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April 3rd, 2007, 02:27 PM
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Ex SPII player - observations so far
I've only just joined the forum and first of all would like to say what a great game SPWW2 is. A few years ago I had SPII and enjoyed many hours with that too and this has so much more in it - A helluva lot of work into the unit /OOB specs for a start and a Bigger Feel to the missions.
I'm toying with buying the full copy cos Im sure there's things I'm missing out on by not having the manual. A few observations that are making me hang back .. and it isnt being tight with my cash, (although thats true too )... but just what I think (very subjectively maybe) about the game.
1> A lot of the packaged scenarios seem frustratingly short on time - I know a lot of players say thats all part of it, but when you only get a Marginal victory or even a Draw after anhiliating the opposition and with your own forces still intact, but are just short of reaching that last victory hex by 2 turns .... I think you know where Im coming from. And of course it works the other way - if I'm getting a beating, why should I be let off the hook so easily and saved by the bell? It seems especially true in assault missions - I'm happy if I can get a draw on those. Of course I could do better if Im prepared to simply banzai charge at one point with everything Ive got and to hell with losses, full throttle on the gas, but that then surely it stops being a tactical game then??? You may as well get a lot of the really excellent tactics tips Ive seen posted on here and elsewhere, and put them in the waste bin - you simply dont have time to use them.
I know that some custom missions state things like "Boy, youre gonna be lucky to even survive this one... " - fair enough as the author intended them that way - The Bloody Ridge scenario for example - the Japanese cant win because they dont have enough turns to make it through the jungle map unless they never get fired on at all and pinned down anywhere. (I played it as the Americans and it was way too easy. As the Japanese I got a draw and spent most of the game hitting the R key).
I dont believe that a general assault mission, (Pegasus Bridge, Eben Emel and others excepted), would be conducted on such a time critical level as "Ok, if you dont get to the very last objective by 6 minutes you've blown it." - regardless that you dominated the battlefield and totally wasted the opposition. Or put another way - if you just wiped out all the enemy in your locality, would it really matter in the real world if you got to the furthest objective a few minutes later than planned, with your forces relatively in one piece?
You often can't plan to allow the enemy to take objectives then mount a flanking counter attack because you know you wont get enough turns to do it, not because you havent got the means to. Again, this doesnt seem to make sense tactically. (And from what Ive read this was a tactic often used by Rommel for starters... ). Or you can't try a wide flanking infantry advance manouvere for the same reason.
Ok this sounds like a major rant, but I think that a few more turns on some scenarios would add rather than take away and make them more flexible and more ways of playing them out. There are just too many where you have to race at break neck spead across the map to have any chance of winning.
2> The auto rally - does it work? I may be thick here, but I'm not sure why I have to manually R key loads of units at the start of each turn (especially after a barrage) - or am I missing the point of it? Fine, if I get supressed by OP fire, but otherwise I dont get it.....
3> How does the enemy "know" where my mortars are, hidden in woods, on a 9 hex visibility map? They never even got within 30 hexes of them at anytime or had aircraft. That wont be a first time either...
4> Some odd things on the long campaign Ive just started as the Germans. Advance mission - took the first objective and fought off the inevitable massed infantry counter attack, (with no armour support against tanks and pzrgdrs?), then took the remaining victory hexes for a Decisive victory (hooray - it's rare), but throughout the game my scout teams kept watch on some T34 and light tanks no more than 20 hexes away which sat there doing nothing - simply camped out the whole scenario. (They were ideally positioned to reinforce the AI infantry counterattack).
SS heavy infantry platoon with 2 Tigers, 5 PzrIIIJ's, 3 Stugs, a motorcycle troop COMPLETELY surround 5 russian rifle sections in the open - ie NO COVER AT ALL and they carried on fighting (tiresomely) for about 4 turns. I cant imagine that infantry in the open with no hope of escape (or crucially any cover) wouldnt have simply thrown the towel in very quickly (ok I could get it if they were Guards or Spetnatz, but they werent). Cover doesnt seem to have as much value. I know the game has emphasis on experience, but given the choice between laying in field or in a foxhole in a firefight, I know where I'd rather be.... And if I was surrounded by tanks and infantry with nowhere to hide and nothing to hit back?
I'm pretty sure I have saved games of these two if anyone wants to see them :-)
5> Infantry are just too resilient (again, especially when they have no cover, see above). They get supressed very easily so attacks grind to a halt really easily, but very hard to kill even at short ranges with a lot of firepower (see above). On the other hand, RTS's like Close Combat infantry were way too fragile so I guess it's all a bit subjective.
Sorry if a lot of this has been discussed at length before or if I really should be reading the manual, but just my thoughts so far. Otherwise, as said already, a very enjoyable game slightly clouded by the time issue (for me anyway, Im sure others beg to differ).
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April 3rd, 2007, 03:17 PM
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
I am, by nature, a very cautious commander so I can see why you have a problem with scenarios ending too early. Many times I have had to hold back from that final victory hex because I have spent one or two extra turns advancing cautiously to avoid undue casualties.
My solution? I almost exclusively play campaigns now. Yes, I still get penalized for not advancing as far as I might have had I been reckless, but by keeping my force intact I have the greater benefit of a superior force in the next battle. There is still the requirement to get a victory but I put more value on a healthy, intact core force than a few extra campaign points.
Dean
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April 3rd, 2007, 04:17 PM
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Shrapnel Fanatic
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
The game contains a number of features to allow players to customize it to fit their personal game play style and/or experience with the game. These controls are usually ignored by newbies even though we do explain them in the manual.
Infantry toughness can be changed by the player in the preferences screen. You think infantry is too tough for your tastes???.... simple........change the setting and they will die quicker. If you only want the AI to die quicker then just adjust the AI's Infantry toughness.
Don't think sceanrio designers give you enough time to take your objectives ? No problem.....open the sceanrio in the editor and increase the number of turns allowed ( and be happy you don't have Patton as the officer above you...)
How does the AI "know" where your mortars are ? Did you fire them ? It's explained in the Game guide that comes with both games. The AI "sees" your mortars the same way you can "see" it's mortars as all mortars after firing a few rounds leave a smoke signature on the map and we have coded the AI to take an interest in any smoke signatures like that the same way any human player can.
Don
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April 4th, 2007, 03:08 AM
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
However AI tanks sitting and doing nothing while in defence is quite common problem. I guess AI tank platoons actions are triggered by capturing specific victory hexes. IMHO It would be a good idea to add/increase proximity/v.hex proximity trigger and add random trigger.
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April 4th, 2007, 07:45 AM
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
Thanks for the tips on the turns number switch (brilliant!! It's right in front of me and I miss it!! talk about needing glasses), and the Infantry Toughness... Im trying a campaign battle with the infantry tweeked down to 90%, (on both sides.. Im not after an easy ride :-) ...).
I know that you can see smoke hanging over mortars once fired, what I didnt know was that it could "seen" by the oppostion even when visibility range was set very low on a particular scenario (9 hexes in this case). I never bothered looking at the enemy side of the map for it becuase I assumed it wouldnt be spottable, (and it was a snow map so that's my excuse for not paying attention in class).
And yes, I'm glad I wasn't under Patton - Even some of his fellow generals questionned his sanity and the man who veto'd earlier use of the Pershing tank because it didn't fit in with his personal doctrine. He slaps a kid for selfishly having shell shock, then later loses several companies of men attempting a bodged rescue attempt of his son in law from a POW camp. There, contraversy ;-) Hey there's an idea for some scenario builders - build a Normandy scenario with Shermans V Panthers then an exact copy with Pershings instead ... and see how the US does then ? I'm sure someone has done it already... Maybe.. Again, thanks all for the pointers.
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April 4th, 2007, 09:07 AM
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Corporal
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
Counter observations...
When the DOS game was out (6.0) I learned against 3 very excellent gamers on "What not to do in SPww2".
Nothing beats a fairly good PBEM game.
Shorter scenarios, like DRG said, but on the ones I created, that is the time allowed for the quick scenario to complete that mission.
That said, when I play campaigns I like tough infantry (default setting), and setting the AI to Hard or Hardest (gives me a great challenge, nothing more fustrating then seeing my Hauptmann Wiess with 25 Kills get wasted by a P-51 with a direct hit!). I got one campaign going now with a German Infantry company reinforced with one platoon of tigers and one platoon of panthers, the Tigers have 7-15 kills for four of them (sans the leader with 30, he is almost a star) and the panthers all have 15-28 kills (sans one that 12 kills and died outright last battle). I got a MG42 with 90 exp and 6 kills.
Anyway I am raving..
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April 5th, 2007, 11:02 AM
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
Yeah Dlazov I read your AAR - I could almost smell the cordite :-) It might be unfair to compare SPWW2 with SPII but when I had Tigers in that they clocked up a huge tally of kills on a Campaign & ended up with more fix points than I could spend. Like you say though, it was sad if they got knocked out by aircraft/arty and the crew were wiped...
I started my 1st SPWW2 campaign as German, but will restrict to 2 Tiger (promise!!) on the basis that half a platoon was broken down a lot of time. And it stops every game turning into a "Mini Kursk".
Oh one other thing I notice... AT gun crews also shoot their small arms in the same turn - they all jugglers? I would have thought they use small arms at very close range against infantry OR their main gun at tanks - not the lot at once. Makes them too tough to take out IMHO. (Games like Close Combat too - "Super" AT guns you cant see til you sit on them, even in open, and use ALL their weapons at once). I cant imagine an AT team pinging their rifles off at a tank instead of loading another few AP shells.
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Tis a mere scratch.
Come back and I'll bite you legs off!!
Chicken! Chicken!!
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April 10th, 2007, 02:58 AM
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National Security Advisor
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Re: Ex SPII player - observations so far
True. Though it might be more fun to imagine they have a couple of guards attached.
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