Jagger wrote:Is it possible to move coastal ironclads/monitors along the coast without being bombarded by every fort as you pass them. I think I just lost the Monitor to a fort trying to move from Charleston back to Philadelphia.
Le Ricain wrote:In a word, no. You can help the situation by moving your ships using the evade button.
Le Ricain wrote:I do not know many ironclads that the South in your game has built. In my games, the South has usually built 2 - 3 ironclads and six gunboats. These are no problem for Farragut and a fleet of 12 steam frigates and armoured frigates. If the South has a larger number of ironclads than that, just send more frigates. The trick is Farragut.
Gray_Lensman wrote:It has already been suggested elsewhere that a button to enable/disable monitor fort bombardment should be added. Hopefully, this will be implemented, then the decision to initiate monitor/fort bombardment will be in the hands of the gamer to decide whether his monitors are going to engage the fort or not.
Massattack wrote:It should just require a change in the chance to evade. If set to evade combat, greatly increase the chance to evade forts, without screwing up the chance of being found by patrolling ships. Hopefully something Pocus can fix when he comes back from his well deserved "vacance".
Regards
NB As per Queegs post, just set this for coastal locations. Any attempt to pass up rivers should increase the forts bombardment chances.
bloodybucket wrote:How seaworthy were these ships? I know the Monitor sank in a storm, and as a class the ironclads probably weren't the first choice for operations in rough weather. Even if the fort/evasion factors were changed to make moving past coastal forts less damaging, (I think only a few ironclads were done in by gunfire, most were victims of scuttling or mines) were they moving up and down the coast freely, or used more locally due to weather?
bloodybucket wrote:How seaworthy were these ships? I know the Monitor sank in a storm, and as a class the ironclads probably weren't the first choice for operations in rough weather. Even if the fort/evasion factors were changed to make moving past coastal forts less damaging, (I think only a few ironclads were done in by gunfire, most were victims of scuttling or mines) were they moving up and down the coast freely, or used more locally due to weather?
bloodybucket wrote:How seaworthy were these ships? I know the Monitor sank in a storm, and as a class the ironclads probably weren't the first choice for operations in rough weather. Even if the fort/evasion factors were changed to make moving past coastal forts less damaging, (I think only a few ironclads were done in by gunfire, most were victims of scuttling or mines) were they moving up and down the coast freely, or used more locally due to weather?
Wilhammer wrote:I would think that if the Monitors were given 'no bombardment and evade orders', no coastal fort should fire on them. River forts should still have a chance to engage due to the tight situation.
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