Need for small tutorials

Can the Blitzkrieg be stopped? Across the Dnepr: Second Edition revisits a classic on a new system. Created from the ground up as an expansion for SSG’s latest acclaimed game engine, Kharkov: Disaster on the Donets, the Second Edition of Across the Dnepr includes Areas of Operations, the latest AI programming and multiple Mystery Variants to keep gamers guessing. Also includes 3 free scenarios in addition to the Across the Dnepr mega-scenario: Operation Husky, Operation Konrad and Kirovograd
Post Reply
User avatar
henri51
Posts: 1151
Joined: Fri Jan 16, 2009 7:07 pm

Need for small tutorials

Post by henri51 »

This also applies to Kharkov, since the mechanics of the game are the same.

What I would like to see given the complexity of the game is a set of tutorials explaining various tactics,such as defending a line, breaking through a line, and so on.

Although one could argue correctly that all that information is in the manual, it is just too much to digest all at once, and I think it would be easier to digest a small bite at a time. For example,in one scenario, the player would be told to break through an enemy entrenched line and to drive his armor through to play havoc with enemy rear units or encirclements while infantry held the breakthrough open. Although most wargamers are familiar with the theory of concentrating force on the breakout point, preliminary bombardment, breaking out etc, how this translates in game terms is far from obvious.

For example, the game discourages a player from keeping his armor forward, and any armor unit that finds itself behind enemy lines without an infantry unit on the same hex faces annihilation. Also the need to maintain a continuous front line seems much greater than in other games.

I would call such a series of tutorials "Kharkov 101". This could ease players into the game, and help reduce the "mind-boggle" that grasps even experienced wargamers like me when they start to play the game. [:D]

The Marchand videos (absolutely essential to watch at least 3 times) and a few other posts are very useful, but IMHO they are not enough.And as for the totorial - well let me just state that the "Battles in Italy" tutorial was one of the best tutorials I have seen, but I find the Kharkov tutorial insufficient.

The changes introduced in Kharkov and AtD2 ere supposed to make the game "simpler", and maybe it is just me, but I don't find it simpler at all.[&:] Experiments in psychology have shown that the human brain is incapable of taking into account more than 5 independent factors at the same time, but I think that this game may have a lot more than 5...[:D]

Henri
Carl Myers
Posts: 136
Joined: Mon Sep 15, 2003 9:04 pm

RE: Need for small tutorials

Post by Carl Myers »

For example, the game discourages a player from keeping his armor forward, and any armor unit that finds itself behind enemy lines without an infantry unit on the same hex faces annihilation. Also the need to maintain a continuous front line seems much greater than in other games

Makes sense in a 24 hour game turn, NODs of the time was limited. A armored regiment laagered at nighttime is a lightly armed infantry battalion against a close assault by regular infantry.
Post Reply

Return to “Across the Dnepr - Second Edition”