I would agree with all of that. I got WITW when it first came out but the joys of a one year old AND a job forced me to shelve this and WITE/WITP. I’ve still got the kid and the job but thankfully some of my time back too, and been really getting back into WITW recently. However while it’s an awesome game and the bombing campaign is fantastically well conceived and implemented, this is one bit I feel sticks a little bit. From reading what I missed it seems like folks through trial and error worked out multiple small raids gets the best results to the extent that some could not bother invading Germany at all and win by VPs from bombing. The new optional city scoring seems to have been introduced to ‘discourage’ relying on bombing points, which looks sensible, but underlying this the problem of too many VPs from Bombing like this seems like it might remain, rather than fixing whether the bombing is a little ‘off target’.
I know relatively more about Bomber command so to look at that for example. While there had been huge improvements since the start of the war night navigation was a very specialist skill. Select crews were assigned to the Pathfinders, and my grandfathers log book, otherwise quite a functional but very interesting document is heavily highlighted with ‘!!!!’ to show the pride he felt when his crew was selected to join a pathfinder squadron. Ironically he was notorious for getting lost in a car… At the start of July 43 there were 7 pathfinder squadrons (about 10%), by the end of the war 15 squadrons. For point of reference it was considered that before Gee was introduced 25% of bombers found their target in good weather, after this rose to 40%. Following pathfinder tactics this was dramatically higher and would continue to rise. To look for example at what was going on about the time of the start of the GC on the night of 25/26 July ’43 600 bombers hit Essen, led by 9 pathfinders mosquitos using Oboe who marked the target despite the smokescreen. The German damage assessment was that more damage was done that night than all previous attacks on Essen to date. This seems to lend support to the type of attack that should be effective. At a similar time Op Gomorrah was a series of 4 raids over ten days on Hamburg (which is nice support for the usual player tempo I think of bombing on D2, D4 & D6). On the night of 27/28 July for example 787 bombers were launched. The pathfinders used H2S though the markers were dropped 2 miles from the intended centre (still better than I could do I’m sure…) but the main force dropped with notable concentration and such damage that 2/3rd of the population fled. While these are certainly large raids and relatively small ones in the region of 300 bombers were happening too I tend to use this as an indication to use 2 city bombing directives for bomber command at operating at a similar tempo, though occasionally a 3rd. Of course it’s a game at the end of the day, and I don’t begrudge Qball in the slightly for doing the right thing here. Especially as he is not in on the conversation yet, but of course we have agreed he should join when the action moves on a bit. He has no doubt got more experience on why different tactics perform better.
In summary as much as I am in awe of what a good innovative part of the game this is, I do feel there should be more thought into the effect of training pathfinders as a limited resource to support effective night bombing results, and there simply weren’t enough to support 25 small raids in a week and expect to see favourable results. There should be much more raids completely missing their targets, and as bomccarthy says the morale effect of flying in such small groups and getting bounced by 3 times your number... These were tough, stoic, steady guys, but bejesus… On the final note for those who have not heard this, here is a brief bit of intercom from a typically unflappable crew. Amazingly brave gentlemen, going about their business like it’s a drive to the shops...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8R5NI-IrUU0
Bonus points if you can point out any issue with the photo paired with the clip (other than its daylight…)