Coregonas wrote:I ve had to re read 3 times your previous words...
As another question, when playing a BOARDGAME (such as World in flames or Grande Guerre) players know ALL the EXACT rules. I know how the rules work, what is posible or not... and I try for instance Czechs to join my third Reich... This is not HISTORICAL, but it could be a posible History.
In a computer game, part of the flavour is finding how the game rules, but the learning curve gets too hard for some of us, a lot of players just skip over these rules even playing for 6 months.
Gray_Lensman wrote:Can you confirm the limitations of the James River past City Point. (source?). I'm currently reworking the naval/harbor/river JumpLink(s) much like the RR work.
Clovis wrote:Last, any change must take into consideration both history and game system. By exmaple, draft accounted for 6% of recruitment during the war for the North. But, considering money at hand to finance bounties, reducing draft to this level would let Federal with an almost impossible task. Here I prefer the choice to give CSA a much better draft results than for North which in return can get more volunteers. The historical difference is here as flavor more than copy but produces the same dilemnas as historical.
Jabberwock wrote:I don't disagree with your point that drafting may have been impossible in 1861. I dont know enough to agree or disagree, because I haven't studied that point in depth. I do know this though. A large percentage of the army was made up of men who "volunteered" to avoid being drafted. It made good sense from a morale and propaganda standpoint to make sure those men were counted as volunteers, and not as conscripts. For most of those men, it made very good sense from a personal financial standpoint to volunteer, whether bounty money came from the federal government, the state government, the local government, a public group, or a private individual.
Coregonas wrote:This seems an excellent resume.
Thinking in game terms, this should mean something like:
We (Both sides) have a lot of Conscription companies to equip for free (dont know what is a lot, lets say a crazy number-> 800/1200!), since the very beginning of the game.
But I have not enough money, WS and the such. (So lets say a lot less resources than now).
So I could draft, but I dont want to do it, because a lot surpluss manpower on 1861... why lose my morale points to get unnecessary men?
edit-> although less "historically probable".. the game seems more fun as it is than this way I ve written now...
The model can be adjusted a bit, but remember we players like to re-re-play our first 10 turns and see the results...
I believe ALL the options should be playable (with a penalty) but not so high penalty to say -> Im never doing this option it is totally unuseful.
Drakken wrote:Also, remember that there was a huge political argument against the draft in 1861: That would have pushed even more States to secession.
Only six States seceded when Lincoln got elected; the remaining five other States seceded when Lincoln asked for Volunteers after the fall of Fort Sumter. Other slaves States, like Kentuky and Maryland, remained undecided until the Crittenden-Johnson Compromise was passed by the Congress.
While the domino effect of secession situation is sadly not simulated in AACW in April scenarios, the fact is that Lincoln would have lost all the seceeding states plus the border slave states to the CSA if he had gone as far as to promulgate the draft in 1861.
Drakken wrote:Also, remember that there was a huge political argument against the draft in 1861: That would have pushed even more States to secession.
Only six States seceded when Lincoln got elected; the remaining five other States seceded when Lincoln asked for Volunteers after the fall of Fort Sumter. Other slaves States, like Kentuky and Maryland, remained undecided until the Crittenden-Johnson Compromise was passed by the Congress.
While the domino effect of secession situation is sadly not simulated in AACW in April scenarios, the fact is that Lincoln would have lost all the seceeding states plus the border slave states to the CSA if he had gone as far as to promulgate the draft in 1861.
Coregonas wrote:Seems as readed before CSA did not had these political problems for draft... as they simply didnt needed could not afford to organize all volunteers presented.
So, according to your explanation, in morale terms, if 81 drafts allowed, USA draft should be more penalized than CSA in early 1861.
Without remaking all the resources flow (as Clovis MOD proposes), giving a MEDIUM BIG penalty on MORALE to the first one who drafts in 1861 (3-5 NM?--- a bit more for USA?) should allow but discourage players to do it the first (until the Winter).
Spruce wrote:As for the game, I tried many CSA games - here are my conclusions =
- War Supply is very easy - a few upgrades early game might give you +10 to +15 extra war supply each turn. All right - it also depends on luck - perhaps I got lucky in all those games. But honestly in 90% of my games war supplies are no problem (given the fact CSA holds onto its defenses). Another thing I see that the Union abandons its blockading boxes at some times - so the percentage of capture goes from 35 to 0%
- Real constraint for CSA is manpower management - I mean the balance between standing army and reserves. Anyone who says money and war supply are bottlenecks, needs a few hands with the game. Basicly - you can recruit a slender army with a huge manpower reserve - an army you can always count on. On the other hand, you can keep on happely recruiting new brigades. In that case you are building a paper tiger - until the full Union blast hits your armies - after a few turns you'll have holes everywere ... and the Union will find its ways to the strategic cities,
I think war supplies and money should be a little more difficult. That means less money from counterfeiting - the blockade runners should bring in more in relation to the counterfeiting. Ans also less basic war supply - so if you are lucky to get some good upgrades on war supply early game, it should mean you are safe (if you hold your lines). On the other hand, if you don't get those needed upgrades, your army will be in chronical deficit of war supplies, as historical was the case,
I think manpower (reinforcments and new recruits) is handled nicely.
runyan99 wrote:I found those pics of Drewry's interesting. Gives a very good sense of the (point blank) range, assuming the river was as wide in 1862 as it is today. When I visited Virginia and took a look at many of the rivers, it seemed apparent that water levels were higher 140 years ago than they are today.
Gray_Lensman wrote:However, lower appearance, does not necessarily mean lower draft capabilities. There has been a lot of dredging going on over the last century. This deepens the useful channel, but narrows the river itself. It also results in faster running rivers which proves rather negative in flooding circumstances as the current news is showing.
As an aside, I work at the Osage Dam in central Missouri, and the US Army Corps of Engineers (on Monday) directed us to hold back all our water into the Osage River which flows into the Missouri River, in order to reduce the overall height of the crest heading down the Missouri River towards St. Louis and the Mississippi River. This would not be such a problem if it were not for the "narrowing" of the flood plains. Thing is, these flood plains are always there, but since people don't see water there, sometimes for decades, they foolishly build into them and then complain like hell when they get flooded.
Gray_Lensman wrote:However, lower appearance, does not necessarily mean lower draft capabilities. There has been a lot of dredging going on over the last century. This deepens the useful channel, but narrows the river itself. It also results in faster running rivers which proves rather negative in flooding circumstances as the current news is showing.
As an aside, I work at the Osage Dam in central Missouri, and the US Army Corps of Engineers (on Monday) directed us to hold back all our water into the Osage River which flows into the Missouri River, in order to reduce the overall height of the crest heading down the Missouri River towards St. Louis and the Mississippi River. This would not be such a problem if it were not for the "narrowing" of the flood plains. Thing is, these flood plains are always there, but since people don't see water there, sometimes for decades, they foolishly build into them and then complain like hell when they get flooded.
runyan99 wrote:I found those pics of Drewry's interesting. Gives a very good sense of the (point blank) range, assuming the river was as wide in 1862 as it is today. When I visited Virginia and took a look at many of the rivers, it seemed apparent that water levels were higher 140 years ago than they are today.
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