No, those aren't lucky rolls. With these high odds attacks you might get unlucky someday. High odd attacks takes good planning.ORIGINAL: Red Prince
Of the 2 attacks this impulse, the one on Kunming is the most important. If Kunming falls, China is at an end . . .
So, the attacks:
And the results:
Attack on Kunming: Assault, Roll = 6+2 = 8 = */2S (all defenders destroyed, due to no valid retreat hex)
Attack on Pskov: Assault, Roll = 4 = */2S
Not wanting to take any chances, I decided HQ-I Umezu could risk being disorganized providing HQ Support. He's still within range to let his troops collect the rest of the Burma Road (connecting Rangoon to China) without having them move out of supply -- as long as the weather stays Fine, and it probably will (famous last words). I'd have to look through all of my notes, but I think that both sides have had very good success trying to provide Support. Of corse, I haven't always mentioned it in the AAR when they fail, so it may seem like more success than there actually was. As I said, I'd have to look through my notes. Anyway, Umezu succeeded, so the chances of Kunming falling move from 50% to 70% and in this case, I really don't care if it disorganizes the attackers. Getting the job done is good enough for me.
At Pskov, since this is a bit of a pit-stop along the way to better things, I wasn't willing to risk disorganization, so I found the best troops available to take on the lone defender at 7:1 odds. A 70% chance to stay organized is what I like (Big Bopper, anyone?). The Soviets might have been able to provide 2 factors of Ground Support, but at the risk of getting shot down at +2/-2 odds in Germany's favor. It would only have dropped this to a 5:1 attack, which is better, but not good enough to risk the LND (at extended range). I want to save those factors for a time and place where they can really mess things up for Germany.
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So, here's a question: both of these rolls were "average" rolls . . . not too high, not too low . . . but in both cases, they were just enough to keep the attackers from being disorganized. Should this be considered luck or not? I consider it to be good planning . . . after all, 4 of the 9 other possible rolls at Kunming would have meant the same thing, and 6 of the 9 other possible rolls at Pskov would have, too. So, is it "lucky" that these weren't '5' and '3' instead of the rolls they actually were?
The roll on Kiev was another thing: there you were lucky, since the chanche of getting disorganised was far, far greater...