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Johnny Canuck
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Question on Blocking Land Movement Across Rivers

Tue May 29, 2007 6:20 pm

I have a quick question regsarding how one uses naval units to block enemy land movements across a river. Can a single naval unit prevent enemy land units from crossing a river, or do I need to have a number of naval units equal to the number indicated for blockading the harbour? For example, as the CSA I've moved up to the Ohio River, and I want to use some gunboats to prevent Union forces from crossing the Ohio to attack south. Is one gunboat per river zone enough, or do I need to match the blockade number? Thanks.

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Rafiki
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Tue May 29, 2007 8:09 pm

A single unit is enough :)

Blockade numbers are for brown-water blockade of production/income (or suchlike); not sure what the blockade number means for rivers, but for blocking supply and land unit movement, a single unit is sufficient.
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Johnny Canuck
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Wed May 30, 2007 1:27 am

Thanks for the info, Rafiki. :) I just took Louisville, but see that Grant is on the north side of the Ohio, & would very much like to keep him there. ;)

jimwinsor
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Wed May 30, 2007 2:46 am

I wonder if river transports can block river crossings. Or must it be a combat ship?

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Pocus
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Wed May 30, 2007 6:23 am

combat ship
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Hofstadter's Law: "It always takes longer than you expect, even when you take into account Hofstadter's law."

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jhdeerslayer
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Wed May 30, 2007 8:15 pm

I seal the whole Mississippi off one gunboat at a time. Makes one feel safe as the USA aggressor.

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Gresbeck
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Thu May 31, 2007 8:37 am

Rafiki wrote:A single unit is enough :)

Blockade numbers are for brown-water blockade of production/income (or suchlike); not sure what the blockade number means for rivers, but for blocking supply and land unit movement, a single unit is sufficient.


Interesting. So can anybody explain what the blockade number means for rivers?

BTW, English is not my mother language and I don't understand what you mean for "brown-water" (rivers delta?).

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Le Ricain
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Thu May 31, 2007 9:00 am

Gresbeck wrote:Interesting. So can anybody explain what the blockade number means for rivers?

BTW, English is not my mother language and I don't understand what you mean for "brown-water" (rivers delta?).


'Brown water' refers to coastal waters and rivers. 'Blue water' refers to the deep ocean.
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jimwinsor
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Thu May 31, 2007 7:36 pm

Gresbeck wrote:Interesting. So can anybody explain what the blockade number means for rivers?

BTW, English is not my mother language and I don't understand what you mean for "brown-water" (rivers delta?).


Same as they mean for ports on the ocean...if you blockade all the zones adjacent to a port, the city suffers economic consequences.

Brown water means coastal or inland waterways. Blue water refers to out on the open ocean.

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Pocus
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Fri Jun 01, 2007 6:34 am

the tooltip list you the number needed for every coastal region, but is not intelligent enough to check if you have a nearby harbor so that the number has a real meaning.
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