loki100 wrote:aye, I know what you mean. I was wondering if my balloons would do as a sort of martian-substitute and I could recast this as the War of the Worlds?
Stuyvesant wrote:Good god, you're sending your troops to Wales?!? I mean, sure, you've been sending them to their death for ages, but Wales? That seems needlessly cruel... Oh wait, you're from urban Scotland. Wales must seem pretty idyllic by comparison.
Since the Royal Navy is not in attendance, any idea where the fleet is hiding? Are all those Man o' Wars holed up in Scapa Flow? Could you base your submarines out of Cardiff and start wreaking havoc?
Substantively speaking, it seems the British are done for - unless they catch your invasion in mid-disembark. With such a pitiful NM, I can't imagine they'll be able to dislodge you from the Welsh countryside once you're there.
Now, speaking of low NM, is there any risk that the Welsh might take this opportunity to throw off the English yoke and rise up whilst your peaceful Italian sightseers are still unpacking their raincoats? That would be unfortunate.
Dewirix wrote:This AAR is starting to read like one of the late-19th/early 20th-century "invasion scare" books. First the dastardly Italians crush the Empire overseas, then the foreign hordes pour ashore to pillage unchecked.
Having grown up in South Wales, all I can say is that your invasion forces should pack their raincoats.![]()
Stuyvesant wrote:Good god, you're sending your troops to Wales?!? I mean, sure, you've been sending them to their death for ages, but Wales? That seems needlessly cruel... Oh wait, you're from urban Scotland. Wales must seem pretty idyllic by comparison.
Since the Royal Navy is not in attendance, any idea where the fleet is hiding? Are all those Man o' Wars holed up in Scapa Flow? Could you base your submarines out of Cardiff and start wreaking havoc?
Substantively speaking, it seems the British are done for - unless they catch your invasion in mid-disembark. With such a pitiful NM, I can't imagine they'll be able to dislodge you from the Welsh countryside once you're there.
Now, speaking of low NM, is there any risk that the Welsh might take this opportunity to throw off the English yoke and rise up whilst your peaceful Italian sightseers are still unpacking their raincoats? That would be unfortunate.
Jim-NC wrote:He had mentioned that he noticed they were all off raiding the sea lanes. From what I have seen, the AI seems to send it's entire fleet into the MTBs to hunt your merchant ships, allowing your fleet to sail/steam up to their capital, taking it by sea-borne invasion.
Jim-NC wrote:He had mentioned that he noticed they were all off raiding the sea lanes. From what I have seen, the AI seems to send it's entire fleet into the MTBs to hunt your merchant ships, allowing your fleet to sail/steam up to their capital, taking it by sea-borne invasion.
loki100 wrote:For the record, I have been blowing things up.
Sir Garnet wrote:In which event doing so does not seem cricket.
Playing Britain in game there is a sense of diffuse anxiety regarding seaborne invasion by surprise at unknown points and the need to keep the fleet poised and set up to be ready to stop it at sea - which it should be able to chance against Germany, or against France, but not so easily both.
The landing could come anywhere - which psychologically and for contingency planning is a different kind of problem from that of the continental powers who face threats from well-defined directions against fortified borders.
The key questions are how much to fortify Britain - the issue not being expense so much as the pros and cons of fortifications that if captured provide an invader with a stronger lodgement - and the force strength to retain there to match or overmatch an invasion by one or possibly two full armies. If the transports make it home, more forces are available, and a safe landing can be made, two waves should be enough to permanently hold British territory.
Stuyvesant wrote:Surely the most shocking revelation in almost fifty years of this game.![]()
Stuyvesant wrote:Must say that the British invasion is a bit anti-climactic (the biggest threat facing you is the fact that your generals sensibly decided not to die of pneumonia and retired to their Mediterranean villas en masse), but I guess that goes to show that the grinders in Africa and particularly India have already destroyed the British ability to resist. Truly, the attack on Albion seems more of a symbolic action ("Look, we're here, your armies are dead meat, let's be reasonable and call it quits."), a bit of mopping up, than a nail-biting gambit to tilt the balance in your favor.
Gen. Monkey-Bear wrote:The high-ranking Italian generals almost unanimously thought the invasion of Britain unnecessary. They felt that Italy had achieved its war goals and that a further invasion would ruin Italy's reputation among nations and would be very dishonorable. They all felt so strongly that they threatened to resign when the Italian government refused to change their mind. So Francesco II di Borbone, who had previously been treated as an equal to the Italian king (in this alternate world), felt that his opinion was being overruled. He and all the former Sicilian generals (along with some Italian ones) decided to resign en masse, but the invasion continued.![]()
Stuyvesant wrote:Oh, and it's of course a nice example of capitalist economic competition taken to its [s]extreme[/s] logical-by-Karl-Marx's-definition's conclusion: laying waste to Britain's industrial base so as to improve the standing of Italy in the world. Oh well, perhaps Britain will be better off as a rural idyll anyway, without those nasty smoke stacks and slag heaps marring the bucolic nature of the countryside and good fun such as cricket on the village green and fox hunts in the forests.
Stuyvesant wrote:I thought Marx (or was it Lenin?) held that at the final stages of capitalism, when all the colonies were divvied up and resources became ever scarcer, the capitalist countries would turn on each other in a bloody struggle to ensure that they'd slice the economic pie into their own favor (and leave the rest with really petty slivers of slices, or even crumbs)? Seems to me you were doing a fine job at that, burning down factories left and right.
Of course, my grasp of political theory is only slightly firmer than, say, quantum mechanics, so I'm probably well wrong here. I guess you could also make a case that you're just conducting a very protectionist economic policy, albeit it one that is exceedingly aggressively prosecuted (that is to say: protecting your domestic production by going overseas and torching your competitors' industry).
Stuyvesant wrote:Anyway, enough wittering. It's good to see Italy strengthening its stranglehold on Britain, while at the same time I'm glad to see a bit of rashness can still cause major pain for you, even this late in the war (hey, I'm not playing/suffering through those losses, so I can admire it in a coolly detached manner). Can understand the desire to wrap up the war, considering it's not very exciting anymore, but surely you can complete wreck the British if you practice patience and bring the whole of Britain under control? I can't imagine that they have the ability to contest your advance, if you take your time. I mean, if they can't even hold a heavily fortified London, I can't see the likes of York or Yarmouth stand up against you.
Perhaps the Scottish highlands, with their rough terrain and rougher populace, can serve as a last stand for the British Empire, but if you manage to push all the way up to Hadrian's Wall, I assume you can pretty much dictate any peace you'd like without having to disturb the natives.
Stuyvesant wrote:PS: If those Arabian rebels are rubbing their Nejds all over you, I can fully understand you would take some very stern actions (I'd recommend grape or canister shot at said Nejds). Certain behavior is just beyond the pale, even from rebellious natives.
Jim-NC wrote:Some serious losses on your part this time. There are actually battles where you lost many more men then them (South East Day 12, London Days 1 and 3). The fact that the combat power is still so near to even (78%) is I believe a testament to the size of the RN. They haven't really lost any ships, and it would seem that those ships represent a lot of Britain's power. I say that, as you have just about removed the entire British army from everywhere.
Director wrote:This is indeed the British nightmare scenario: attacked abroad, fleet neutralized (although by their own faulty doctrine) and now invaded at home while the European powers watch and yawn. The Times is unlikely to opine that, 'with an enemy fleet in the Channel the Continent is cut off.' Given the long-lasting French political crisis after the Franco-Prussian War and the German political meltdown after WW1, I wonder how bad the convulsions of British politics and policy will be. My guess - given that the last successful invader was William in 1066 - is that it will be really bad. A hyper-revanchist, hyper-patriotic brew topped by sudden feelings of military inadequacy will make for a bitter, nasty potion.
Director wrote:If you want an explanation for the mass exodus of high commanders I would offer that the traditional good feelings of Italians toward Britain have led to the same sort of command crisis as affected the British Army and Navy in the American Revolution. The really talented commanders simply don't support the Italian government's policy (or belong to a different political faction) and won't participate.
Director wrote:I know that you are looking to free Scotland for reasons of prestige (and personal gloating) but could you take - or liberate - India instead?
Director wrote:You have pretty well proved the worth of the two dominant naval strategies. Commerce raiding is inherently defensive and causes economic pain but cannot force a decision. Control of the sea is inherently offensive and enables that power to use the waters for invasion, transport and supply - riskier than raiding but with a bigger potential payout.
Good luck with the rest of your campaign, as it appears that only London can resist you.![]()
Director wrote:That kind of defeat is simply hard to get your head around. It's the sort of debacle the French suffered in the Franco-Prussian War with the added insult of having the colonies overrun. A human (ruler or player) would not rest until the insult was avenged... the AI is, as you say, more likely to go play in Ruthenia.
Stuyvesant wrote:Tell the British to sail those 9% of their fleet to Scapa Flow (it's foreign territory now anyway) and scuttle them there.
Britain's been humiliated and left wrecked. A fine job, I imagine the challenge has basically gone out of the game - hence your plans for a cataclysmic WWI.
Will be interesting to see what your new territories contribute to your empire, besides the obvious strategic implications if you go back to beating up old and weary John Bull.
Director wrote:I was basing my opinion on what I remember reading about the Italian entry into WWII - that the high command was very upset and dismayed since they had always looked to Britain as an ally. The Navy High Command was appalled since they had a very high opinion of the Royal navy and were dependent on British companies for oil fuel stocks.
Then again it just could be that the rumor got around that the King intended to send troops into Scotland.
A very 19th-century peace. One wonders who the Scots will nominate to fill their now-vacant throne. THe King of Italy might have a relative or two who would be interested... Nah, it's Scotland. Time to rattle the bushes and see if a spare Prince falls out!
That kind of defeat is simply hard to get your head around. It's the sort of debacle the French suffered in the Franco-Prussian War with the added insult of having the colonies overrun. A human (ruler or player) would not rest until the insult was avenged... the AI is, as you say, more likely to go play in Ruthenia.
Sir Garnet wrote:Well, as it happens, in 2 massive MP games player-run France and Germany in each case patched things up post FPW without a ripple of unrest from the population as a result. I suspect the AI would not do so. Even autocracies had to consider the feelings of their nobility and general population.
Maybe it is time for heady success to lead to dreams of reconstituting the Roman Empire and overweeningly ambitious plans against those in the way of this grand design.
Stuyvesant wrote:Seems that there is always some kind of bottleneck holding you down, no matter how successful your industry or how much you're willing to trade with the rest of the world. I don't know how I'd like that, playing the game: on the one hand, it's realistic, on the other, it must get a little old to be the pre-eminent military superpower in the world and still have a bunch of nobodies refuse to sell their fish or cows to you. Is there anything you can do to boost your trade efficiency, apart from paying the 25 % premium?
Stuyvesant wrote: Is there anything you can do to boost your trade efficiency, apart from paying the 25 % premium?
[The extension pdf has been deactivated and can no longer be displayed.]
Stuyvesant wrote:Apologies for not commenting earlier: out of town for a few days and family stuff (boring, rather than dramatic).
Anyway, I see peace becomes Italy, even if it does take a certain frisson from the AAR. Interesting observation that you are able to keep your populace in the rum and opium, but struggle to give them hamburgers. I didn't think the Italians would be very big on hamburgers to begin with. Or that they would mind much, considering they're getting all the alcoholic and opium-based intoxication their little hearts desire.
Seems that there is always some kind of bottleneck holding you down, no matter how successful your industry or how much you're willing to trade with the rest of the world. I don't know how I'd like that, playing the game: on the one hand, it's realistic, on the other, it must get a little old to be the pre-eminent military superpower in the world and still have a bunch of nobodies refuse to sell their fish or cows to you. Is there anything you can do to boost your trade efficiency, apart from paying the 25 % premium?
From the last screenshot, it is obvious that Belgium and the Netherlands are having morale issues. Are they at war or something?
Jim-NC wrote:You can put more ships in the trade boxes to try to gain a competative advantage (the larger your trade fleet in the box, the better your chances to get the goods).
Jonathan Pollard wrote:It's actually a 50% premium, even though when you place the orders the button says 25%.
Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 8 guests