ArmChairGeneral wrote:A) Yep, lots of ways to win.
B) Because Fox blew them already.
C) Not sure what you are saying here. All those union cities I listed produce a lot of supply that could move down the river just as easily as across the rail net. You can't blow up the river; you have to emplace guns or have riverboats, and you have to do it in multiple places because there are supplies entering the chain all along it as well as at both ends. That's all doable, but costs, and slows down the steamroll.
Saying just take Cairo and Cincinnati doesn't make any sense; the whole point of the OH line is to try to STOP me from easily seizing those very cities. If I can still do so then the tactic, by definition, doesn't work. If it does work, then I will NOT be able to do it easily. The best counter to any tactic is for the tactic to have failed in the first place.
D) There is more than one way to mess with the Union's midwestern rail network, but it is complicated and I gotta get to the airport. Let's just say I have an intimate familiarity with every inch of track between Columbus OH, and St. Louis.
Will the OH-line actually work? Who knows? But I find it plausible, especially if done on a more limited scale.
Probably the best way to put a stop to any CSA nonsense in the midwest is to invade Tennessee or not lose KY in the first place.
Yep, lots of ways to win.
Yes, there are. I said, the South doesn't need to invade the Midwest to win. The response, "there exist other ways," does not parse. If X is sufficient but not necessary...you're a statistician, but I'll chalk it up to being in a hurry.
The point is, the CSA doesn't have to do all this and a human just might not let you waltz into Toledo. Ever play the CSA against wetware? I have, twice, in AACW. Humans don't let you just hop on board the Indy 500 Special. Remember, Athena tends not to invade New Orleans, retake Norfolk, etc. Harper's Ferry is a whole 'nother story against a human. It is a whole different ball game, as much as the difference between a real good college team and the World Champion Red Sox (can't say that too many times).
I thought I knew the game. I was bored with Athena. I had thrashed her in seven different ways, with stone weights on my mouse.
Then I played Pat. All those lovely strategies met a human.
Because Fox blew them already.
Just not a good idea. If you think it is, then next time you fire up a CSA start, start blowing Depots in Corinth, Chattanooga, Petersburg...you don't need 'em anyway, right?
If I understand Supply rightly, the Depots (usually found in Town and Cities and the sizes of these help to determine Supply demand - hey, I wonder if there's connection...) act as filters or pumps, what have you. A network consisting of NYC, Chicago and targets along the river just doesn't seem to be optimum. "OK, our first move is to torch all we have in Dayton!" just rubs me wrong. Plus, uh, how are we doing this? Raising good little militias who then merrily torch their cantonments? Granted, militias ain't expensive, but, especially in the early game, the North isn't Uncle $am and won't be for a while (play the North some more, you'll find out; the Resources are a bit straitened for much longer than you might think). So, you either spend resources you really can't spare on building militias you don't really need that badly, all to destroy your own Depots, or you have a few militias running & railing around destroying your own Stuff, just so Forrest can't have a ham sandwich about six game months later.
If that makes immense sense to you, AGC, then I'm definitely keeping you out of the Risk Management meetings, OK?
(C) The CSA needs to evaluate Overextension as a Risk. Taking St Louis is a no-brainer; supplement with the Missouri river line & St Joseph; Leavenworth would be nice and is a Strat City. Cincy is a Strat City and a good speedbump. Cairo is a Strat City too, iirc, and should be taken, for duh! You don't need to risk much more, unless you're feeling your oats & want Pittsburgh. Even a dull Union player is going to wake up at this point and start looking for those 500 pound sledgehammers he heard about. See what I'm saying? Athena is one thing - a human will respond and even a Union sorely gashed can be one nasty gorilla once it gets a load on. If you strike at a king, you'd better kill him, right quick.
(D) You don't have time to hang around with LtCav or Partisans or the 155th Bushpullers and try to change MC, 'cuz any semi-somnolent Union player is going to show up with at least two Cav and a pop-gun if he's had his coffee -
tout suite. Forrest can get away with Pulling Stuff, 'cuz he is Very Fast, but that network of RRs will
Gitcha! every time. I know, I have played the CSA against good players and You Do Not Get Away With This against a competent defense.
Which brings me to my main point, which I think I was saying in the first place. AGC, I will bow to you all day in analysis and number crunching and willingness to sandbox - but there is no substitute for experience, as we say. I can teach you how to sell cars, there is a well known and proven set of steps used by all, but until you've dealt with those first 1,000 customers, you have lots to experience. As I used to say to one rookie in Kansas, "the only real difference between you and I is that there is very little that I haven't seen or heard."
The same in the game. We AACW vets (and for all I know, AGC, you spent 3500 hours with it) who got involved in some serious PbeM - well, play us, I think you'll find "a brave new world that hath such creatures in it!"
M'sieu Gray Fox has had the game for a week and is coming up with Ideas and Approaches - very well, they should be examined and the gentleman has good ideas, a good imagination. You will be a scary opponent in PbeM, 'cuz You Know Too Much.
But until you have tried some of these theories against Soundoff, Banks, pgr now, I would say, my opponent havi, who I can just feel soaking things up as we play, and some really strong players on both sides, like Pat - don't go to the bank too soon.
Remember, four wheel drive don't work that good when the dirty side's up and the shiny side's down
Regards,
The Big Blue Glacier - coming soon to a plantation near you!