

And note that, after all that, in the 10th day of battle, no one has yet retreated










CWNut77 wrote:I should like to point out that this battle was fought in some rather harsh winter weather, which no doubt had its effect. Retreat may not have been an option, whereas confusion probably overtook the force at some point.
Roger B wrote:Well with their backs to a river I'd say retreat was almost impossible. Not a good place to fight defensively. Truly the most amazing battle in history.
No generals died in this?
CWNut77 wrote:Backs to the river, and the river was frozen!!! That explains it completely!![]()
And no, no personnel casualties.
Will this go down as the single greatest battle EVER in AACW?
Roger B wrote:I now have to rethink my position but I'm on the offensive attacking Jackson in Winchester with two corps and over 80,000 men to his one corps. If I lose the battle I better get my arse across river not stay in HF to long. Oh, its winter as well.
I'm glad I'm playing the computer and not one of you guys. Lee would be sleeping in the Lincoln bedroom right now.
berto wrote:IIRC, there were times at Petersburg (and Cold Harbor?) where the soliders decided for themselves not to obey orders, or just to fake half-hearted attacks, no matter the specified "ROE". (Sort of like French Army mutinies circa 1917?)
As just one way to mute battle casualties, AACW should reflect that self-preservation behavior (even if abstracted deep within the AI and basic battle mechanics code).
CWNut77 wrote:You may be thinking of the Battle of Lookout Mountain [sic] (Battle of Chattanooga), where George Thomas's Union soldiers totally took it upon themselves to charge uphill and take a position, without orders.
I know there were other moments in the war like this, but I believe this is the most well-known.
CWNut77 wrote:Ahh, but PBEM is where it's at my friend. This is my FIRST PBEM game, and I have almost completely learned the fundamentals of the game within it. I have made MANY mistakes, but stuck with it and it has thus far proven to be a great experience for both of us. Don't say you wouldn't do well, as you would learn from your mistakes and probably present a greater challenge than you would think.![]()
Roger B wrote:I hope to do a PBEM sometime but right now I'm still trying to get the grasp of the basics of the game (I've sent whole corps in different direction and the general I wanted to command in another). Just saying right now the computer is probably a better opponent and its kicking my butt.
AndrewKurtz wrote:Oh yeah! As the turn ran, I kept yelling at the PC "retreat!!!", but my bit-men wouldn't listen.
Doomwalker wrote:I do believe I would have been yelling at it also. Not too sure if it would have been "retreat" though. I imagine that I would have had a few choice explatives for it.
AndrewKurtz wrote:LOL. There were MANY explatives around the word retreat. And you should have heard me when I saw the 30 point NM swing because of that battle.
I don't think the weather had any impact on the decision to retreat or not retreat. The Union kept attacking for 10 straight turns and then after turn 10 decided to stop. From what Pocus told me after reviewing, the Union troops became fanatical, which is probably OK for one battle, but not for 10 straight days. We'll see some routing changes in the next patch I believe![]()
CWNut77 wrote:SO, an update...
I do not have a screen shot to show, but thought I'd offer a quick description regarding how the tide almost turned. I moved across the river north of Nashville, TN, with a good chunk of the Army of Tennessee (about 25,000 strong) against the Union force in Bowling Greene under McClellan. The result was the annihilation of my force (those that didn't succumb to the casualty list surrendered outright)...[snip]
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