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Other Forums / Other Games / Re: Pacific General
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on: May 04, 2007, 06:38:12 pm
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Oddly Enough, I never played Pacific General. I literally wore a hole in my Panzer General I disc, played a lot of Panzer General II, played People's General until I realized how broken the Chinese engineers were.
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Other Forums / General Discussion / Re: AA fantasy Baseball league
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on: May 04, 2007, 06:26:33 pm
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More power to you guys for being able to play Fantasy baseball. I have an arduous task every year running Fantasy football, and that's once a week. I don't know how you do it, but I do admire your dedication.
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Other Forums / World War II History / Re: Ardennes ( and the battles)
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on: May 04, 2007, 06:25:22 pm
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THis thread is not "french bashing" take that to the proper forum please...
I don't think it's "trendy french bashing" to point out the number of flaws in French strategic military thinking in the 20th century. The French historically (and by historically, I mean 1500-1865) always operate from a position of strength. The rapid success of opposing powers at various stages in combat has led to the myth of the poorly prepared France. Additionally, am I missing something about hating on the French? I remember the vitriol towards them in 2002-03, but five years later, is there still as much of an active disdain for the French?
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Other Forums / Other Games / Re: Tsuro - Neat new board game
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on: April 09, 2007, 10:33:14 am
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Wait did Avalon Hill get into the soap business? I have soaps like those in my bathroom. They smell good too.
The ones we're not supposed to ever touch? Along with the towels we're not supposed to use to dry our hands?
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Other Forums / Other Games / Tsuro - Neat new board game
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on: April 08, 2007, 06:38:30 pm
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I've been playing this one for a few weeks with friends, and I decided to let everyone on the forum know about it. Tsuro: The Way of the Path is a board game that showed up at my FLGS last month. The object is really simple. Players alternate placing tiles on the board that create intricate paths. It's a lot like chess, and you have to remain on the board longer than everyone else. It's a Wizkids product that doesn't involve pre-painted miniatures.
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Other Forums / Other Games / Re: HALO 3
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on: April 08, 2007, 06:32:55 pm
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Smoke grenades would be awesome. Some games just don't do them right, but when they get them correctly, it's an awesome tool. There's a map in Red Orchestra that's nearly impossible for the assaulting Germans before they put smoke into the game.
Experience with shooters, especially Half-Life mods, has taught me that smoke grenades pose difficulties mainly because they put such a strain on PC hardware. I used to loathe smoke grenades in Counter-Strike that I disabled them given the chance.
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Axis & Allies Miniatures / A&A Miniatures (Original) / Re: WaS Collections
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on: April 07, 2007, 04:42:19 am
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I've bought a case of boosters, an extra booster, and two starters. I'm 9 rares and 2 uncommons short of a set, so I'm getting a second case. Hopefully I'll have enough trade fodder to finish the set. My biggest problem is I got none of the big US rares out of the box, so I've had to buy/trade for them.
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Other Forums / General Discussion / Re: Should Schools Require School Uniforms?
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on: April 03, 2007, 04:16:45 pm
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Well, the nice thing about uniforms is that the district can buy them in bulk and get huge discounts and then have families that can afford them purchase them. This way all the children have adequate clothing to shield them from the elements. Remember, a uniform does not mean plaid skirts and ties per se. A uniform could be jeans, white sneakers, school t-shirt and, for cold weather, a school jacket.
Furthermore, parents could get together and exchange or sell their children's uniforms to the next student - since the style would not change, the uniforms would have lasting power.
And anyway, after school, kids would be free to wear whatever, whenever.
You know what I never thought of until now - college athletic teams sign deals to use Nike and Reebok brand gear, I'm surprised the clothing companies haven't tried this on the lower levels. Granted, people would raise all holy hell if a public school tried this, but a private school could get away with it. "School Uniforms Provided By Nike", and then they get their apparel at cheap rates, and have all these kids walk around with their swoosh label on. Kinda creepy, in that corporate saturation sense, but I'm surprised no one hasn't tried it.
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Other Forums / General Discussion / Re: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World
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on: April 01, 2007, 06:14:13 pm
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Oh, and since the point of this thread was to add five more battles, here's my list:
Mexico City (1847): Established the U.S. as the dominant power in the Western Hemisphere, fulfilled the Manifest Destiny, and sewed the seeds of imperial aspirations that would culminate in greater involvement in world affairs as the 19th century ended.
Antietam/Sharpsburg (1862): Essentially ended the Confederate State's bid for foreign recognition. A lack of external support irreparably harmed the chances of a Southern victory.
Sedan (1870): It has been mentioned already, as it marks the ascension of Germany into imperial power status and begins her military aspirations that would culminate in two world wars.
Hiroshima (1945): No single discharge of a weapon has had so much impact upon the world. The dropping of a single bomb changed warfare and world politics forever. A 40-year Cold War and the threat of nuclear terrorist actions all stem from August 6, 1945.
Huai-Hai (1948): This is my sleeper. This was the battle that broke the back of Nationalist Chinese forces. Their losses along the Huai River and the Hai Railway prevented them from further contesting Communist forces for mainland China. In the 50 years since, the political and economic impact on the region has been more significant than almost all of the battles during the Pacific Theater of World War II.
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Other Forums / General Discussion / Re: The Fifteen Decisive Battles of the World
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on: April 01, 2007, 05:55:34 pm
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I would contest the idea that Jutland is a determining factor in the demise of the battleship. The first thing Britain demanded after the Armistice was the sinking of the German dreadnoughts. Hindsight might show us early warning signs, but remember that in the inter-war period all naval treaties concentrated on restricting battleship development. It was not until the start of hostilities in the Pacific that battleships were proven less effective. If there had been a significant incidence of some weapon being distinctly better than the battleship, navies after the First World War would have jumped on the new bandwagon.
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