![]() Replacements are only available from the mainland - then you need to ship them(or fly them where possible) to the respective airfields.Īircraft should have different stats then just be ok or destroyed - there should be damaged, severly damaged with long repair. Repair and build landing strips on island, then fly in(or transfer from nearby carriers) fresh squadrons. Let me recruit infantry, load them on ships, land them. Fly in out out of squadrons on carriers as soon as they are in range of a suitable airfield with a fresh squadron.īuild invasion fleets by yourself(instead of calling a "magic" landing fleet coming from nowhere). It would be better to move direction real strategy I would suggest. It's a "halfebreed" between a real strategy game and some real time strategy. I really try to like it but in every new start I just find other things that are just bad designed. Now we have that automatic convoys, apparently we can build our own supply runs as well(don't see the point in that because there are still the ones I cannot control, so it makes things needless complicated). And the ones that should attack enemy islands. And it should be for infantry units defending ALL island, the garrison if you want so. They should be shipped, by player controlled convoys, from the mainland. Planes can be build on some island in the pacific, just as I need them. I am, at the end, not really allowed to decide so much here. I must say - people are talking about "Micromanagement" in this game - WHERE could that be. ![]() Hate it.Īfter all another shortcoming(or my bad if I missed some button in that fantastic UI, then, please, tell me). ![]() Instead the game keeps on sending out my planes instead letting me do my thing. Problem - I do not want the KI to do it or I want it in a coordinated manner. I never gave an attack order, nevertheless the bloody airfield sends out Catalinas(even those designated ASW - on cruisers - facepalm), dive bombers and torpedo bombers. Again, CAP would be good for carriers.įor airfield it seems this rules do not apply. Find out more about the authors who wrote them.Had another look into the so called manual(28 pages for grand strategy, well, I think there is not much to say) - on carriers it is clear - only if I give an attack order they launch(would be nice to be able to organize a CAP which is really basic strategy for carriers). The fact files in this timeline were commissioned by the BBC in June 2003 and September 2005. New convoys would be established, huff-duff (the High Frequency/Direction Finding equipment network) was to be increased and further escort carrier groups would protect Atlantic convoys. Reorganisation was necessary and North West Atlantic command was given a new head, Rear Admiral Murray, a Canadian officer who previously commanded the Newfoundland Escort Force.Īlso as a result of reorganisation, 20 very-long-range aircraft were promised to the Royal Canadian Air Force to cover the principal mid-Atlantic air gap to the south of Greenland. With the threat of US withdrawal, the Allies compromised and the British and Canadians agreed to take control of the majority of northern transatlantic convoys. Support from the US came in 1942 after agreements made at the Placentia Bay Conference. It was Churchill who had given this naval struggle its name after the fall of France in the summer of 1940, which upped the stakes in the naval war and threatened the Allied blockade. Participants were shocked when it became clear that the Americans intended to withdraw escort vessels (accompanying supply boats transporting food, raw materials and arsenal) in the Battle of the Atlantic - the ongoing struggle on behalf of the Allies to sustain Atlantic sea routes that were vital to victory. The conference was attended by representatives who would report back to the Combined Chiefs of Staff, and the aim was to plan strategy with particular focus on the Battle of the Atlantic. Roosevelt ©At the Casablanca Conference in January 1943, the Allies agreed to have this second conference two months later. Prime Minister Winston Churchill and President Franklin D.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |