Tue Apr 01, 2014 7:33 pm
It's straightforward - I really don't see why CSA elements get to recover hits twice as fast as the Union elements. I've seen some historical facts mentioned here, all well and good, but personally, I haven't seen anything that is that convincing, some Ueber-fact that would just settle the reservation once & for all.
It's an abstraction - I don't insist that we raise regiments, for instance, and not brigades. I think it's much more of a design decision, and I'm sure there was a discussion about the historical modelling, but it just strikes me as a weighting, if I may, more than anything else. I don't even really care about the justifications that much, to tell you the truth. The ratio just seems a bit much to me. It really penalizes the Union and ameliorates the manpower advantage more than a little, imo.
You collect your intel, do everything you should be doing, prep, rest up, feed 'em steak & eggs in the morning and then attack. Wow, that was close! Just one more push...
uh-uh. Not so fast, buddy. While you're trying to recover Strength, the CSA is doing it twice as fast - and improving the fortifications.
It gets to the point where, if you don't Win Every Battle on a certain campaign, most especially during the spring and summer, well, your Union NM goes in the wastebasket, the CSA NM shoots up, and at a certain point, by mid-game, even, you're spending all your money on Hit Recovery, you can't raise any new units and by the time you can attack again, the CSA is just sitting back, fat, dumb & happy, just egging you to come & fight. I would, too, as a CSA player.
You might as well take the 'manpower advantage' and file it under Bad Jokes. You want history? 22 million base to 5 million, effective (4 million were slaves). The AotP on 17 September 1862 had a 5:2 advantage in the vicinity of Sharpsburg - Lee was excreting paving tiles, you could put that in the bank, especially with the Potomac at his back a mile away. A jumped up colonel could've put fini to the ANV that day; lucky for Lee, he was facing McClellan, who not only attacked piecemeal, but didn't even use some of his reserves.
22:5 - the Union should be able to not only field bigger armies by mid-game, but be able to raise enough to assemble Expeditionary Corps to land and attack at places where the CSA ain't, can't be, and won't be.
The base advantage is at least three to one in manpower, but letting the CSA recover hits twice as fast essentially whittles that down very, very sharply.
It is what is & I'll have to work with it, but I think that it's really a bit much - it's only one of the most fundamental advantages the Union had, after all.
[color="#AFEEEE"]"Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable!"[/color]
-Daniel Webster
[color="#FFA07A"]"C'mon, boys, we got the damn Yankees on the run!"[/color]
-General Joseph Wheeler, US Army, serving at Santiago in 1898
RULES
(A) When in doubt, agree with Ace.
(B) Pull my reins up sharply when needed, for I am a spirited thoroughbred and forget to turn at the post sometimes.
