that direction.