ORIGINAL: Kull
ORIGINAL: mike scholl 1
The truth is that a lot of players SAY they want to play the Japanese when what they mean is they want to play some version of Japan "on steroids". And AE provides the "Super Japan" option for those who want to go that way. For those who want a more historical game, PDU on is not a good choice.
Agreed. I want my Japanese opponent to be "on steroids", because otherwise the game is a boring walkover. Whatever tactical advantages the Japanese may gain from the ability to use historical hindsight to adjust production, they pale in comparison to the Allied STRATEGIC advantages that come from using the same hindsight to avoid deploying their assets inefficiently on known historical dead ends and backwaters. The Allies will always have both the quantitative AND qualitative advantage. Couple that with strategic pre-knowledge and - absent some corresponding offset to the Japanese - it's quickly game, set, match. Fun for you, maybe, but not for most of the rest of us.
I'm mostly in agreement with Kull on this.
As a IJ PBEM player (x3), there are strategic advantages that are assumed by the allies that they don't have to worry about. Examples of this on the IJ side include a fixed number of aircraft engine factories, research factories and airframe factories on the home islands and Manchuria. I wouldn't mind fielding a polyglot airforce if I could have more control over the numbers being produced of each type of airframe.
If the allied players wanted to hassle with factory setup, feeding resources into CONUS and Great Britain for airframe production, oil transfer to CONUS / GB and so forth and then have their factory outputs limited, then PDU off would make more sense. Most allied players eschew the micromanagement of monkeying with production and running the economies, so this would likely be of limited appeal were it possible (which it's not).
IRL, the Allies realized that some of their fighter types were crapola. Examples included the P-400, Buffalo and some of the Dutch fighters. They generally moved away from those to more capable airframes as the war progressed. This transition is a hard coded improvement for the Allies. Much the same transitions occur with the IJAAF and IJNAF, except this transitition also bears a cost to the IJ player-the factory setup / production circuit.
I suppose I would entertain the idea of keeping Nates on the front lines into 1943, provided that the Allies are willing to reciprocate by keeping their P-400s, Wirraways and Buffalos on the front line into 1943 too. Course, no one wants to commit their pilots to such foolhardy endeavors, resulting in them switching into preferable airframes ASAP.
Since the Allied production is not going to be changed in this game any time soon, the Allied players are stuck with 'ground truth' such as it is-replacements are hardcoded and you don't have to monkey with factories, resources, oil, fuel, etc. With this tradeoff in playability, PDU on for most games makes the most sense for me as IJ as a result.