Will there be any change to production?

Gary Grigsby’s War in the East: The German-Soviet War 1941-1945 is a turn-based World War II strategy game stretching across the entire Eastern Front. Gamers can engage in an epic campaign, including division-sized battles with realistic and historical terrain, weather, orders of battle, logistics and combat results.

The critically and fan-acclaimed Eastern Front mega-game Gary Grigsby’s War in the East just got bigger and better with Gary Grigsby’s War in the East: Don to the Danube! This expansion to the award-winning War in the East comes with a wide array of later war scenarios ranging from short but intense 6 turn bouts like the Battle for Kharkov (1942) to immense 37-turn engagements taking place across multiple nations like Drama on the Danube (Summer 1944 – Spring 1945).

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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Gandalf »

ORIGINAL: Encircled

There isn't anything close to this as a computer game that fights the Eastern Front. Just enjoy playing it.

Wrong.

Though dated, Schwerpunkt Games' Russo-German War 41-44 does a pretty good job fighting the East Front on a similar scale and does a far more equitable job of treating both sides the same design wise, even if it does lack an in depth production system.

see: http://schwerpunkt.wargamer.com/
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Baelfiin »

No offense to the boys of scwerpunkt but that game is severely lacking.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by darbycmcd »

This whole national morale debate is a meaningless sidetrack started by Pelton and taken up as a cause. It could have been better handled in the model, I agree, but despite everyone jumping up and down no one has really explained how it radically alters the game to be ahistoric. it seems to me that it just boils down to 'the russian get so tough by the end and the germans are fragile' well, perhaps that is because THAT IS WHAT HAPPENED. At least there was one player who actually did some testing and gave some meaningful feedback, and the results seem to be.... meh, not a huge issue.

Now if a German player wanted to think about making the Soviets standfast a bit more, maybe they should think about the old thread about railing out factories. Not that rail-cap is too high for russians, because i think it was shown that this was not true. but if they could gather some production data from several LATE WAR games it is possible that they could show that the Russians are producing much more than historical. I am guessing this because the benchmark I believe was 50% evacuation to equal historical production. But I think it is very rare for the Soviet player to get less than 90% evacuation. But I don't know for sure, because I only have my games and a few AARs to go by. But seriously, a bit of real data gathering and constructive conversatioin could maybe go a long way to helping craft a solution.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

I can't undestand all this mess [&:] 1941 is about right. Ok, no catastrophic losses but the Germans grab more things than in the real thing. Not to mention that NO German player really sticks to the original German plan (aka Barbarossa) and yet they want to force the Soviets to stick to history (aka send the lambs to slaughter aka mega-pockets everywhere and every turn)...

1942: the Germans seem to be strong. Right again.

Later we really can't tell. But I suspect Tarhunnas (active AAR) should be winning (at least on my book). And he is playing the German side... Soooo I really don't get it [:D]
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Great_Ajax »

In my opinion, national morale for the German represents both the decreasing quality of replacements due to the need of short cutting training to get the maximum number of replacements into units and the the gradually losing of the cream of your soldiers through sustained fighting. The Germans are at the peak of combat efficiency when Barbarossa begins and the only place to go is down. The Soviets are almost at the floor in terms of combat efficiency and they can only improve.

National morale is not "fighting spirit" but the quality of replacements and newly raised formations. The longer that soldiers stay in service (less casualties), the less you have to scrape the barrel to get replacements. Thus, it should not be affected at all by the loss and gain of territory. I'm not a fan of fixed national morale myself and think it should be based on casualties with the the historical losses being the median or the current NM settings. If the Germans suffer fewer casualties, then their NM could be in a little bit better shape but the same should go for the Soviets as well.

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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Aurelian »

ORIGINAL: Gandalf

ORIGINAL: Aurelian

ORIGINAL: RCH

Production is not my biggest concern. The number one concern is moral. Moral increases or decreases should be dependent on lost or gained cities and not predetermined. This is clear bias. Not accusations no insults just a plain fact. That system is indefensible. How important is moral in this game?

As has been explained a few times by those who know, national morale is actually a proficiency rating. It has nothing what so ever to do with territory or cities won or lost.

OK, for the sake of argument, let's agree that National morale is a proficiency rating... What affects German proficiency over time? Obviously, it's the steady wear and tear of the war effort over the period depicted assuming the West Front conditions proceed historically with an abstracted allied war effort which includes strategic bombing. Now, we return to this game and the East Front itself. What effects Soviet proficiency or better stated, the limitation of it's improvement within the game system? Absolutely nothing. No matter what the German player accomplishes he cannot really affect the Soviet proficiency AND he cannot alter his own production to compensate for his own decreasing proficiency whereas the Soviet player can alter his production priorities as he sees fit knowing his proficiency is going to increase year over year even if he loses a heck of a lot more cities/territory than happened historically.

And no matter what he does the Soviet player can not alter Axis proficiency. Cities and territory have nothing to do with how well a unit fights. Nor can the Sovs alter production as they see fit. (I don't want T-34s. I want KVs. So how can I change production?).

To use Flav's example, should the Free French be worse than the 1940 Army? Afterall, they lost all of mainland France. Could the Red Army been any worse? They lost what in US terms would equal the distance from the East Coast to Topeka Kansas.

And yet, they didn't collaspe. They didn't get worse. They got better. Despite all the territory lost.

How?
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

ORIGINAL: el hefe

In my opinion, national morale for the German represents both the decreasing quality of replacements due to the need of short cutting training to get the maximum number of replacements into units and the the gradually losing of the cream of your soldiers through sustained fighting. The Germans are at the peak of combat efficiency when Barbarossa begins and the only place to go is down. The Soviets are almost at the floor in terms of combat efficiency and they can only improve.

I am pretty certain it's much more than that. It's all the variables that in the end make a fighting unit: military doctrine, plans, organization, armaments, will to fight, training, tactics, efficient personnel (soldiers and top leaders), mobilized population, war industry etc etc. In short, it's the whole thing: the units backed by the whole country industry, technology, science, morale etc etc.

In the Soviet case it only can increase. As noted, the Red Army cannot get any worse [:D]

At least that's what Pavel more or less said, if I remember correctly.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by darbycmcd »

TD, you are right on. It is the really frustrating thing about many of these complaints. Ok, there are some that are really about problems with the way things are implemented, like the airbase attack problem which was fixed, or the 2:1 attack rule (good idea, bad implementation). So much of the focus is on the early war period. I suspect it is because many of these players are what we called 'panzer pushers' in europa. they think the war as a whole was barbarrossa and case blue. But in reality those were a very small part of the entire conflct. the war ends when BERLIN IS CAPTURED. play it to that point and then lets see what the problems are. the incessant complaining about 41/42 is starting to sound just churlish.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Mentor »

ORIGINAL: darbymcd

I would also add that the hysterical and ill-defined complaints are not without broader impacts. I know 3 people in just my little wargame circle that have not bought this game because they got the impression from the forum that it was broken. I pointed out that it is basically just the same 2-3 people with a small chorus of supporters who just repeat the whine of the day, but the number of threads that get spammed about percieved problems in the game have put them off.

For sure there are some good points made by these folks occasionally, but for the most part the complaints are just that Germany can't win in the way they think they should. There is a lack of historical operational knowledge and most damning a lack of testing. Really at this point there should be more playing and less complaining. It is the same process that WitP went through, but there the community worked to weed out cancerous forum members as well as game-play bugs. There are people with expectations about this game that will not be met, for instance Heliodorus. It is at heart an historical game, which means the Germans are screwed. It takes a Soviet player as incompetant as Stalin to give you the game you would want.

So lets focus on mechanics that need some work, such as aspects of the air war, high ROF weapons, etc and do it with some meaningful testing and respectful comments in a collegial atmosphere. Heliodorus, you think the game is a way for the game designers to become fabulously wealthy at your expense, that is your right. Please feel free to leave the forum and be bitter. Pelton, you think the game designers are a bunch of rednecks who don't appreciate the awesome magesty that was the Wehrmact, ok, you should move on to greener pastures. Otherwise, why dont you make more constructive input.

+1

Excellent post.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by alfonso »

Ok, morale again…there is one thing that I do not understand yet.

Why do the Germans have a high proficiency (NationalMorale=75) in June 1941? In theory, because they were battle-hardened veterans. Back in 1938 the German Army performed rather poorly during Otto, the military walk into Austria, and in November 1939, after the Polish campaign, von Brauchitsch wrote a memorandum to Hitler explaining the shortcomings in the performance of the German Army.We can deduce that their improvement was indeed due mostly to their battle experience, and not training alone. After Poland there were campaigns in Norway, Denmark, Low Countries, France , Yugoslavia. None of those campaigns were really long, or incredibly difficult, but supposedly the Germans acquired in the process the summit of military perfection.

Then, how is it that after two years of constant fighting the Soviet proficiency is set at 50 in June 1943? I understand it in terms of balance and playability, but, then, how can those morale settings be considered horribly biased in favor of the Soviets? Unless we assume that the Russians are somewhat retarded and cannot reach the zenith of military performance as quickly as the Germans, what I see here is a mechanism to improve the chances of the Axis of reaching Autumn 1944 deep in Russia, not the other way round.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by darbycmcd »

This is just my opinion on National Morale and why it makes sense for the Germans to consistantly be a bit ahead. For me, it really represents the tactical level proficiency of a formation. If you look at the level it is applied at, the manuever element, it seems to me that it really reflects the general effectiveness of the NCO and junior/unit level officers and the military culture to maximize that effectiveness. Most players focus on the difference in generalship between the armies, but in my opinion it was at the small unit leader level where the German army most consistantly had its advantage. Not only better leaders, but a doctrine that allowed those leaders to operationalize their initiative and insight into battlefield results. The red army had, by war's end, an effective NCO cadre and capable junior officers, but even then was rigid in its small unit doctrine which did not allow them the same latitude for tactical problem solving that the German army had. Because I see NM as representing this, I think it makes sense that the Germans have a higher default level. But like I said, it is something of a mishmash concept
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by alfonso »

ORIGINAL: darbymcd

This is just my opinion on National Morale and why it makes sense for the Germans to consistantly be a bit ahead. For me, it really represents the tactical level proficiency of a formation. If you look at the level it is applied at, the manuever element, it seems to me that it really reflects the general effectiveness of the NCO and junior/unit level officers and the military culture to maximize that effectiveness. Most players focus on the difference in generalship between the armies, but in my opinion it was at the small unit leader level where the German army most consistantly had its advantage. Not only better leaders, but a doctrine that allowed those leaders to operationalize their initiative and insight into battlefield results. The red army had, by war's end, an effective NCO cadre and capable junior officers, but even then was rigid in its small unit doctrine which did not allow them the same latitude for tactical problem solving that the German army had. Because I see NM as representing this, I think it makes sense that the Germans have a higher default level. But like I said, it is something of a mishmash concept

Thanks, I understand your explanation, and it seems plausible to me (although I do not know if it is correct, in Stalingrad the Soviet side arguably adapted better to street tactical fighting...). But for those forum members that are critical of morale being tied to historical timeline, history could not be invoked to explain the gap between Germans and Russians.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

ORIGINAL: alfonso

Why do the Germans have a high proficiency (NationalMorale=75) in June 1941? In theory, because they were battle-hardened veterans. Back in 1938 the German Army performed rather poorly during Otto, the military walk into Austria, and in November 1939, after the Polish campaign, von Brauchitsch wrote a memorandum to Hitler explaining the shortcomings in the performance of the German Army.We can deduce that their improvement was indeed due mostly to their battle experience, and not training alone. After Poland there were campaigns in Norway, Denmark, Low Countries, France , Yugoslavia. None of those campaigns were really long, or incredibly difficult, but supposedly the Germans acquired in the process the summit of military perfection.

In fact after the Polish campaign the German High Command had concluded the 1914 German infantry was superior to their 1939 counterparts.

Let's never forget that the armored forces (a really small fraction of the land forces) did most of the job. The infantry had not really been tested. And this was true in 1940 and in fact in 1941 in the USSR.

The German infantry über supermen is a myth. Hardened veterans, ok, but not some sort of Death Star some people want us to believe [;)]

In case people are missing this, the Wehrmacht had grown way too fast (the Versailles Treaty restrictions). As a result, this army was NOT that efficient (inevitable structural problems). The thing is most people only see the rutilant façade: the mighty panzers. The infantry marched behind with the horses...

And sorry if I am pissing in someone's pocket [:D]
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

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In fact look at the advance in the AGS during Barbarossa. Here NO panzers to really create a big mess [;)]

German infantry vs Red Army... we all know the advance here was much MORE difficult... and again, Panzers were called (from the AGC) to do -again- the job: Kiev pocket...

But German infantry alone...

And above all, I guess the German High Command knows better than any of us armchair generals. Which makes me of course conclude the offensive CVs of German infantry -on the game- are way too high [:D]

If you want it (weak soviets), you'll have it (realistic German infantry)!
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Flaviusx »

Tullius, that was just Brauschitsch popping off to Hitler for his own reasons. He grossly exaggerated the deficiencies of German infantry after the Polish campaign mostly to curb Hitler's appetite for further offensive actions. (Hitler wanted to attack France much earlier than May of 40 despite the weather.) The case against such an early attack was completely justifiable on other more objective grounds.






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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

The comparison was perfectly valid, evident Flavius. The 1914 army had a lot of time to learn (decades). The one in 1939 did not. It was a new army. And this was of no little consequences (like evertyhing, too fast is not the best thing to do: Czech tanks in panzer units) [;)] It is indeed a fact that the Panzers did most of the job and therefore saved the German infantry from proving its real value. The Germans were lucky that their western enemies (British and French) were incompetent (WWI mentality) and of course the clown in the east (Stalin).
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

In 1939 the 50% of the men (Wehrmacht) were born before 1901. Rather old. 19.400 officers in 1939, but only 4.000 in 1933...

Too fast. Too messy. And too old [8D]
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by Flaviusx »

Um, the landsers were using the same infantry doctrine from 1939-45 as they ended WWI with, stosstruppen tactics, etc.

And point in fact, the 1914 German infantry was actually worse in this regard -- those tactics evolved later in WWI.

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RE: Will there be any change to production?

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ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

In fact look at the advance in the AGS during Barbarossa. Here NO panzers to really create a big mess [;)]

German infantry vs Red Army... we all know the advance here was much MORE difficult... and again, Panzers were called (from the AGC) to do -again- the job: Kiev pocket...

Don't forget thst they also faced the strongest Russian concentrations.
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RE: Will there be any change to production?

Post by TulliusDetritus »

ORIGINAL: Aurelian

ORIGINAL: TulliusDetritus

In fact look at the advance in the AGS during Barbarossa. Here NO panzers to really create a big mess [;)]

German infantry vs Red Army... we all know the advance here was much MORE difficult... and again, Panzers were called (from the AGC) to do -again- the job: Kiev pocket...

Don't forget thst they also faced the strongest Russian concentrations.

Sure, but had they been the supermen some people believe they were (and on top of that the Soviets utter incompetent) they should have vaporized anything on their path... I mean, why would they bring the panzers in the first place? That's for sissies [8D]
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