
Seriously though, very entertaining as always and thanks for brightening up my COVID lockdown.
It's interesting to me that you were able to weaken the "main" theatre in Virginia so greatly (until the end anyway) without suffering much for it. I suspect it was also a question of Murtagks' reaction - he committed just enough troops to your various alternate pushes that he couldn't devisively outnumber you in Virginia, but unfortunately (or rather no doubt also due to your skill) it was never quite enough troops to stop you pushing on. The amount of blue on the map for only mid 1863 is astonishing.
That said all that is no slight on Murtagks. Obviously we have a better view of your side, but I'm not sure what much I would have done differently in his place, and if he had indeed focused more on Virginia and less on the other theatres, it's very possible he would have had more armies breathing down his neck from the south earlier on.
One final question from a tactically very cautious player. I saw throughout the AAR many instances of attacks where the odds were less than 3-1 in favour of the attacker and sometimes less than 2-1. Many didn't succeed, but quite a few did. I always chicken out of such attacks, which renders my fronts too static for my liking. How do you determine an acceptable level of risk in order to make the decision to stage such an attack? Is it based purely on strength (i.e. the assumption that due to cohesion and/or supply losses the enemy strength is less than might be though based purely off the number of men) or also on extraneous cirumstances such as leader skill, terrain etc. I know all of these to be relevant, but as I said I always end up chickening out. Oh and there were several instances where you spoke of 'driving the enemy from their entrenchments' - by this do you mean you are willing to take a smaller defeat in order to move the enemy army from their fortified position? Does the enemy need to move out of the region for this to apply?
Thanks again to you both for this highly entertaining read!
-deguerra