Furthermore, there is the supply issue, especially, in your case, for base VPs in China. What territory Japan is able to hold is likely to be reduced somewhat in VP value because some bases certainly will be without supply by 1945.
I do not understand why you identify this as a problem??
I am not sure what the solution is. Any changes to the values of base VPs of areas close to Japan in favor of Japan will favor those Japanese players who try for an auto-victory in 1943 or Jan. 1 1944 also and may do little to discourage front-loading the Japanese economy to play for a mid-war auto-victory.
An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
Moderators: wdolson, MOD_War-in-the-Pacific-Admirals-Edition
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
Intel Monkey: https://sites.google.com/view/staffmonkeys/home
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: witpqs
Furthermore, there is the supply issue, especially, in your case, for base VPs in China. What territory Japan is able to hold is likely to be reduced somewhat in VP value because some bases certainly will be without supply by 1945.
I do not understand why you identify this as a problem??
I am not sure what the solution is. Any changes to the values of base VPs of areas close to Japan in favor of Japan will favor those Japanese players who try for an auto-victory in 1943 or Jan. 1 1944 also and may do little to discourage front-loading the Japanese economy to play for a mid-war auto-victory.
The issue is the near-impossibility of Japan winning a victory in the late-war period and the question is how to tweek the VP system to make this more viable. The reduced value of bases owing to lack of supply is another factor that contributes to this problem of VP game balance.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
I think it's a positive element and if needed some other adjustment should be made.ORIGINAL: Aurorus
ORIGINAL: witpqs
Furthermore, there is the supply issue, especially, in your case, for base VPs in China. What territory Japan is able to hold is likely to be reduced somewhat in VP value because some bases certainly will be without supply by 1945.
I do not understand why you identify this as a problem??
I am not sure what the solution is. Any changes to the values of base VPs of areas close to Japan in favor of Japan will favor those Japanese players who try for an auto-victory in 1943 or Jan. 1 1944 also and may do little to discourage front-loading the Japanese economy to play for a mid-war auto-victory.
The issue is the near-impossibility of Japan winning a victory in the late-war period and the question is how to tweek the VP system to make this more viable. The reduced value of bases owing to lack of supply is another factor that contributes to this problem of VP game balance.
Intel Monkey: https://sites.google.com/view/staffmonkeys/home
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Bullwinkle58
... As far back as WITP, and certainly in AE's early days, the VP ratio dilemma was discussed. A CV and a BB are in the same realm, more or less, in terms of building assets and crew investment. OTOH, a 4E bomber at 2 VP and a DD at 10 VP? The bomber has a crew of 10 men and costs low dozens (?) of tons of material, primarily aluminum. A DD has a crew of circa 250 men, and costs thousands of tons of material, mostly steel. Crazy. But, abstraction . . .
The VP system was indeed the subject of discussion amongst the AE development team but the devs did not much discuss it on the public forum. Their public comments on the issue basically ceased some 6 months before the game was published. What Bullwinkle58 is remembering is not dev but player discussion of the subject. Much of that player discussion being undertaken before or shorter after, the game was released.
AE's VP system is basically that of classical WITP. Ultimately the lack of resources and time meant that an early decision was made to not revamp the VP system. Some tweaking was undertaken, primarily in the area of base VPs, but the conscious decision was made to preserve the ratios between the various types of VPs.
The point was made that there were no, and the case still remains the same today, experts on AE victory points on the planet. The devs were very meticulous in researching all data germane to AE but this was not really of much assistance in determining specific VPs to be associated with each asset. To illustrate this problem consider Don Bowen's comment of 27 July 2008 that:
"If we were to determine a proper 'value' for a ship, should it not be related to the loss of it's capability."
Consequently ship VPs are not simply based on the ship durability value but also take into account tonnage and capacity to carry aircraft or troops, or cargo etc. It is therefore an attempt to represent the setback to the war effort of that side if the ship is lost.
Alfred
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mind_messing
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
ORIGINAL: witpqs
Regarding VP's for military assets, keep in mind that VP's are meant to most especially take account of political importance, so the VP's of battleships is certainly warranted.
It is a weird mix of military and political considerations for VPs. That is where I think you can handwave away the 4E's being 2 VPs - given the focus on strategic bombing (at least in Europe), the public perception of the bombers as being that important to the war effort provides some kind of justification for their VP cost.
Really, I'd prefer a general ballooning in VPs to provide for more granularity. If VPs were straight up doubled, fighters could be 1 VP, strike craft 2 VP, 2E's 2 or 3 VP, 4E's 3 or 4 VP... and you could really differentiate between capital ships better (currently, CV VPs = durability + 3*capacity). Alas, not in this game.
But ultimately, a dual victory condition system would be better. A political (negotiated) settlement vs. the total military victory. PPs are meant to abstract the will to fight a little bit, and a Japanese autovictory is meant to simulate a negotiated settlement as well, but it's not perfect.
This is the real crux of the VP issue; it's a balanced system for a asymmetrical war.
The lack of competitiveness in the late-game for Japan is a combination of three main factors:
- The game design over-emphasizes the impact of strategic bombing. Firebombing did monumental damage to Japanese cities, but (as with Germany) it made very little impact on the decision of the leadership to surrender. Even the atomic bombings were afterthoughts in the decision to surrender.
- The Allied aversion to losses (especially after May '45) is not really represented in the VP values of ships or units.
- The VP value of pre-war Japanese possessions (Formosa, Manchuria, Korea, Sakhilin) is too low.
There's never going to be a fix for it, but if there was, I would propose that:
- VP values from strategic bombing of Japanese industry is reduced by a moderate degree.
- VP values for bases in Formosa, Manchuria (in particular), Korea, Sakhilin are increased significantly to represent the value Japanese leadership placed on these possessions.
- VP values for Allied units and ships lost to combat increases gradually after 1/1/1945, and makes a significant increase after 1/5/1945 in order to represent the aversion of the Western Allies to incur massive losses after the end of the War in Europe.
- VP values for Japanese units and ships lost to combat decreases after 1/1/1945, to represent the all-or-nothing approach of the Japanese leadership to continued resistance.
To my mind, these proposals would make the late-game more competitive for Japan in that:
1. Strategic bombing becomes less of a one-sided VP harvest for the Allies.
2. Core regions of the pre-war Japanese Empire become paramount considerations for defense (as they were historically).
3. Battles where both sides trade equal numbers of casualties will have greater VP cost for the Allies than Japan (case in point, Iwo-jima) and will make large-scale attrition warfare more viable for the Japanese than it is currently.
Fundamentally, by 1945, the Allies should be fighting against the stubborn nature of the Japanese leadership more than the Japanese armed forces, and they should be compelled by the VP system to make moves that would change the outlook of the Japanese leadership regarding the prosecution of the war.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: crsutton
The problem with VP in a game of this scope is that there was no way to fully test it in the beginning. You would have to had multiple completed games in the play testing phase to have any idea if there was balance.
ORIGINAL: Alfred
AE's VP system is basically that of classical WITP. Ultimately the lack of resources and time meant that an early decision was made to not revamp the VP system. Some tweaking was undertaken, primarily in the area of base VPs, but the conscious decision was made to preserve the ratios between the various types of VPs.
The point was made that there were no, and the case still remains the same today, experts on AE victory points on the planet.
Exactly my point.
I wouldn't say I'm an expert, but I'm at least a journeyman. I have a hypothesis and I think initial observations bear it out.
The fact that it's not possible to get a big enough sample size nor a complete understanding of the exact factors that led to the conclusion of each game in such a sample means that it's also impossible to know exactly what to change. Hence, I would be conservative in adjustments. I do think VPs for bases needs further adjustment.
And of course, any changes would be a mod - which is to say, no longer a stock scenario.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
ORIGINAL: crsutton
The problem with VP in a game of this scope is that there was no way to fully test it in the beginning. You would have to had multiple completed games in the play testing phase to have any idea if there was balance.
ORIGINAL: Alfred
AE's VP system is basically that of classical WITP. Ultimately the lack of resources and time meant that an early decision was made to not revamp the VP system. Some tweaking was undertaken, primarily in the area of base VPs, but the conscious decision was made to preserve the ratios between the various types of VPs.
The point was made that there were no, and the case still remains the same today, experts on AE victory points on the planet.
Exactly my point.
I wouldn't say I'm an expert, but I'm at least a journeyman. I have a hypothesis and I think initial observations bear it out.
The fact that it's not possible to get a big enough sample size nor a complete understanding of the exact factors that led to the conclusion of each game in such a sample means that it's also impossible to know exactly what to change. Hence, I would be conservative in adjustments. I do think VPs for bases needs further adjustment.
And of course, any changes would be a mod - which is to say, no longer a stock scenario.
Yes, that. Plus I doubt anyone really would be willing (read crazy enough) to fool with it anyways. I have managed to thoroughly enjoy the game over the past decade regardless of VPs.
I am the Holy Roman Emperor and am above grammar.
Sigismund of Luxemburg
Sigismund of Luxemburg
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
These are interesting proposals. Sure most are not possible without developers, but at least the bases you cite could be adjusted in scenarios.ORIGINAL: mind_messing
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
ORIGINAL: witpqs
Regarding VP's for military assets, keep in mind that VP's are meant to most especially take account of political importance, so the VP's of battleships is certainly warranted.
It is a weird mix of military and political considerations for VPs. That is where I think you can handwave away the 4E's being 2 VPs - given the focus on strategic bombing (at least in Europe), the public perception of the bombers as being that important to the war effort provides some kind of justification for their VP cost.
Really, I'd prefer a general ballooning in VPs to provide for more granularity. If VPs were straight up doubled, fighters could be 1 VP, strike craft 2 VP, 2E's 2 or 3 VP, 4E's 3 or 4 VP... and you could really differentiate between capital ships better (currently, CV VPs = durability + 3*capacity). Alas, not in this game.
But ultimately, a dual victory condition system would be better. A political (negotiated) settlement vs. the total military victory. PPs are meant to abstract the will to fight a little bit, and a Japanese autovictory is meant to simulate a negotiated settlement as well, but it's not perfect.
This is the real crux of the VP issue; it's a balanced system for a asymmetrical war.
The lack of competitiveness in the late-game for Japan is a combination of three main factors:
- The game design over-emphasizes the impact of strategic bombing. Firebombing did monumental damage to Japanese cities, but (as with Germany) it made very little impact on the decision of the leadership to surrender. Even the atomic bombings were afterthoughts in the decision to surrender.
- The Allied aversion to losses (especially after May '45) is not really represented in the VP values of ships or units.
- The VP value of pre-war Japanese possessions (Formosa, Manchuria, Korea, Sakhilin) is too low.
There's never going to be a fix for it, but if there was, I would propose that:
- VP values from strategic bombing of Japanese industry is reduced by a moderate degree.
- VP values for bases in Formosa, Manchuria (in particular), Korea, Sakhilin are increased significantly to represent the value Japanese leadership placed on these possessions.
- VP values for Allied units and ships lost to combat increases gradually after 1/1/1945, and makes a significant increase after 1/5/1945 in order to represent the aversion of the Western Allies to incur massive losses after the end of the War in Europe.
- VP values for Japanese units and ships lost to combat decreases after 1/1/1945, to represent the all-or-nothing approach of the Japanese leadership to continued resistance.
To my mind, these proposals would make the late-game more competitive for Japan in that:
1. Strategic bombing becomes less of a one-sided VP harvest for the Allies.
2. Core regions of the pre-war Japanese Empire become paramount considerations for defense (as they were historically).
3. Battles where both sides trade equal numbers of casualties will have greater VP cost for the Allies than Japan (case in point, Iwo-jima) and will make large-scale attrition warfare more viable for the Japanese than it is currently.
Fundamentally, by 1945, the Allies should be fighting against the stubborn nature of the Japanese leadership more than the Japanese armed forces, and they should be compelled by the VP system to make moves that would change the outlook of the Japanese leadership regarding the prosecution of the war.
Intel Monkey: https://sites.google.com/view/staffmonkeys/home
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
I remember the proposal that aircraft be counted for VP by number of ENGINES. That would make sense but would also serve to scue things as well.

Member: Treaty, Reluctant Admiral and Between the Storms Mod Team.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: witpqs
These are interesting proposals. Sure most are not possible without developers, but at least the bases you cite could be adjusted in scenarios.ORIGINAL: mind_messing
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
It is a weird mix of military and political considerations for VPs. That is where I think you can handwave away the 4E's being 2 VPs - given the focus on strategic bombing (at least in Europe), the public perception of the bombers as being that important to the war effort provides some kind of justification for their VP cost.
Really, I'd prefer a general ballooning in VPs to provide for more granularity. If VPs were straight up doubled, fighters could be 1 VP, strike craft 2 VP, 2E's 2 or 3 VP, 4E's 3 or 4 VP... and you could really differentiate between capital ships better (currently, CV VPs = durability + 3*capacity). Alas, not in this game.
But ultimately, a dual victory condition system would be better. A political (negotiated) settlement vs. the total military victory. PPs are meant to abstract the will to fight a little bit, and a Japanese autovictory is meant to simulate a negotiated settlement as well, but it's not perfect.
This is the real crux of the VP issue; it's a balanced system for a asymmetrical war.
The lack of competitiveness in the late-game for Japan is a combination of three main factors:
- The game design over-emphasizes the impact of strategic bombing. Firebombing did monumental damage to Japanese cities, but (as with Germany) it made very little impact on the decision of the leadership to surrender. Even the atomic bombings were afterthoughts in the decision to surrender.
- The Allied aversion to losses (especially after May '45) is not really represented in the VP values of ships or units.
- The VP value of pre-war Japanese possessions (Formosa, Manchuria, Korea, Sakhilin) is too low.
There's never going to be a fix for it, but if there was, I would propose that:
- VP values from strategic bombing of Japanese industry is reduced by a moderate degree.
- VP values for bases in Formosa, Manchuria (in particular), Korea, Sakhilin are increased significantly to represent the value Japanese leadership placed on these possessions.
- VP values for Allied units and ships lost to combat increases gradually after 1/1/1945, and makes a significant increase after 1/5/1945 in order to represent the aversion of the Western Allies to incur massive losses after the end of the War in Europe.
- VP values for Japanese units and ships lost to combat decreases after 1/1/1945, to represent the all-or-nothing approach of the Japanese leadership to continued resistance.
To my mind, these proposals would make the late-game more competitive for Japan in that:
1. Strategic bombing becomes less of a one-sided VP harvest for the Allies.
2. Core regions of the pre-war Japanese Empire become paramount considerations for defense (as they were historically).
3. Battles where both sides trade equal numbers of casualties will have greater VP cost for the Allies than Japan (case in point, Iwo-jima) and will make large-scale attrition warfare more viable for the Japanese than it is currently.
Fundamentally, by 1945, the Allies should be fighting against the stubborn nature of the Japanese leadership more than the Japanese armed forces, and they should be compelled by the VP system to make moves that would change the outlook of the Japanese leadership regarding the prosecution of the war.
Since only bases can be adjusted without code changes, which would be HUGE code changes (not in terms of difficulty, but in terms of ramifications)... I've kept any thinking about what could possibly be changed to base VP adjustments.
Hence, my conclusions have been that bases closer to Japan (or even in Japan) need an upward adjustment for the Japanese side. And probably some of the major bases that the Allies take need a downward adjustment on the multiplier since strat bombing has been and always will be the way the Allies win. Has there been a game where strat bombing (or at least a-bombs) weren't the thing that won the game for the Allies in 1944 or 1945?
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
Since only bases can be adjusted without code changes, which would be HUGE code changes (not in terms of difficulty, but in terms of ramifications)... I've kept any thinking about what could possibly be changed to base VP adjustments.
Hence, my conclusions have been that bases closer to Japan (or even in Japan) need an upward adjustment for the Japanese side. And probably some of the major bases that the Allies take need a downward adjustment on the multiplier since strat bombing has been and always will be the way the Allies win. Has there been a game where strat bombing (or at least a-bombs) weren't the thing that won the game for the Allies in 1944 or 1945?
Perhaps a project here on the forum to collect final VP scoresheets from all of the games that have reached 1945? This would provide some data that could guide a VP-mod. I would recommend 2 versions of the mod: a mod for scenario 1 games, which would be more favorable to Japan, and a mod for scenario 2 games, which would be less favorable. To do this, however, one would need data sets from both scenarios to compare and try to get some idea of the differences.
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mind_messing
- Posts: 3394
- Joined: Mon Oct 28, 2013 11:59 am
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Lokasenna
ORIGINAL: witpqs
These are interesting proposals. Sure most are not possible without developers, but at least the bases you cite could be adjusted in scenarios.ORIGINAL: mind_messing
This is the real crux of the VP issue; it's a balanced system for a asymmetrical war.
The lack of competitiveness in the late-game for Japan is a combination of three main factors:
- The game design over-emphasizes the impact of strategic bombing. Firebombing did monumental damage to Japanese cities, but (as with Germany) it made very little impact on the decision of the leadership to surrender. Even the atomic bombings were afterthoughts in the decision to surrender.
- The Allied aversion to losses (especially after May '45) is not really represented in the VP values of ships or units.
- The VP value of pre-war Japanese possessions (Formosa, Manchuria, Korea, Sakhilin) is too low.
There's never going to be a fix for it, but if there was, I would propose that:
- VP values from strategic bombing of Japanese industry is reduced by a moderate degree.
- VP values for bases in Formosa, Manchuria (in particular), Korea, Sakhilin are increased significantly to represent the value Japanese leadership placed on these possessions.
- VP values for Allied units and ships lost to combat increases gradually after 1/1/1945, and makes a significant increase after 1/5/1945 in order to represent the aversion of the Western Allies to incur massive losses after the end of the War in Europe.
- VP values for Japanese units and ships lost to combat decreases after 1/1/1945, to represent the all-or-nothing approach of the Japanese leadership to continued resistance.
To my mind, these proposals would make the late-game more competitive for Japan in that:
1. Strategic bombing becomes less of a one-sided VP harvest for the Allies.
2. Core regions of the pre-war Japanese Empire become paramount considerations for defense (as they were historically).
3. Battles where both sides trade equal numbers of casualties will have greater VP cost for the Allies than Japan (case in point, Iwo-jima) and will make large-scale attrition warfare more viable for the Japanese than it is currently.
Fundamentally, by 1945, the Allies should be fighting against the stubborn nature of the Japanese leadership more than the Japanese armed forces, and they should be compelled by the VP system to make moves that would change the outlook of the Japanese leadership regarding the prosecution of the war.
Since only bases can be adjusted without code changes, which would be HUGE code changes (not in terms of difficulty, but in terms of ramifications)... I've kept any thinking about what could possibly be changed to base VP adjustments.
Hence, my conclusions have been that bases closer to Japan (or even in Japan) need an upward adjustment for the Japanese side. And probably some of the major bases that the Allies take need a downward adjustment on the multiplier since strat bombing has been and always will be the way the Allies win. Has there been a game where strat bombing (or at least a-bombs) weren't the thing that won the game for the Allies in 1944 or 1945?
The pre-war Japanese holdings should all be bulked up, as it was the prospective loss of these (especially Manchuria) that got the Japanese government to finally send up the white flag.
I'd even go as far as to suggest that these areas should be of such high VP value as to require the Allies to seize in order to attain their victory conditions. It shouldn't be enough for the Allies to simply get the B-29's into range in order to win on VP's (the Japanese leadership didn't give a damn IRL), the game design should promote the Allies taking core pre-war Japanese territory, either Japan proper, or their colonial holdings.
It's not that strategic bombing shouldn't be a valuable source of VP income for the Allies, but it shouldn't be THE long term strategy for the Allies.
- Canoerebel
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
Mind Messing - I'm enjoying your thoughts and those of many others. Many good ideas from veterans here.
I agree that the pre-war holdings should be highly valued but I don't think the Allies should be "forced" to take them. They didn't in the real war - the Allies didn't touch Formosa, Korea, Sikhalin Island and (until Russia got involved) Manchuria.
I think we all agree that the Allies should have a number of viable routes to victory, including one similar to the historical model, which did rely heavily on strategic bombing and the atomic bomb.
By the same token, we wouldn't want to do things that would seriously restrict the options that Japan has in the game.
But within that framework, there may be ways to adjust VPs in order to give Japanese players a more fair chance to win the game on points than currently exists (if the consensus I'm seeing here is on target, which I think it is).
On a separate note, there are 10 zillion ideas out there and it would be hard to accomodate everyone's notions. Probably the only way to get this done would be to appoint a committee of like five fair-minded, experienced, clever Forumites who could debate it and make decisions.
But whether we ever have enough consensus and energy to implement that is uncertain at this point.
I agree that the pre-war holdings should be highly valued but I don't think the Allies should be "forced" to take them. They didn't in the real war - the Allies didn't touch Formosa, Korea, Sikhalin Island and (until Russia got involved) Manchuria.
I think we all agree that the Allies should have a number of viable routes to victory, including one similar to the historical model, which did rely heavily on strategic bombing and the atomic bomb.
By the same token, we wouldn't want to do things that would seriously restrict the options that Japan has in the game.
But within that framework, there may be ways to adjust VPs in order to give Japanese players a more fair chance to win the game on points than currently exists (if the consensus I'm seeing here is on target, which I think it is).
On a separate note, there are 10 zillion ideas out there and it would be hard to accomodate everyone's notions. Probably the only way to get this done would be to appoint a committee of like five fair-minded, experienced, clever Forumites who could debate it and make decisions.
But whether we ever have enough consensus and energy to implement that is uncertain at this point.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
- Chickenboy
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
On a separate note, there are 10 zillion ideas out there and it would be hard to accomodate everyone's notions.
...
But whether we ever have enough consensus and energy to implement that is uncertain at this point.
Whether we feel a compelling need to reinvent a system that already works pretty darn well is the operative question. Everyone's got an opinion about this overvalued and that undervalued, who won, what the 'game' says, what the historical analogy is, what the emotional impact on a nation's psyche should be, etc., etc., etc.
So long as there is a methodology to adjust the VP value of bases, units, etc. in the editor, then there is no need to bring this to the 'officials'. It can be yet another mod subject to review and agreement by two players or by a player and the AI.
If I was going to beseech the developers to work on ONE thing with the game, it would not be this one. This would not be the hill I would 'die on' and can't agree with those that ask for a developer's scarce (and dwindling) support for this issue.

- Canoerebel
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
I don't think anyone was envisioning the developers working on this. I wasn't. As far as I know, there's no extant body that would even consider a request like this.
The idea is indeed a mod.
The idea is indeed a mod.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
I have found it is not enough to "simply get the B-29's into range". The strategic bombing campaign in my recent game was much more difficult than that.
Intel Monkey: https://sites.google.com/view/staffmonkeys/home
- Canoerebel
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
I found the same thing, though I wasn't sure that was due to the nature of the campaign or my own shortcomings.
I do know this - trying to strategic bomb from the Marianas (as in the real war) wouldn't get the Allies anywhere at all. You have to get a lot closer than that.
I do know this - trying to strategic bomb from the Marianas (as in the real war) wouldn't get the Allies anywhere at all. You have to get a lot closer than that.
"Rats set fire to Mr. Cooper’s store in Fort Valley. No damage done." Columbus (Ga) Enquirer-Sun, October 2, 1880.
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mind_messing
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RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
ORIGINAL: Canoerebel
Mind Messing - I'm enjoying your thoughts and those of many others. Many good ideas from veterans here.
I agree that the pre-war holdings should be highly valued but I don't think the Allies should be "forced" to take them. They didn't in the real war - the Allies didn't touch Formosa, Korea, Sikhalin Island and (until Russia got involved) Manchuria.
I think we all agree that the Allies should have a number of viable routes to victory, including one similar to the historical model, which did rely heavily on strategic bombing and the atomic bomb.
While only Manchuria and Sakhalin were invaded by the USSR, their loss was THE key component in bringing about Japan's surrender. Strategic bombing and the atomic bombs scarce factored in the decision. It was the certain loss of the pre-war territories that forced Japan's hand.
If this was reflected in the VP situation, it brings about some degree of balance into the late-war game. The Allies are compelled by the VP system to attempt a conquest of high-value Japanese possessions, while the Japanese will be able to dig in deep to bloody the Allied advance.
There's a wide spectrum of choice for both players if this is the case, as Japan has a wide range of geographically distant regions to defend, while the Allies have the debate of pre-empting the Russian activation or not, and risking the clock running out before sufficient territorial gains are made to trigger the victory conditions.
By the same token, we wouldn't want to do things that would seriously restrict the options that Japan has in the game.
By late 1945 Japan has little, if any options in the game. Under the current system, the Allies are not required to do much more that strategic bombing of Japanese industry. Granted, the hard part is getting bases in range from which to do this, and Japan has some capacity to contest this, but not much.
This irks me moderately, as in reality the strategic bombing campaign wasn't a major factor in forcing Japan's surrender. It was certainly a factor, but not to the extent that the VP system suggests.
If you bulk up the VP value for the pre-war holdings, you give Japan a bit more leeway in terms of potential. The B-29s can bomb away, but if the VP's from the strategic bombing campaign alone won't be enough for autovictory, then something else is needed.
My point, basically, is that the Allies should be required to do something other than strategic bombing in order to win. The smart play is the safe play, which is strategic bombing.
By requiring something more you change the late-war to be a bit more balanced. The Allies can play smart, strategic bomb till the Russians roll in, but in doing so they run the risk that Japan might play the clock out. The Allies can play a bit more aggressive, and try and take Formosa or other holdings before the Soviets get involved to ensure a swift autovictory, but then they expose themselves to Japanese preparations and a potential bloody nose.
The '45 Allied OOB is immense: I think any competent Allied player with such assets at his disposal can't fault the notion that they should be expected to do something with it.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
It is my understanding that the Japanese high command, all but a few, were in favor of surrender after Guam and Saipan fell. The question was the terms of that surrender. The more hard-line senior people would accept only terms that allowed Japan to retain all the territory of her pre-war empire, including eastern China, Manchuria, and Thailand. A minority were in favor of terms by which Japan retained Formosa, Sakhalin, the Kuriles, and Manchuria. Finally, a small group were willing to accept any conditions except the occupation of the Home Islands. The hard-line group was the dominant faction until Iwo Jima fell, which shifted some of the hard-line people to the more moderate position, when the majority were willing to surrender provided that Japan retained all of its "home soil," which would include Formosa, the Kuriles, and Sakhalin. The U.S. insistence upon unconditional surrender prolonged the war, however, and allowed the Soviets to enter the conflict (which created the current situation on the Korean peninsula).
It was the combination of the situation on the ground (which, by August 1945 had deprived Japan of most of her imperial possessions) and the strategic bombing (including the atomic bombs) that forced the hard-line party among the Japanese high command to concede that they would never be able to negotiate the terms that they desired. Without the strategic bombing and the atomic bombs, however, I do not think it was certain that the majority of the senior Japanese people would have accepted terms that allowed the U.S. to occupy the Home Islands. There was great concern that an occupation would become a rape of Honshu, literally and figuratively.
I assume the victory conditions for the end-war period would be based upon the U.S. desire for unconditional surrender, which would include a post-war occupation of the Home Islands. In which case, the value of the Japanese Home Islands would be much higher than it is. It was the high value that the Japanese high command placed on the Home Islands that prolonged the war beyond the point where everyone, including the Japanese high command, knew that the allies had won.
It was the combination of the situation on the ground (which, by August 1945 had deprived Japan of most of her imperial possessions) and the strategic bombing (including the atomic bombs) that forced the hard-line party among the Japanese high command to concede that they would never be able to negotiate the terms that they desired. Without the strategic bombing and the atomic bombs, however, I do not think it was certain that the majority of the senior Japanese people would have accepted terms that allowed the U.S. to occupy the Home Islands. There was great concern that an occupation would become a rape of Honshu, literally and figuratively.
I assume the victory conditions for the end-war period would be based upon the U.S. desire for unconditional surrender, which would include a post-war occupation of the Home Islands. In which case, the value of the Japanese Home Islands would be much higher than it is. It was the high value that the Japanese high command placed on the Home Islands that prolonged the war beyond the point where everyone, including the Japanese high command, knew that the allies had won.
RE: An Old Timer Steps Back to Measure Game Competitiveness
Do not forget the naval and transportation blockade established by the allies. Without supplies (food, oil, raw materials) coming from the South, China, Korea, Manchuria the Japan would starve. Yet even more trade was being carried by ships around the islands and this was being crippled by subs, mines and airstrikes. If you have a quarry at place A and factory at place B... the B is not worth much if it cant get what it needs from place A. Plus the Japanese rail system had its own problems - mountainous center of the islands forced the railways onto narrow coastal corridors on at some places - thus it was not that problematic to interdict.
But this is very hard to measure in game terms... So its more on a Japanese player acknowledge the defeat when he cannot run his economy.
But this is very hard to measure in game terms... So its more on a Japanese player acknowledge the defeat when he cannot run his economy.







